America for sale: as our government careens toward bankruptcy, Americans are being dispossessed by the outsourcing of industrial jobs and the buyout of our infrastructure by foreign interests.We begin with a parable: Driven to the streets after a run of relentless misfortune, a man took up station on a street corner holding a hand-lettered sign stating: "Will work for food." Most pedestrians and motorists passed the desperate man without so much as a second's worth of thought. One exception was a well-dressed businessman, who read the sign while waiting for the street light to change. But burdened by thoughts of his own concerns, the businessman gave in to a moment of imprudent im·pru·dent adj. Unwise or indiscreet; not prudent. im·pru dent·ly adv. sarcasm. "You 'work for food'? I work for Visa!" he exclaimed to the sign-bearing man. "I'm working for food I ate years ago!" After getting the green light, the businessman launched one last unworthy gibe gibe also jibe v. gibed also jibed, gib·ing also jib·ing, gibes also jibes v.intr. To make taunting, heckling, or jeering remarks. v.tr. : "You're not broke--you're even!" The homeless man eventually found a steady job paying just enough for him to get by and save a little money. His employer, a large and amoral a·mor·al adj. 1. Not admitting of moral distinctions or judgments; neither moral nor immoral. 2. Lacking moral sensibility; not caring about right and wrong. conglomerate paying most of its employees subsistence wages, used its workers' savings (which the conglomerate controls) to make loans to spendthrifts' like the heavily leveraged businessman--people who continued to live well beyond their means by stretching their credit lines well past the breaking point. At the same time, the conglomerate quietly used its' expanding financial holdings to buy up practically everything in sight. Eventually, the loans were called in, the debtors were unable to pay, and the businessman found himself--along with many of his fellow spendthrifts--working for that same predatory conglomerate. His earnings and standard of living were "harmonized har·mo·nize v. har·mo·nized, har·mo·niz·ing, har·mo·niz·es v.tr. 1. To bring or come into agreement or harmony. See Synonyms at agree. 2. Music To provide harmony for (a melody). downward" to those of the homeless man whose plight he had once mocked. Adapted from a stand-up stand·up or stand-up adj. 1. Standing erect; upright: a standup collar. 2. Taken, done, or used while standing: a standup supper; a standup bar. routine broadcast on Comedy Central about a decade ago, this parable is not intended to inspire mockery of the homeless or other unfortunate people. It's intended to encourage a realistic appraisal of our national economic condition. Think of the homeless man as symbolizing the poor but industrious Chinese population, willing and eager to work for a fraction of what Americans earn, and the businessman as a stand-in for an American population whose prosperity is largely a debt-enhanced illusion. The conglomerate, of course, is the entity upon which our nation and our government have become increasingly dependent to underwrite that pseudo-prosperity: the Communist Chinese regime, which is rapidly acquiring the means quite literally to buy our country out from underneath us. Indeed, the process of selling off public assets to foreign interests is already underway. In June, for example, a Spanish-Australian conglomerate paid $3.8 billion to lease the Indiana Toll Road The Indiana Toll Road, officially the Indiana East-West Toll Road, is a tolled highway running east-west across the northernmost part of Indiana. It is a part of the New York-Chicago Toll Road system, and has been advertised as the "Main Street of the Midwest". . Transfer of electronic tolling equipment began in August, and by fall it is expected that the new foreign owners will be collecting tolls once paid by Indiana residents to their own state government. And similar deals are being struck by states and municipalities across the country. "Roads and bridges built by U.S. taxpayers are starting to be sold off, and so far foreign-owned companies are doing the buying," reported the Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. on July 15. At present the main foreign players in these deals are companies based in Australia and Spain. But as China accumulates ever-increasing quantities of depreciating de·pre·ci·ate v. de·pre·ci·at·ed, de·pre·ci·at·ing, de·pre·ci·ates v.tr. 1. To lessen the price or value of. 2. To think or speak of as being of little worth; belittle. dollars, it will start looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. tangible goods in which to invest those dollars. And as we will see, some analysts in this country are suggesting that we should welcome Chinese "direct investment" in our country as a way of closing our imponderably huge "fiscal gap." Beijing Buyout "Without Chinese support, the dollar would have already collapsed, bond yields would have soared, and the U.S. economy would already be in a recession, if not a depression," observe Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin in their study Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis. "Where does the money come from? The Chinese get the dead presidents from selling products to live Americans, who seem ready to consume anything that comes their way. First, the dollars come rolling off U.S. printing presses, then they make their way into the hands of Chinese and other manufacturers, and finally, they are returned to their birthplace as loans. China is fast becoming America's 'company store,' to whom we owe our standard of living and maybe even our soul." By accumulating hundreds of billions of dollars in their foreign-exchange holdings, the Chinese are acquiring the power to define our nation's economic destiny. At some point, perhaps very soon, Beijing will have the ability to decimate dec·i·mate tr.v. dec·i·mat·ed, dec·i·mat·ing, dec·i·mates 1. To destroy or kill a large part of (a group). 