• RSS Feed
  • Subscriber Login
  • Weiss Ratings
Money and Markets
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Experts
    • Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.
    • Jack Crooks
    • John Ross Crooks, III
    • Tom Essaye
    • Mike Larson
    • Nilus Mattive
    • Ron Rowland
    • Guest Contributors ►
      • Monty Agarwal
      • Sean Brodrick
      • Amber Dakar
      • Larry Edelson
      • Don Lucek
      • Rudy Martin
      • Tony Sagami
      • Peter Schiff
      • Claus Vogt
  • Blog
    • Martin D. Weiss’ Blog
    • Jack Crooks’ Blog
    • Mike Larson’s Blog
    • Nilus Mattive’s Blog
  • Resources
    • Personal Finance Corner ►
      • Hot Tips
      • Investments
      • Money & Banking
      • Consumer Loans
      • College Savings
      • Retirement
      • Credit & Debt
      • Taxes
      • Insurance
      • Life & Home
      • Investment Portfolios
    • Links
  • Services
    • Premium Membership Services  ►
      • Weiss Inner Circle
      • Money and Markets Inner Circle
      • The Weiss Elite
    • Trading Services ►
      • Global Forex Alert
      • International ETF Trader
      • LEAPS Options Alert
      • Million-Dollar Contrarian Portfolio
      • Safe Money’s Crisis Trader
      • Weiss Million-Dollar Ratings Portfolio
      • World Currency Trader
    • Investment Newsletters ►
      • Income Superstars
      • Safe Money
    • Books ►
      • The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide
      • Investing Without Fear
      • The Standard & Poor’s Guide for the New Investor
      • The Ultimate Safe Money Guide
    • Public Service
  • Media and Events
    • Press Releases
    • Money and Markets in the News
    • Media Archive ►
      • 2011 Media Archive
      • 2010 Media Archive
      • 2009 Media Archive
      • 2008 Media Archive
      • 2007 Media Archive
  • Issues
    • 2012 Issues
    • 2011 Archives
    • 2010 Archives
    • 2009 Archives
    • 2008 Archives
    • 2007 Archives
    • 2006 Archives
    • 2005 Archives
    • 2004 Archives
    • 2003 Archives
    • Special Reports
  • Videos
  • Store
  • Contact Us
    • Interview a Money and Markets Analyst
    • Reader’s Comments – Testimonials

Issues

Share Email Print

A Time for Honesty, Sacrifice, and a Serious Financial Course Change

Mike Larson | Friday, February 5, 2010 at 7:30 am

Mike Larson

I just got back from my first lengthy vacation in years — to New York, London, and Paris. I enjoyed many fine meals and fun nights out with friends. I got to see everything from the Rosetta Stone and St. Paul’s Cathedral to the Mona Lisa and the Eiffel Tower.

The only real downside? The lousy January weather!

But perhaps the biggest highlight of the trip, at least for a history buff like me, was the Churchill Museum and Cabinet War Rooms just off St. James Park in Westminster. Tucked away in the basement of the U.K. Treasury, the facility allows you to experience what it was like during the Nazi “Blitz” of World War II.

Beginning in the middle of 1940 and continuing for months on end, successive waves of Nazi fighters and bombers began pummeling the British coastline. They struck the British airfields next before moving on to British towns and cities, including London.

You can eyeball the cramped, low-ceilinged meeting rooms where Churchill and staff pondered the course of the war amid thick, acrid clouds of cigar and cigarette smoke.

You get to see the Spartan sleeping quarters they made do with, and the musty old maps of Europe, the U.K., and the North Atlantic they used to track troop movements and convoys.

Churchill didn't pull any punches when he gave his regular radio speeches.
Churchill didn’t pull any punches when he gave his regular radio speeches.

You can listen to the speeches Churchill delivered even as the bombs fell — never lying to the British public about the dire straits they were in … but also never failing to inspire.

Perhaps most disturbing of all, you can view the yellowed casualty lists they used to track the dead and wounded from the Nazi bombardment. More than 20,000 ultimately perished in London alone.

Then and Now …

Not much has changed in the nearly 64 years since the facility was mothballed. But I still couldn’t help but be inspired from my visit. After all, Londoners persevered during the Blitz. Churchill didn’t back down. The Brits “kept calm and carried on.” And ultimately, the Allies won the great war.

