Our Capacity Remains Undiminished

President Barack Obama’s Inaugural Address

We remain the most prosperous, powerful nation on Earth. Our workers are no less productive than when this crisis began. Our minds are no less inventive, our goods and services no less needed than they were last week, or last month, or last year. Our capacity remains undiminished. But our time of standing pat, of protecting narrow interests and putting off unpleasant decisions — that time has surely passed. Starting today, we must pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and begin again the work of remaking America.

That sounds nice I believe however, it is fairly irrelevant. Economic demand is what is down, not production capacity. We are “no less productive than when this crisis began.” Ok, that is probably true. So what. That implies that the crisis has something to do with productivity. If we say the color of our eyes is the same as when the crisis began it is obvious that is a non-sequitur. Well so is the quote by the new President, though that is less obvious.

Our demand was definitely over stimulated using massive federal government budget deficits, massive trade deficits, massive amounts of consumer debt, massive amounts of unjustified mortgage debt and massive amounts of leverage. None of those things has anything to do with capacity in the implied sense – capacity to produce. They have to do with the capacity to consume. And while our capacity to consume has not declined. The funding that allows that consumption (foreign lending, high leverage, junk mortgages…) has decreased.

We can consume much more than we can afford to consume. So as long as we either sell off assets we earned previously or borrow from someone else we can consume beyond our ability to produce. But if we actually have to fund our consumption with production we might not be able to afford McMansions for everyone. I am not sure I see what chance there is of ending the practice of putting off “unpleasant decisions” has if we just pretend the current economic crisis is somehow related to productive capacity instead of a massive binge of consumption that could not be paid for and rested on the foundation nothing more than huge debt and financial gimmicks.

Economies that are distorted by bubbles collapse. That is the state we are in now. If people actually think we are able to produce less today than we could a year ago I suppose telling them that our capacity has not declined might be useful. But what I would like to see is actual talk about how we need to live within our means to produce and stop financing our consumption by selling off assets and taking on debt.

“our goods and services no less needed” – another example of this very traditional view (not at all a new “remaking America” idea. So is it that McMansions are needed? And Junk mortgages? There are many things people desire. Desire is not need.

Related: The Budget Deficit, the Current Account Deficit and the Saving DeficitFamilies Shouldn’t Finance Everyday Purchases on CreditThe Economy is in Serious TroubleExpectationsObama disagrees with me

Comments

One response to “Our Capacity Remains Undiminished”

  1. Will Avatar

    Good points all, but it is still scary right now. We are a two income family who has done much correct. Original mortgage of 14 years on a 60 year old house. No car loans. No credit card debt. Fairly significant savings. We do have two kids in college though and are very concerned about this economy.

    The county in Oregon where we live has a 10% official unemployment rate. That is December and it is expected to be 2% higher for January. Measured correctly, the true unemployment here is supposedly about 3 or 4 points higher. The estimate is that 40% of the work force here is “underemployed” The county just to our north has rates a couple of points higher in all these areas.

    This is a disturbing time not just for the current state of affairs, but for fear that it might get a lot worse. With no ability to sell a home right now for almost any price, a job loss even in a family like ours could be ruinous.

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