2. Usage Problem a. our currency by selling off its dollar-denominated bonds. But this would inflict severe damage on China's economy as well, making that option the economic equivalent of a suicide-bomb attack. A better approach, from Beijing's perspective, would be to take its huge and expanding supply of depreciating dollars and invest them in tangible productive assets. In recent years, China has been following that approach in the Western Hemisphere Western Hemisphere Part of Earth comprising North and South America and the surrounding waters. Longitudes 20° W and 160° E are often considered its boundaries. . During his 2005 tour of Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. , President Hu Jintao Hu Jintao (h ` jĭn`tou`), 1942–, Chinese political leader, b. Jixi, Anhui prov. A hydroelectric engineering graduate (1965) of Qinghua Univ. inked lucrative energy and resource deals with Brazil, Argentina, and Venezuela. In January, China completed a deal with Canada for joint development of Alberta's uranium mines Uranium mining is presently carried out in more than 25 countries around the world. An estimated 100 or more uranium mines in different stages of development are reported. Major uranium mines are located in Canada, Australia and Kazakhstan that contribute more than half of world's uranium and oil sands. With Beijing using its dollar hoard to buy up assets in both South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. and Canada, what's to stop it from buying up the U.S.A.--a debt-plagued country with vast natural resources, the world's best transportation system, and a huge (and increasingly idle) manufacturing base? Horrifying as the prospect of a Beijing buyout would be to most Americans, the concept is being discussed, in principle, by some policymakers as a solution to our impending--and all but inevitable national bankruptcy. How Big Is the Deficit? "The federal government keeps two sets of books," noted USA Today USA Today National U.S. daily general-interest newspaper, the first of its kind. Launched in 1982 by Allen Neuharth, head of the Gannett newspaper chain, it reached a circulation of one million within a year and surpassed two million in the 1990s. for August 3. "The set the government promotes to the public has a healthier bottom line: a $318 billion deficit in 2005." An "audited financial statement produced by the government's accountants following standard accounting rules" discloses that the actual deficit for 2005 was $760 billion," continues the paper. And if the costs of Social Security and Medicare were included in the total, as any honest accounting would require, "the federal deficit would have been $3.5 trillion." That's the annual deficit--not the national debt. In what sense is a deficit of nearly one-third of a trillion dollars "healthy"? In roughly the same sense that congestive heart failure congestive heart failure, inability of the heart to expel sufficient blood to keep pace with the metabolic demands of the body. In the healthy individual the heart can tolerate large increases of workload for a considerable length of time. is "healthier" than a sucking chest wound: Both are lethal if untreated, but the latter will kill much more quickly. "We're a bottom-line culture, and we've been hiding the bottom line from the American people," complains Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.), a former investment banker Investment Banker A person representing a financial institution that is in the business of raising capital for corporations and municipalities. Notes: An investment banker may not accept deposits or make commercial loans. who offered a draft resolution--supported by congressmen on both sides of the aisle--to require the president to include audited spending and deficit numbers in his budget proposals. "It's not fair to [the people], and it's delusional on our part." That Washington has invested heavily in the preservation of that delusional system is illustrated by the fact that Rep. Cooper's proposal for honest accounting wasn't even considered by the Senate. Official Washington remains determined to conceal the size of the "fiscal gap"--a figure that includes not only the existing national debt, but also future commitments, such as Medicare and Social Security. A 2005 report compiled for the National Bureau of Economic Research The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is a "private, nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization" dedicated to studying the science and empirics of economics, especially the American economy. by economists Jagadeesh Gokhale and Kent Smetters concluded that the fiscal gap is $65.9 trillion, and growing. The "fiscal gap," explains Professor Laurence J. Kotlikoff of Boston University, offers the most telling measure of a country's solvency. If the "fiscal burdens facing current and future generations ... exceed the resources of those generations, get close to doing so or simply get so high as to preclude their full collection, the country's policy will be unsustainable and can constitute or lead to national bankruptcy." By any rational reckoning, the United States has already reached that point. The estimated fiscal gap of $65.9 trillion "is more than five times U.S. GDP GDP (guanosine diphosphate): see guanine. and