Excessive Spending - What is our economic engine?
On December 23, I wrote about the issues related to our current account deficit (negative trade balance). I questioned the basic assumption that cheaper imports were good for our economy.
Today, there were a few articles in The Detroit News and elsewhere that I found interesting and connected... even if obtusely:
- The economy apparently has not been generating enough tax revenues
- Lending money is the new growth industry.
- We are creating our low-cost competitors as they transfer their costs to us.
- Large companies are increasingly acquiring their competitors.
- Movement up the economic ladder is becoming harder for Americans.
It seems that there is a macro trend developing in the U.S. which greatly reduces the pathways to wealth creation and wealth expansion. Those individuals and companies who do not enjoy leverage and prosperity may find that it is increasingly difficult to find pathways to wealth creation as domestic manufacturing and trades dwindle.
Rather than moving upward economically, the "average" citizen may find that they are on a treadmill of running faster to stay in the same place... finding that borrowing becomes increasingly necessary to meet basic needs and opportunities for personal advancement become fewer as massive corporate structures engulf smaller competitors... places offering opportunity for personal advancement... leading to more "contract" employment or direct "outsourcing" to foreign countries.
This macro trend could be called "economic squeezing"... and it portends a less dynamic, more elitist, economy.
If so, what will be our economic engine for the future... home equity loans?