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    Looking for blame in the financial crisis?

    Michael Bliss: Financial meltdown is all in the attitude
    Posted: September 23, 2008, 10:00 AM by Kelly McParland

    Full Comment, Michael Bliss

    It’s too simple to blame the global credit crisis and its consequences on covens of greedy bankers, incompetent regulators or do-nothing politicians. The fundamental cause of the enormous debt bubble of our times is firmly rooted in the way post-industrial societies evolved in the last half of the 20th Century. After the Second World War, values based on thrift and savings were gradually replaced by a culture of having it all. Now that culture is in danger of cracking up.


    Those of us with a sense of history, or whose personal memories go back to the 1940s and ’50s, remember some of the maxims of the old society -- values forged during many generations when good times inevitably gave way to hard ones. Our parents told us stories of the wrenching effects of the Great Depression and how it caused them never to feel right about spending lavishly or going into debt. It was important to save money in advance to pay for the things a person wanted -- education, a household, a home.


    Some people systematically saved all year to get ready for Christmas. Would-be college students often worked for several years after high school to accumulate an educational nest egg. Marriage was postponed until a career was well-enough established that there was money in the bank. Consumer credit was used carefully, with credit card balance always paid in full to avoid interest. We took on huge debts to buy our homes, but never committed to mortgage payments higher than a third of our incomes, and with at least a 10% payment.


    Money was never frittered away in the mindless, addictive, losers’ pastime of gambling. Investment policy was: never risk money that you can’t afford to lose; nothing wrong with being satisfied with 3% real return on investments, the historic average. Buy Canada Savings Bonds, leave the stock market to the professionals. Live within your means.


    These were some of the principles of a thrift culture that was already beginning to crumble in the teeth of affluence and seemingly endless growth after the Second World War. It turned out that you could have attractive consumer goods now -- the new cars, the big TVs, the flashy appliances, even the dinners out -- on credit, so long as you paid your installments.


    By the 1960s, periods of economic expansion became so prolonged, interrupted by only occasional recessionary hiccups, that young people, politicians, investors -- practically everyone -- felt confident wagering on a golden future. So college students, encouraged by governments and bankers, began to think nothing of going into debt to have a college education now rather than later. Down payments on houses shrunk, mortgage payments went up -- no risk in getting into the housing market now because prices are bound to go up, the thinking went.


    Since the 1960s, practically every form of gambling has been legalized and legitimized by government agencies. When advertising bombards ordinary people with inducements to spend their money on lotteries, in casinos and playing Internet games, the ubiquity of the high-rolling mentality on Bay and Wall Streets should be no surprise. When the trend of markets and growth is always upwards -- as it has been in Canada for the adult lifetimes of a whole generation of young people -- old expectations seem out of date. Why not presuppose six, 10, 12, even 15% annual returns on your investments? In the long run stocks never go down -- do they?


    Politicians thoroughly bought into the culture of instant gratification and easy money. The postwar growth of government was based on the assumption that voters could have anything and everything -- generous social programs, student loans, cheap mortgage money, deregulation to goose economic growth, guns and butter, free health care, subsidized concerts, subsidized circuses.


    In Canada in the early 1970s, the personally ascetic prime minister, Pierre Trudeau, was widely criticized for musing that government was not Santa Claus, and so he gave up and turned on the spending spigot. In the 1980s, the glad-handing arriviste, Brian Mulroney, saw nothing wrong with running what were then enormous budget deficits, year after year, to keep putting cash in people’s pockets.


    Brian Mulroney was supposed to be a conservative. So was George W. Bush, who, with the bipartisan help of his Congress, has presided over the greatest orgy of deficit spending in American history. The left had always been utopian and narcissistic, but the abandonment of thrift and prudence even by conservatives signalled a great social change. Everyone had bought into the culture of having it all.


    It’s true that we have sometimes tested the limits. It’s ironically fortunate that in the mid-1990s the government of Canada hit a debt wall that forced it to reform, become reasonably prudent and begin running budget surpluses. Even more ironically, Paul Martin, the finance minister who was (probably unduly) credited with this return to responsibility, morphed into a free-spending prime minister who wanted to give everyone everything all at once.
    The only people Martin ever denied were Canada’s bankers: In rejecting their proposals to merge and create big banking players on the global stage, Martin unwittingly saved the Canadian financial system from being as badly imperilled as the American system is today. He saved the Canadian bankers from themselves.


