Bush Derangement Syndrome has been with us nearly as long as President George W. Bush has been in office. People afflicted by the syndrome believe that all of the world’s and country’s ills, regardless of the facts or the Bush Administrations involvement, are the result of something that President Bush has done or caused to be done. BDS has led to serious incivility in the public arena. Worse, it prevents public discourse on solutions to numerous issues as those afflicted with the syndrome are unable to rationally or logically respond with any answer other than “BUUUUUUUUUUUUUSSSSSHHHHHH!”
I’m now beginning to see signs of FDS or FED derangement syndrome. Second guessing the FED has been great sport for years. There have always been segments of people who pontificate, hypothisize and hand wring over every move the FED might or does do. That activity is OK, generally it’s harmless. However, since the FED stepped in on the Bear Stearns deal I’m seeing more and more articles that are trying to link the FED to issues they or their policies come no where near.
One of the most recent and aggregious FDS arguments is in this opinion piece.
The article starts by calling the Bear Stearns move “reckless.” OK, I’m open to differing opinions on this one and at the time, honestly debated whether the move was “brilliant”, “idiotic” or somewhere in between. I’m not willing to say “nothing to see here, move along,” but each day that goes by in which the markets heal a bit brings me closer to saying “brilliant” or maybe “damn lucky”. In any event, using a term like “reckless” at this point seems…well…reckless.
From there the article makes the claim that the fall of the dollar “40%” as stated in the article, was a direct result of the Bear Stearns move. The FED certainly does have part of the responsibility for the slide of the dollar but many other things including the size of our Federal Deficit and the world’s expectations of our future economic health also have significant impacts. Where I see FDS is that the dollar had done nearly all of its slide PRIOR to the Bear Stearns deal and in fact, has rebounded slightly in the time since. If anything, the improvement of the markets which can be traced to the Bear Stearns deal has improved the dollar not impaired it.
The worst example of FDS in the article is the claim that the FED is responsible for food inflation and the food riots that have occurred in Africa. As previously stated, I don’t believe the FED’s Bear Stearns action caused a dollar decline or inflation. However, let’s assume that they did. While the Fed’s actions may have contributed to some food inflation it is by no means responsible for the world wide increase based on the following 2 facts:
1. All but one of the countries in Africa that have seen food riots, have their currencies pegged to the Euro. The Euro’s value has been the inverse of the dollar. As the dollar slides, the Euro has increased.
2. Even the US commodity food prices have risen at a rate far in excess of the change in the dollar. This fact means that something more than the dollar is driving the cost of food commodities.
So what’s moving food prices? I know it’s hard for the FDS folks to take in logic but today, even Condoleezza Rice recognized that the chasing of biofuels has led to increases in food prices. So as not to be accused of having EDS (Ethanol derangement syndrom), I would also offer the rising cost of oil and speculation as other contributors to rising commodity/food prices.
FDS, while not generally fatal, is a horrible disease. If you find that a loved one has contracted FDS, take them immediately to a library and inject them with a good dose of An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations.
When the Fed stopped publishing M3 a couple of years ago, it was a warning sign. And your observation that the USD/Euro has been falling for a long time is correct–so happens that the slide started when M3 numbers disappeared (or thereabouts.)
But let’s be real. The “FDS” you mention is most likely created and fed by a Congress which is perfectly happy to have us think that FISCAL policy (Congressional drunken-sailor spending) has nothing to do with it–that only MONETARY policy (the Fed) runs the financial world.
In all likelihood, the trouble is a combination of both. The Fed’s loosey-goosey “helicopter dollars in there” approach was complemented by Congressional/Presidential spending WAAAAAYYYYYYY beyond the means of the US.
A pox on both their houses (which is the only printable quote I can think of…)
Come on, dad29, you can do better than that. I let just about any vulgarity fly.
Dad29, How did I know I’d hear from you on this??? :)
As usual we’re in violent agreement. the FDS meme has folks starting to believe that the FED controls all economic impacts not only in the US (it doesn’t) but throughout the world. It’s simpleton thinking like FDS, looking for “who to blame” that allows citizens not to think and deal with what are sometimes difficult choices i.e. cut the spending???
On the other hand, Shoebox, have you heard that the FRB has ordered 200 black helicopters w/60mm cannons?
Geez, I guess that would discourage any run on banks!
Thanks, Steve, for bringing my attention to your post tonight.
Speaking as someone who has no “FDS” but rather says “How can I profit from these morons?”,(hey, someone has to pay the stupid penalty, I might as well be a payee of the stupid penalty) the FDS has been with us since Greenspan came to office. He never had the guts of Voelker (smarts, yes…guts, no) to raise rates to protect the US$.
WTF, works for me….short the dollar and buy anything but US$.
The “main” Presidents overseeing Greenspan, Clinton and BushII, have been busy protecting their legacy and going along as long as the economy is booming. Well, as Sun Tzu once said “In time of war, prepare for peace, in times of peace, prepare for war.”
The US$ is now just debased. The mortgage crisis (and resulting idiotic “rescue” proposed by Congress) only exacerbates the situation.
Add the mandates of putting our basic food into our gas tanks and VOILA….you gotta big problem. Also, don’t forget, the public thinks you can just reverse this stuff in 90 days or less. Ain’t going to happen. We’re in for a long tough road. It took Voelker, what? About two to three years to see the results of his guts?
Until Bernanke RAISES rates, and, until we let the mortgage chips fall where they may (defaulters will just move back into apartments and thus increase demand for apartments while the price of homes/condos fall, thus creating demand among QUALIFIED homebuyers and as usual, the market sorts it out) we’re going to be in trouble.
The U.S. should tie itself to gold and peg it to about….call it US$500/oz. (Less…around US$400/oz would be better but that’s a longer term goal.)