Mr Bear’s Bid For High Elected Office

 | Apr 19, 2015 03:22AM ET

You may thinkthat this is April 2015, and for those who follow the calendar that is exactly correct. A month ago I couldn’t let Fluffy out at night without exposing the little girl to frostbite. Today the grass is green, trees are budding leaves and the wild flowers will be blooming soon. However with America’s perpetual-election cycle, politically it seems to always be either winter, or winter is just around the corner.

Geeze Louise, the next election is in November 2016, and for the next eighteen months we’ll be subjected to continual coverage of presidential candidates who will be promising this, that or the other thing as they have for decades. Economically speaking, today whatever should be going up is going down, and whatever should be going down is going up. No one running for office or reporting on the candidates has a clue what the real problem is. Instead the main-stream media for the next year and a half will be dwelling on whether Hillary has finally connected with the middle class and working poor, or how the Republicans are planning their next attack on women or other minorities.

Sewn into whatever fabric of “reality” the media chooses to weave between their viewers and the candidates will be the question of how these presidential hopefuls plan to make the economy grow. The Republicans will promise to cut taxes and shrink the size of government,not that they mean it. But you can be sure that when a Democrat promises to tax the rich and grow government they will do it given half a chance. Absent from the debate will be the actual reason why the economy and middle-class are doing so poorly: in 2015 Americans and the economy are carrying far more debt than they can reasonably service. The solution to this problem has always been to let Mr Bear and his clean up crews go to work scrubbing the nation’s balance sheets clean of all illiquid and mispriced assets.

“Market experts” and “economists” would immediately point out that this plan risks national bankruptcy, to which I would respond that today we are decades past the point of bankruptcy, thanks to the cheap-money, low-interest rate cures the academic quacks making “policy” have been subjecting the economy to since the Leveraged Buyout (LBO) debacle of the late 1980s. Our problem is clear as day; not since the early 1980s has the FOMC tightened “monetary policy” with the intent of fully deflating a previous bubble they had inflated, ridding the financial system of its toxic waste.

Today in 2015, Mr Bear has to haul out the excesses of four bubbles in the financial system seen in the chart below. Doing what needs to be done will be painful to the extreme, but if the “policy makers” would for once step aside and let Mr Bear do his job (mark all assets to market {at whatever price they clear} and dispose of the trash), at the end of the process prosperity and employment opportunity would return, and twenty year olds will finally be able move out of their parents’ basement, that is if Mom and Dad manage to hold on to their home through the bear market to come.

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Raising the Fed Funds rate 3% above the US Treasury’s long bond yield, and keeping it there for a year with a sincere and much publicized no more bailouts policy for the banks would be sufficient to begin the process that would last a few election cycles. However, proposing such a policy is not how one wins high political office.