    Who but the old and out-of-touch remembered the old saws about hard times, rainy days, staying out of debt? What kind of fool put his money in Canada Savings Bonds or GICs or warned against buying million dollar bungalows? At both the macro- and the micro-levels, the old laws of economic gravity seemed to have been repealed. Just ask maestro Alan Greenspan and his fiddlers at the Federal Reserve. As the band played on, the dancers whirled faster and faster.


    In 2007 the music began to fade. Confused, the dancers slowed to a walk. Now, in 2008, they have gone from bewildered wandering to the verge of panic. Bubbles are bursting, houses of cards teetering, bears foraging. The Pollyannas of the financial pages and in politics are still telling us that things are OK. The fundamentals are sound. Governments can provide fixes, we can all be bailed out, the hiccups will end and growth will return. No need to stop spending or stop buying. Maybe a few bad guys are going to get hurt, but all you good people who count on having it all. You can still do it.
    Perhaps. But you shouldn’t bet on it.


    National Post


    Michael Bliss is University Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto. He has written extensively about the history of Canadian business. His books include A Living Profit, A Canadian Millionaire and Northern Enterprise.

    #2
    Good article,minus the savings bond idea at 3% when inflation is around 13%.

    And gambling is just plain fun.

    Comment


      #3
      Some people might find this interesting.
      http://www.chrismartenson.com/three_beliefs

      Make sure you have high speed and free time.

      Click on the chapters at the top of the screen as you go.

      Comment


        #4
        AdamS: How is your posted article differ from your own desire of wanting the highest US (subidized) spot wheat price ?

        You too are a victim of the Gimmie generation without realization.

        Comment


          #5
          It amazes me how CWB supporters just don't get this simple point...It's Adam Smith's grain, let him do what he wants with it!!!!!! It has nothing to do with greed ie. he's not asking for someone else's grain (like Board supporters want control over others), he's just wanting control over his grain. Is that so hard to understand?

          Comment


            #6
            Exactly the point, Choice2U, exactly.

            Parsley

            Comment


              #7
              Those of a leftwing mindset believe that if they just talk as if a persons property doesn't actually belong to them eventually people will believe that it doesn't.

              It drives them bonkers whenever anyone points out that their Fairy tale is just that, a Fairy tale.

              Comment


                #8
                Good point, I will make it on my own or I will not ' but that is my choice alone, not everyones. If I fail is that of yuour concern? But If I do well and you do not that is not good right? My grain is my grain - not yours to share. My grains should not be mixed with yours so we can be average together so we can all farm 1200ac and have chickens, pigs and cows to raise a family. This is not the little house on the prarie any more.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Furrowtickler...

                  Some of the most aggressive leftwing fanatics I know... have the biggest houses... have been divorced cause their life partners couldn't stand their greed... self serving arrogant decadence... while all the while claiming to love their neighbour....

                  Just like the Pharisees... and the truthful words Jesus spoke...

                  About the converts they had captured... reminds me of Vader...

                  "Jesus said the Pharisees were sons of hell [Gehenna], and their converts were twice the sons of hell. The Pharisees taught these gentiles the wrong emphasis ..." (Loving religion and religious ways [the creation]... instead of GOD the creator!)

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Thats a little over the top Tom.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      maybe they can give tom an evangelical blog.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        AS - Thanks for posting a great article.

                        CP - note that the comment about 3% return on investments was part of his description of the 40's and 50's. Also, its 3% REAL RETURN - which means AFTER inflation. So don't be too harsh on him.


                        Grainbeetle - thrift culture = fiscal prudence. Watch every dime. That means not only spend carefully, but earn carefully too. That's the mindset we've lost.

                        I'm going to guess that even members of the Borg spend carefully but they seem to be a deer in the headlights when it comes to earning carefully, gladly passing the responsibility to the CWB.

                        It's your responsibility to yourself and to your family to do everything you can to squeeze every last penny out of every last bushel you produce, and to protect you assets (money) like a junk yard dog. These are the thrift maxims the article is talking about - the ones our society has forgotten.

