MEET THE DOCTOR - PART II
Richebacher: You Anglo-Saxons know no limits at all! And no 
one complains about it. We Europeans impose fiscal limits 
on ourselves and have difficulty keeping them under 
control, which is understandable. But when Americans double 
and treble their deficits, that is okay, because there are 
not limits. The Anglo-Saxons have two different sets of 
rules: One for the Europeans and one for the Anglo-Saxons. 
The Anglo-Saxons can do whatever they like.
The normal economic condition for a developed industrial 
country is to have an export surplus, and this surplus 
becomes the basis of its capital formation…That was basic 
macroeconomics, yah.
All of a sudden, the virtue of an industrial country is not 
to export, but to over-consume…to save the world through 
over-consumption.
Fry: That’s because consumption feels so much richer, even 
if it impoverishes. Consumption is easier.
Richebacher: The European economies, for example, always 
had investment and export as a key driver of growth. And 
that is what you would expect from an industrialized 
economy, that is invests and that it exports…But 
Americans just borrow and consume.
Fry: Yes, but we are very good at borrowing and consuming. 
Nobody does it better.
Richebacher: Yah, that’s right, but because your 
consumption has grown so far out of proportion to 
production, capitalist America relies on the generosity of 
communist China. The Americans don’t even realize how 
ridiculous and absurd this is. It’s so absurd I can’t 
believe it. I think this is the worst sign that I could 
imagine. It means that net investment is collapsing.
Consumption produces the least desirable kind of growth.  
And the simple thing to know is that it is unsustainable.  
It is unsustainable because real incomes are not growing. 
In America you’re having a fiasco in employment and income 
growth. The average income of the American middle-class is 
declining in real terms. And they have debts and debts and 
debts and zero savings. They have no reserves. 
In America, it is no secret, the manufacturing sector is 
shrinking. That’s THE big problem. In every economy, the 
manufacturing sector has the biggest multiplier effect.
Fry: What about the financial sector in the United States? 
It is a service sector, but it is also a major employer. 
And one could argue that many parts of the financial sector 
provide a value that is as tangible as the value of a 
manufactured product. It performs a necessary function.
Richebacher: Yes, but let’s not forget that manufacturing 
is a sector that uses all the intermediate goods. That’s 
part of its multiplying effect. The growth of financial 
services is fine, but not when the manufacturing sector is 
disappearing at the same time…When you look at capital 
goods production in the United States, you can see what has 
collapsed is investment. And with the collapse of 
investment you have a collapse of employment in the 
manufacturing sector…
There are two kinds of assets; those that you produce, and 
those that you simply trade. In America today, you have an 
inflated service sector trading inflated assets. The assets 
that you trade do not produce any widespread wealth. They 
simply produce wealth for the individuals who trade them.  
The great failure in America is in investment, employment 
and income growth…and that is tied to manufacturing.
Fry: Most American politicians would agree with you, but 
most American economists would not.
Richebacher: Okay, but we’re living in a world where 
Greenspan and his associates have told the world that all 
of America’s massive imbalances do not matter. But for any 
economist who has a little something in his head, the 
structure of the American economy is one of the most 
alarming of all time. For a developed economy it is 
scandalous.
The American economists think this is perfectly acceptable. 
But I find it unbelievable. Like Ben Bernanke blaming the 
rest of the world for what he calls a “savings glut.” This 
is crazy. Why isn’t he, instead, urging Americans to save 
and to invest? Are the Fed governors really as stupid as 
they appear? Or are they deliberately stupid?
Fry: You mean, are they stupid or corrupt? That’s the 
question…And I would answer that question by saying that 
I believe they are all very honorable men.
Richebacher: There are, of course, people in America, 
including many of my readers, who are old-fashioned, 
economically speaking. Paul Volcker, for example, who is an 
old friend of mine. But he held these basic economic 
concepts that I write about in his gut. All these things 
that I write about used to be in the gut of every 
economist.
The Americans I knew thirty years ago saved money. They 
didn’t save as much as the Europeans, but they held the 
same attitude, at least. The fundamentals were never 
questioned. No economist questioned the idea that a nation 
needs savings. They never questioned that investment is 
crucial for prosperity. It was never questioned that a 
developed country should have a surplus in its current 
account. This was never questioned! It was never a topic of 
discussion!
But all of a sudden, the Americans have rewritten 
economics…because it suits them…Saving money used to be 
instinctive in people, even without any economic theories.  
Classic economic theory is absent in America. It does not 
exist.
Fry: Yes, but obviously, recent experience influences 
behavior. And since recent experience has been one of 
relatively continuous prosperity, the imperative to save 
money seems like a quaint anachronism.
Richebacher: We are at an inflection point in 
thinking…The big change begun in the 1980s. In the ’80s, 
Americans continued to save, but it was the government that 
began to dis-save. And at the time, there was a lively 
debate among economists about the wisdom and benefits of 
deficit-spending by the government. There was a very lively 
debate about this topic. Today there is no debate. There is 
no longer any economic discussion. American economists are 
silent, deeply silent.
Do you know why they are quiet? Because academic America, 
like all of America, believes that consumer spending is the 
key to prosperity. The high esteem of consumer spending is 
implanted in every American, including its academics.
There are many who say that deficit spending by the 
government is bad. But they don’t say that deficit spending 
by the consumer is equally bad, or worse. The American idea 
that everything good comes from consumer spending is 
preposterous. And that is the key fallacy in America today.
And so I wonder, is it possible that next year we will see 
the great denouement of the American economy?
Cheers,
jOEL
And the Markets…
  | Tuesday  | Monday  | This week  | Year-to-Date  | 
DOW  | 10,378  | 10,385  | 163  | -3.8%  | 
S&P  | 1,197  | 1,199  | 17  | -1.3%  | 
NASDAQ  | 2,109  | 2,116  | 27  | -3.0%  | 
10-year Treasury  | 4.54  | 4.45  | 15.00  | 4.45  | 
30-year Treasury  | 4.73  | 4.66  | 13.00  | 4.68  | 
Russell 2000  | 643  | 647  | 10  | -1.4%  | 
Gold  | $472.50  | $465.30  | $5.61  | 8.0%  | 
Silver  | $7.79  | $7.67  | $0.13  | 14.3%  | 
CRB  | 329.19  | 321.36  | 6.68  | 15.9%  | 
WTI NYMEX CRUDE  | $62.21  | $60.02  | $1.58  | 43.2%  | 
Yen (YEN/USD)  | JPY 115.07  | JPY 115.52  | 0.82  | -12.2%  | 
Dollar (USD/EUR)  | $1.2100  | $1.1980  | -151  | 10.7%  | 
Dollar (USD/GBP)  | $1.7837  | $1.7678  | -161  | 7.0%  | 

                            	        
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