almost twice the size of national wealth," Kotlikoff continues. "One way to wrap one's head around $69.5 trillion is to ask what fiscal adjustments are needed to eliminate this red hole. The answers are terrifying ter·ri·fy tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies 1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten. 2. To menace or threaten; intimidate. . One solution is an immediate and permanent doubling of personal and corporate income taxes. Another is an immediate and permanent two-thirds cut in Social Security and Medicare benefits. A third alternative, were it feasible, would be to immediately and permanently cut all federal discretionary spending by 143 percent." Beijing as "Savior"?! These details are offered by Dr. Kotlikoff in Is the United States Bankrupt?, a recently published paper commissioned by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. To begin closing the fiscal gap, Kotlikoff urges imposition of a national sales tax sales tax, levy on the sale of goods or services, generally calculated as a percentage of the selling price, and sometimes called a purchase tax. It is usually collected in the form of an extra charge by the retailer, who remits the tax to the government. to replace existing income, payroll, and estate taxes; phasing out the existing Social Security Program in favor of a Personal Security System into which all workers would be required to give 7.15 percent of their wages into an investment fund managed by the Social Security Administration; and abolishing Medicare and Medicaid Medicare and Medicaid U.S. government programs in effect since 1966. Medicare covers most people 65 or older and those with long-term disabilities. Part A, a hospital insurance plan, also pays for home health visits and hospice care. in favor of a "Medical Security System," under which Americans would receive "an individual-specific voucher to WARRANTY, VOUCHER TO, practice. A warranty is a contract real, annexed to lands and tenements, whereby a man is bound to defend such lands and tenements from another person; and in case of eviction by title paramount, to give him lands of equal value. 2. be used to purchase health insurance for the following calendar year." Kotlikoff believes that these radical reforms would dramatically reduce the level of current federal spending--which is, at best, a debatable assumption. In any case, a fiscal gap still remains that can only be closed through additional revenues. How is it to be overcome? Some relatively optimistic commentators insist that increased productivity --working smarter, rather than harder--will lead to consistent growth in the U.S. Gross Domestic Product. Kotlikoff, after crunching the numbers, doesn't buy into this assessment. "Were productivity growth a certain cure for the nation's fiscal problems, the cure would already have occurred," Kotlikoff points out. "Assuming the United States could restrain the growth in its expenditures ... is there a reliable source of productivity improvement to be tapped? The answer is yes, and the answer lies with China." "Not only is China supplying capital to the rest of the world, it's increasingly doing so via direct investment," he points out. "For example, China is investing large sums in Iran, Africa, and Eastern Europe." Given that China holds hundreds of billions of dollars in its foreign exchange reserve, the question for the United States "is whether China will tire of investing only indirectly in our country and begin to sell its dollar-denominated reserves. Doing so could have spectacularly bad implications for the value of the dollar and the level of U.S. interest rates." Another possibility presents itself, however: China could use its dollar hoard to buy valuable assets within the United States. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently , rather than dumping its dollars, China could use them to buy up the United States. "Fear of Chinese investment in the United States seems terribly misplaced mis·place tr.v. mis·placed, mis·plac·ing, mis·plac·es 1. a. To put into a wrong place: misplace punctuation in a sentence. b. ," Kotlikoff writes soothingly. "With a national saving rate running at only 2.1 percent--a postwar low--the United States desperately needs foreigners to invest in the country. And the country with the greatest potential for doing so going forward is China." In fact, China could emerge as "the world's saver and, thereby, the developed world's savior with respect to its long-run supply of capital." The Buyout Begins Unlikely as it may seem that foreign interests could buy our country out from beneath us, the process is already underway. "On a single day in June," reported the AP on July 15, "an Australian-Spanish partnership paid $3.8 billion to lease the Indiana Toll Road. An Australian company bought a 99-year lease on Virginia's Pocahontas Parkway, and Texas officials decided to let a Spanish-American partnership build and run a toll road from Austin to Seguin for 50 years. Few people know that the tolls from the U.S. side of the tunnel between Detroit and Windsor, Canada, go to a subsidiary of an Australian company--which also owns a bridge in Alabama." These are just a few examples of how roads and bridges built with U.S. taxpayer dollars are starting to be sold off, and so far foreign-owned companies are doing the buying. State and local governments are strapped for cash and relatively limited in the financial tools at their disposal. (While they can float bond issues, for instance, they cannot simply write blank checks that are covered by new money printed by the Federal Reserve.) Thus many of them, lured by the prospect of