                        Time and time again, you and others in the Borg have been shown that the CWB does not add value - most recently Fran posted some numbers showing the CWB performance is over a BILLION behind the average. Are you happy with less than average? Don't you think you could get average prices on your own? We're not talking top dollar here. Just average!

                        How would you react If you were forced to have someone else manage your investments (RSPs, etc) and they went sour? What if they didn't even keep pace with the TSX index? Not a rhetorical question. Really - how would you react?

                        How can you have the responsibility to manage your family's financial affairs, yet by law you're not allowed the authority to do it to the best of your ability in your chosen field of endeavor? And don't say "if you don't like it, don't grow wheat" because the impact is pervasive, effecting everything, every crop.

                        It's your grain, your business, your family. If you want help, its up to you to go get it. If that "help" fails you, then give it the boot.

                        And perhaps most importantly, if that "help" fails (which it has), who the hell are you to tell me I must continue my relationship with that "help"? It's not your responsibility - it's mine.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          AdamS: How is your posted article differ from your own desire of wanting the highest US (subidized) spot wheat price ?

                          You too are a victim of the Gimmie generation without realization.

                          ------------------------------------

                          beetle, the reason I posted this article was twofold, it seems to me that there are a thousand experts telling us a thousand different reasons why this financial crisis has occured and much of that analysis does contain elements of truth, but not until I read this article and the plain and simple way the writer articulated his point, had I read much about the root causes.

                          All along my gut was telling me the same thing Mr. Bliss is saying.

                          The other reason was because it does indirectly tie into the cwb system debate.

                          But how you can equate me wanting to sell my wheat into the US to people buying houses they have no hope of ever paying for is flawed to the point of being loopy.

                          As others have said here, I am wanting to freely sell(not buy)that which I already own. I'm not looking for any special favours, just the ability to negotiate the best deal possible for my grain. On my terms and on my timelines.

                          And the price today in the US northern tier is not subsidized, and if there were subsidies they would be in the form of LDP payments which I as a Canadian would not qualify for. The rules also prevent Canadian wheat from being exported so if there were export subsidies my Canadian wheat could not be subsidized. This is why an end use certificate is required to sell wheat into the US.

                          grainbeetle Canadian wheat is sold into the US everyday just like Canola and Oats and Sunflowers, nobody sits around and points fingers at a farmer who sells Oats into the US.

                          beetle, your comment shows that that you clearly don't grasp "Greed".

                          Greed is not always wanting more,

                          Greed is always wanting more than what it is worth.

                          I just want for my wheat what it is worth. I just want to get the full potential out of my farm. That is not greedy.

                          Having a target yield of 4o bpa of canola and applying 100 lbs of N is NOT GREEDY.

                          Being upset with your neigbour who did get 40 bpa of canola when you only got 22 bpa of canola and when you only put down 40 lbs of N;

                          IS GREEDY

                          do you see the difference?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Speaking of greed;

                            was watching Mike Duffy yesterday and the Libs and dippers were making a huge tadoo about "the arts"

                            So here's Justin Trudeau slamming Harper for not caring about the "Arts"
                            because he cut or is going to cut 45m from some program for Canadaian artist.

                            he goes on to say that the "Arts" industry is an $85 billion a year industry and employs over 1 million Cdns.

                            And here's old lovably Duff just nodding away and I'm thinking if this industry is so huge why are these people going snake over 45 mill?

                            These people are saying their world is going to come to an end because Mr. Harper cut .0005% of their revenue.

                            Then they bring on this young musician who when duff did challenge him on the numbers he says, get this, "I really don't know much about the numbers"

                            I wanted to reach through my TV and slap the guy.

                            This is greed, expecting others, ie the taxpayers to foot the bill for something these people can clearly afford to do themselves.

                            by the way I sincerely doubt the "Arts" industry employs 1 million Canadians and is an $85B a year industry.

                            Just when I thought we had Trudeau buried into history his gene pool still exists ready to ramp up the destruction of the Canadian economy.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              HAHA!!!!

                              30 day treasuries just went into negative yield territory!

                              Just wait till those sheep see what the inflation boogey man looks like.

                              Gold will become the most googled item on the planet.

                              Comment

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