Why do I bring this all up? Because I feel like we’ve lost that ability for politicians to level with us, especially when it comes to financial matters. There’s no Churchill on the airwaves willing to tell it like it is, and asking for personal sacrifice.

Instead, politicians keep promising the sun, the moon, and the stars — even though we simply can’t afford it. We’re SPENDING like there’s a massive world war going on even though there isn’t! And no one seems to want to change this course we’re on.

You can already see “budget bombs” scoring direct hits in Athens. And they’re landing on the outskirts of Lisbon. If we don’t do something about it soon, one of ‘em is going to land squarely in Washington — with bond prices plunging and interest rates soaring!

CBO Warns of Never-Ending
Budget Woes …

Just a few short days ago, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) became the first official D.C. source to open its bomb bay doors and let loose on all of us. The CBO’s projections: Instead of falling substantially from $1.4 trillion in 2009 (9.9 percent of GDP), the 2010 deficit would essentially hold steady at $1.35 trillion (9.2 percent of GDP).

The massive 2010 deficit would be followed by another $980 billion deficit in 2011 … $650 billion in 2012 … and $539 billion in 2013. Total red ink through 2020: $7,400,000,000,000!

As stunning as those figures are, long-term projections usually UNDERESTIMATE the deficit. Roughly 80 percent of the four-year deficit forecasts issued in the past three decades ultimately proved too optimistic, according to The New York Times.

Politicians love spending what isn't theirs.
Politicians love spending what isn’t theirs.

Why?

Those forecasts rely on growth, revenue, and spending projections that don’t pass the test of time. Politicians just can’t help themselves — pandering, over-borrowing, and overspending is in their nature.

Just consider this: Two years ago, the CBO forecast the 2010 deficit would be $241 billion. Now the CBO is throwing that projection out the window and saying it’ll be more than FIVE AND A HALF TIMES AS BIG!

Obama Unleashes Carpet-Bombing
Campaign of Red Ink …

But if you thought the CBO numbers were bad, you should read through the Obama administration’s latest budget. It forecasts a whopping $1.6 trillion deficit this year — more than $200 billion above and beyond the CBO’s numbers. That would come to 10.6 percent of GDP, the worst in modern time.

What about 2011?

Another $1.3 trillion. And the years after that? More of the same. The White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is now expecting $8.5 trillion in red ink over the next decade, with the annual deficit NEVER falling below the 3 percent-of-GDP threshold considered fiscally responsible.

It gets worse …

Those projections assume relatively rosy growth — 3.8 percent next year, and more than 4 percent over the following three years. We’ve only seen a string of 4 percent+ growth readings twice in the past three decades.

The projections also include assumptions about taxes and spending discipline that won’t pass the test of time. One example: The OMB projects $250 billion in savings from a proposed three-year freeze on a significant chunk of domestic spending. Increases thereafter would be limited to the inflation rate.

I don’t know about you, but I think the chance of that happening is somewhere between slim and none! Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans have shown any real spending discipline. There’s no reason to assume they’ll have a “Eureka!” moment in the middle of the decade.

And I’m not even getting into the Social Security- and Medicare-related problems. We’ve promised trillions in benefits over the coming years that also threaten to blow our nation’s balance sheet to smithereens.

Debt, Debt, Debt.
And Did I Mention Debt?

U.S. public debt is expected to double in 10 years.
U.S. public debt is expected to double in 10 years.

Bottom line: A never-ending wave of budget bombs is headed our way in the coming years. That will drive the total U.S. public debt load inexorably higher — from about $9.3 trillion in 2010 to $18.6 trillion by 2020. And the cost of servicing all that debt? It’s projected to more than QUADRUPLE from $188 billion to $840 billion!

I’m at a loss for words, folks. These figures are horrendous … outrageous … infuriating … and terrifying all in one. They paint a picture of a country that’s on a collision course with financial catastrophe.

We CAN still turn things around. We can pull our nation out of this fiscal tail spin. Heck, if the average Londoner could pick himself out of the rubble of his home, brush himself off, and head to work in the middle of the Blitz, then we can show the same stoic resolve here.

But that will take real political courage and real sacrifices. There is no easy way out.