a quick influx amounting to billions of dollars, have put public assets--highways, airports, utilities, and even state-run lotteries--on the auction block. While this approach offers a short-term remedy for state and local governments, it leaves the public facing the worst of both worlds: the prospect of increased taxes to cover rising local expenses, plus paying fees and tolls to foreign companies that are, in effect, absentee landlords over what had been locally controlled infrastructure. Referring to the sale of a 75-year lease over the Indiana Toll Road to an Australian-Spanish consortium, Democratic state Representative Patrick Bauer summarized the lose-lose proposition: "In five, maybe 10 years, all that money is gone, and the tolls keep rising and the money keeps flowing into the foreign coffers." Last winter, much of the United States was figuratively up in arms over the prospect of an executive branch deal to permit Dubai, one of the United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates, federation of sheikhdoms (2005 est. pop. 2,563,000), c.30,000 sq mi (77,700 sq km), SE Arabia, on the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. (UAE (Uninterruptible Application Error) The name given to a crash in Windows 3.0. In subsequent versions of Windows, a crash was called a "General Protection Fault," "Application Error" or "Illegal Operation." See crash in Windows and abend. ), to operate U.S. port facilities. This was seen, with just reason, as a potentially disastrous breach of national security, since it would put our port security in the hands of a company owned by a government cozy with al-Qaeda. Yet less than six months later, Congress enacted a "free-trade" agreement with Oman--which borders Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE--that would permit government-controlled companies in that Arab nation to own and operate U.S. ports. Not surprisingly, China--which now controls the most crucial port facilities in the hemisphere, the "anchor ports" to the Panama Canal--is looking to build on that advantage, and it has cash-hungry politicians across the country lining up to help. In late July, three members of the Dallas City Council--Ed Oakley, Bill Blaydes, and Ron Natinsky--traveled to China to discuss a possible joint venture involving building and operating a shipping, storage, and distribution facility located inland for the purpose of relieving congestion The condition of a network when there is not enough bandwidth to support the current traffic load. congestion - When the offered load of a data communication path exceeds the capacity. at seaside entry ports, called the "Inland Port of Dallas," described by Traffic World as the "linchpin linch·pin or lynch·pin n. 1. A locking pin inserted in the end of a shaft, as in an axle, to prevent a wheel from slipping off. 2. of a new NAFTA NAFTA in full North American Free Trade Agreement Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's corridor." (The nascent Dallas port facility already has a working relationship with the Chinese-controlled Panama Canal Authority The Panama Canal Authority (Spanish: Autoridad del Canal de Panamá, or ACP) is the agency of the government of Panama responsible for the operation and management of the Panama Canal. .) "Dallas hopes to become the place where East meets West--literally," notes the publication. "It seeks Asian imports in containers shipped from Los Angeles and Long Beach and intermodal freight moving north from Mexico on the proposed $180 billion Trans-Texas Corridor, or 'TTC.'" This explains the pilgrimage of Dallas councilmen to Beijing to court China's favor. Houston's city government has also made a pitch to China. Both Houston and Corpus Christi are reportedly offering Beijing access to ports on the Gulf of Mexico Noun 1. Gulf of Mexico - an arm of the Atlantic to the south of the United States and to the east of Mexico Golfo de Mexico Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa on the east , and China is reportedly in negotiations to lease Kelly Air Force Base Kelly Air Force Base was a United States Air Force base located in San Antonio, Texas. In 2001, the runway and land west of the runway became "Kelly Field Annex" and control of it was transferred to the adjacent Lackland Air Force Base. , which was converted into an industrial park about five years ago. But these developments in Texas are just "part of a larger battle that involves cities such as Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City is the largest city in the state of Missouri. It encompasses parts of Jackson, Clay, Cass, and Platte counties and is the anchor city of the Kansas City Metropolitan Area, the second largest in Missouri, which includes counties in both Missouri and Kansas. ; St. Louis; Memphis, Tennessee; and even Indianapolis, all of which hope to use transportation and logistics assets to become the next big North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. Gateway for Asian imports," concludes Traffic World. Beijing, U.S.A. But we're not just talking about importing inexpensive Chinese-made consumer goods consumer goods Any tangible commodity purchased by households to satisfy their wants and needs. Consumer goods may be durable or nondurable. Durable goods (e.g., autos, furniture, and appliances) have a significant life span, often defined as three years or more, and . Remember the process described by Bonner and Wiggin in Empire of Debt: dollars are printed by the Federal Reserve, which are spent on Chinese-made goods, and end up being sent back to the United States as loans, which are used to buy more Chinese-made goods. We've reached the point in this process where American politicians are literally begging Beijing to be taken on as business partners. And if Laurence Kotlikoff's recommendations prove attractive to policymakers, our government will come to embrace "direct investment" from China as the key to staving off utter insolvency. What this could mean, in practical terms, is that the debt-wracked American middle class The American middle class is an ambiguously defined social class in the United States.