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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

2010 January 11 | Escape The New Great Depression

Consumers Cannot Borrow at Zero Percent like the Banks

Posted by Michael A. Kamperman on January 11, 2010

The consumer is getting the shaft in the Fed’s zero percent interest environment.  Consumer credit fell by over $17 billion in November, which is part of the all-important Christmas shopping season.  But what’s even more disturbing is the federal government is allowing the tax payer bailed out too-big-to-fail banks to get away with highway robbery.  Big banks have raised the interest rates on credit card customers who are current on their bills up to 30% in some cases.  We already have a huge problem in that many consumers cannot access credit.  But many who can access credit are getting gouged.  There is simply no acceptable reason for banks to be allowed to charge usurious interest rates when the Fed is letting them have money almost for free.  The Fed’s policy of low interest rates is working to give the banks a chance to earn some income to cover their swept under the rug losses.  However, the Fed’s low interest rate policy is failing to jump start the economy because the consumer is not seeing the low interest rates passed on to them, except for home mortgages.  But most people cannot buy a new house because they can’t sell the house they live in and they cannot refinance because their current mortgage is underwater.  Hence, this is having a limited impact on reviving the economy.  The consumer’s inability to access affordable credit is paramount to a contraction in the money supply.  Since the money supply is already contracting without factoring in the interest rate differential, the risk of persistent deflation rises daily. 

 

The Federal Reserve needs to quit talking nonsense about an exit strategy and needs to get serious about printing a lot more money.  There is no way the housing market will survive if mortgage interest rates rise further.  That is all but certain to happen if the Fed ends its purchases of mortgages under its current quantitative easing program at the end of March.  Nero fiddled while Rome burned.  Right now the Obama Administration is fiddling while the consumer is being burned alive.  It is up to Ben Bernanke to stand up and be counted.  History calls.

 

It is also up to Congress to stand up and be counted.  The recent “consumer protection” bill left a multi-month window for banks to abuse the little guy.  And boys have they.  Do they not realize that 70% of the U.S. economy is based on consumer spending?  Do they not realize the consumer votes?  Senator Dodd pushed this legislation through and now he has been pushed out.  President Obama needs to call for change.  He needs to call for change we can believe in.  This economy is going no where if the consumer is not given a life-line, pronto.