Until next time,

Mike



About Money and Markets

For more information and archived issues, visit http://www.moneyandmarkets.com

Money and Markets (MaM) is published by Weiss Research, Inc. and written by Martin D. Weiss along with Nilus Mattive, Claus Vogt, Ron Rowland, Michael Larson and Bryan Rich. To avoid conflicts of interest, Weiss Research and its staff do not hold positions in companies recommended in MaM, nor do we accept any compensation for such recommendations. The comments, graphs, forecasts, and indices published in MaM are based upon data whose accuracy is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Performance returns cited are derived from our best estimates but must be considered hypothetical in as much as we do not track the actual prices investors pay or receive. Regular contributors and staff include Kristen Adams, Andrea Baumwald, John Burke, Marci Campbell, Amy Carlino, Selene Ceballo, Amber Dakar, Dinesh Kalera, Red Morgan, Maryellen Murphy, Jennifer Newman-Amos, Adam Shafer, Julie Trudeau, Jill Umiker, Leslie Underwood and Michelle Zausnig.

Attention editors and publishers! Money and Markets issues can be republished. Republished issues MUST include attribution of the author(s) and the following short paragraph:

This investment news is brought to you by Money and Markets. Money and Markets is a free daily investment newsletter from Martin D. Weiss and Weiss Research analysts offering the latest investing news and financial insights for the stock market, including tips and advice on investing in gold, energy and oil. Dr. Weiss is a leader in the fields of investing, interest rates, financial safety and economic forecasting. To view archives or subscribe, visit http://www.moneyandmarkets.com.

From time to time, Money and Markets may have information from select third-party advertisers known as “external sponsorships.” We cannot guarantee the accuracy of these ads. In addition, these ads do not necessarily express the viewpoints of Money and Markets or its editors. For more information, see our terms and conditions.

© 2010 by Weiss Research, Inc. All rights reserved.

15430 Endeavour Drive, Jupiter, FL 33478

Share Email
Tweet

Previous post: Get Energized With Energy ETFs

Next post: A Time for Honesty, Sacrifice, and a Serious Financial Course Change

  • Sign Up FREE

    To receive your Money and Markets FREE investment newsletter subscription, type in your e-mail address. We respect your privacy

  • Advertising

  • Take advantage of our strong track record for safety to guard your wealth in these trying times with our free daily updates delivered to your inbox every morning.
  • Advertising

  • Market Update

    Click an index for a graph of its recent activity:

    U.S.

    Wed 5/23/12, 5:30pm
    Index Last Change
    DOW
    NASDAQ 2,850 +11.0
    NASDAQ
    S&P 500 1,319 +2.2
    S&P 500

    Europe

    Wed 5/23/12, 11:57am
    Index Last Change
    FTSE 100 5,266 -136.9
    FTSE 100
    CAC 40 3,003 -80.8
    CAC 40
    DAX 6,286 -149.8
    DAX

    Asia

    Thu 5/24/12, 2:00am
    Index Last Change
    HANG SENG 18,755 -31.0
    HANG SENG
    NIKKEI 225 8,563 +6.8
    NIKKEI 225
    CSI 300 2,598 -18.6
    CSI 300
  • Advertising

  • Weiss Group Press Releases

    Weiss Ratings: U.S. Credit Union Deposits Up $41 Billion in 2011 April 2, 2012
    Weiss Ratings: U.S. Banking Industry Continues Modest Turnaround March 26, 2012
    Weiss Ratings: Southwestern Banks Show Signs of Turnaround January 24, 2012
    Weiss Ratings: Sluggish Demand Triggers Downgrades of China, Canada, Saudi Arabia December 19, 2011
    Weiss Ratings: Eurozone Crisis Prompts Debt Downgrades December 9, 2011
    • Find us on Facebook

    • Follow us on Twitter

      • Money and Markets on Twitter
      • Money and Markets on Twitter
      • Dr Martin D. Weiss on Twitter
      • Nilus Mattive on Twitter
      • Ron Rowland on Twitter
      • Mike Larson on Twitter
      • Jack Crooks on Twitter
    • Weiss Ratings - Top-Rated Banks, Credit-Unions, Insurers

    • Weiss Research Affiliate

    • About Us
    • FAQ
    • Legal
    • Privacy
    • Whitelist
    • Advertising
    • ©2012 Money and Markets. All Rights Reserved.
    Weiss Research, Inc., founded in 1971, has a long history of providing research and analysis designed to empower investors with information and tools to make more informed, independent decisions along with an equally long history of public service. [More »]