[1][2] While concept remains largely ambiguous in popular opinion and common language use,[3][4] would suffer the fate of the businessman in our parable. EXTRA COPIES AVAILABLE Additional copies of this issue of THE NEW AMERICAN are available at quantity-discount prices. To order, visit www.thenewamerican.com/marketplace/ or see the card between pages 38-39. RELATED ARTICLE: Serf's up. by William Norman Grigg William Norman Grigg is a writer of Mexican and Irish descent.[1] He was the senior editor and a prolific contributor to The New American, the official magazine of the John Birch Society. During the late 1990s, abetted by the Federal Reserve's loose money and easy credit policies, an unprecedented number of Americans invested money in the stock market, many of them seeking a quick fortune in "dot-com" tech stocks. The Fed continued its inflationary policies following the 2000 bursting of the "dot-com" bubble, which wiped out trillions of dollars in speculative wealth. The result was a nationwide housing and mortgage refinancing bubble, with artificially low interest rates permitting millions of borderline or unqualified borrowers to get mortgage loans on almost concessionary terms. Escalating demand for new homes drove home prices skyward sky·ward adv. & adj. At or toward the sky. sky wards adv. , permitting debt-plagued households to take out second or even third mortgages against the inflated value of their homes in order to pay off high-interest debt, such as credit cards and car payments. After the Fed reversed course and raised interest rates, the Hindenburg-sized real estate bubble This article is about the general phenomenon of housing bubbles. For housing bubbles in various countries, see below. A real estate bubble or property bubble (or housing bubble backed into a nest of porcupines Noun 1. porcupines - meat patties rolled in rice and simmered in a tomato sauce porcupine ball meatball - ground meat formed into a ball and fried or simmered in broth . Mortgage foreclosures surged 72 percent in the first quarter, as compared to a year ago. Last February, Wayne County, Michigan Wayne County is a county in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the population was 2,061,162 with an estimated population of 1,971,853 as of July 1, 2006. The county seat is Detroit6, the largest city in Michigan. Geography According to the U.S. , financially crippled by the ongoing demise of General Motors, was the site of a spectacle out of the Great Depression: a Wednesday foreclosure auction of 379 homes in 35 minutes. During one 60-second stretch, 11 houses were auctioned away. In June, reported the August 7 Wall Street Journal, "total single-home sales fell 8.7% from a year earlier." This was the sharpest decline since April 1995, when the Fed began its recent inflationary binge. While some analysts insist that the housing/mortgage industry will enjoy a "soft landing," Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, is more realistic: "It's a 15-year bubble unwinding in two years. It's going to hurt." And because our consumer economy now effectively rests on the housing/mortgage refinancing bubble, its collapse will inflict greater hurt on more people than any similar financial catastrophe in our nation's history. "Never before have so many Americans gone so deeply into debt so willingly," warns Dr. Michael Hudson of the University of Missouri-Kansas in "The New Road to Serfdom serfdom In medieval Europe, condition of a tenant farmer who was bound to a hereditary plot of land and to the will of his landlord. Serfs differed from slaves in that slaves could be bought and sold without reference to land, whereas serfs changed lords only when the land ," published in the June issue of Harper's. "Housing prices have swollen to the point that we've taken to calling a mortgage--by far the largest debt most of us will ever incur--an 'investment.' ... In the odd logic of the real estate bubble, debt has come to equal wealth." Hudson points out that right now "more people owe more money to banks than at any other time in history. And that's not just in terms in dollars--$11.8 trillion in outstanding mortgages--but also as a proportion of the national economy. This debt is now on track to surpass the size of America's entire gross domestic product by the end of the decade." Tens of millions of Americans have been lured into mortgages by artificially low interest rates and the perverse notion that over-valued homes can serve as ATMs. Now that rates are rising and values are falling, those who bought into the bubble because of "the promise of 'economic freedom' almost certainly will end [up] ... locked into a lifetime of debt service that absorbs every spare penny," predicts Dr. Hudson. Rather than enjoying financial security, they "will find out that what they really signed up for was the hard servitude servitude In property law, a right by which property owned by one person is subject to a specified use or enjoyment by another. Servitudes allow people to create stable long-term arrangements for a wide variety of purposes, including shared land uses; maintaining the of debt serfdom." |
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