Bill Gross: The US Is A Debt Meth Addict – Unless The Fiscal Gap Is Closed Soon “The Damage Will Be Beyond Repair”
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/02/2012 07:37 -0400
The highlights from Bill Gross’ latest monthly piece:
- Armageddon is not around the corner. I don’t believe in the imminent demise of the U.S. economy and its financial markets. But I’m afraid for them.
- The U.S. is no “clean dirty shirt.” The U.S., in fact, is a serial offender, an addict whose habit extends beyond weed or cocaine and who frequently pleasures itself with budgetary crystal meth. Uncle Sam’s habit, say these respected agencies, will be a hard (and dangerous) one to break.
- What the updated IMF, CBO and BIS “Ring” concludes is that the U.S. balance sheet, its deficit (y-axis) and its “fiscal gap” (x-axis), is in flames and that its fire department is apparently asleep at the station house.
- To keep our debt/GDP ratio below the metaphorical combustion point of 212 degrees Fahrenheit, these studies (when averaged) suggest that we need to cut spending or raise taxes by 11% of GDP and rather quickly over the next five to 10 years. An 11% “fiscal gap” in terms of today’s economy speaks to a combination of spending cuts and taxes of $1.6 trillion per year!
- To put that into perspective, CBO has calculated that the expiration of the Bush tax cuts and other provisions would only reduce the deficit by a little more than $200 million.
- We owe, in other words, not only $16 trillion in outstanding, Treasury bonds and bills, but $60 trillion more. It just so happens that the $60 trillion comes not in the form of promises to pay bonds or bills at maturity, but the present value of future Social Security benefits, Medicaid expenses and expected costs for Medicare. Altogether, that’s a whopping total of 500% of GDP, dear reader, and I’m not making it up. Kindly consult the IMF and the CBO for verification. Kindly wonder, as well, how we’re going to get out of this mess.
- Unless we begin to close this gap, then the inevitable result will be that our debt/GDP ratio will continue to rise, the Fed would print money to pay for the deficiency, inflation would follow and the dollar would inevitably decline. Bonds would be burned to a crisp and stocks would certainly be singed; only gold and real assets would thrive within the “Ring of Fire.”
- If the fiscal gap isn’t closed even ever so gradually over the next few years, then rating services, dollar reserve holding nations and bond managers embarrassed into being reborn as vigilantes may together force a resolution that ends in tears. The damage would likely be beyond repair.
- The U.S. and its fellow serial abusers have been inhaling debt’s methamphetamine crystals for some time now, and kicking the habit looks incredibly difficult.
Damages
From Bill Gross
- The U.S. has federal debt/GDP less than 100%, Aaa/AA+ credit ratings, and the benefit of being the world’s reserve currency.
- Studies by the CBO, IMF and BIS (when averaged) suggest that we need to cut spending or raise taxes by 11% of GDP and rather quickly over the next five to 10 years.
- Unless we begin to close this gap, then the inevitable result will be that our debt/GDP ratio will continue to rise, the Fed would print money to pay for the deficiency, inflation would follow, and the dollar would inevitably decline.
I have an amnesia of sorts. I remember almost nothing of my distant past – a condition which at the brink of my 69th year is neither fatal nor debilitating, but which leaves me anchorless without a direction home. Actually, I do recall some things, but they are hazy almost fairytale fantasies, filled with a lack of detail and usually bereft of emotional connections. I recall nothing specific of what parents, teachers or mentors said; no piece of advice; no life’s lessons. I’m sure there must have been some – I just can’t remember them. My life, therefore, reads like a storybook filled with innumerable déjà vu chapters, but ones which I can’t recall having read.
I had a family reunion of sorts a few weeks ago when my sister and I traveled to Sacramento to visit my failing brother – merely 18 months my senior. After his health issues had been discussed we drifted onto memory lane – talking about old times. Hadn’t I known that Dad had never been home, that he had spent months at a time overseas on business in Africa and South America? “Sort of, but not really,” I answered – a strange retort for a near adolescent child who should have remembered missing an absent father. Didn’t I know that our parents were drinkers; that Mom’s “gin-fizzes” usually began in the early afternoon and ended as our high school homework was being put to bed? “I guess not,” I replied, “but perhaps after the Depression and WWII, they had a reason to have a highball or two, or three.”
My lack of personal memory, I’ve decided, may reflect minor damage, much like a series of concussions suffered by a football athlete to his brain. Somewhere inside of my still intact protective helmet or skull, a physical or emotional collision may have occurred rendering a scar which prohibited proper healing. Too bad. And yet we all suffer damage in one way or another, do we not? How could it be otherwise in an imperfect world filled with parents, siblings and friends with concerns of their own for a majority of the day’s 24 hours? Sometimes the damage manifests itself in memory “loss” or repression, sometimes in self-flagellation or destructive behavior towards others. Sometimes it can be constructive as when those with damaged goods try to help others even more damaged. Whatever the reason, there are seven billion damaged human beings walking this earth.
For me, though, instead of losing my mind, I’ve simply lost my long-term memory. It’s a damnable state of affairs for sure – losing a chance to write your autobiography and any semblance of recalling what seems to have been a rather productive life. But I must tell you – it has its benefits. Each and every day starts with a relatively clean page, a “magic slate” of sorts where you can just lift the cellophane cover and completely erase minor transgressions, slights or perceived sins of others upon a somewhat fragile humanity. I get over most things and move on rather quickly. The French writer Jules Renard once speculated that “perhaps people with a detailed memory cannot have general ideas.” If so, I may be fortunate. So there are pluses and minuses to this memory thing, and like most of us, I add them up and move on. If that be the only disadvantage on my life’s scorecard – and there cannot be many – I am a lucky man indeed.
The ring of fire
In last month’s Investment Outlook I promised to write about damage of a financial kind – the potential debt peril – the long-term fiscal cliff that waits in the shadows of a New Normal U.S. economy which many claim is not doing that badly. After all, despite approaching the edge of 2012’s fiscal cliff with our 8% of GDP deficit, the U.S. is still considered the world’s “cleanest dirty shirt.” It has federal debt/GDP less than 100%, Aaa/AA+ credit ratings, and the benefit of being the world’s reserve currency – which means that most global financial transactions are denominated in dollars and that our interest rates are structurally lower than other Aaa countries because of it. We have world-class universities, a still relatively mobile labor force and apparently remain the beacon of technology – just witness the never-ending saga of Microsoft, Google and now Apple. Obviously there are concerns, especially during election years, but are we still not sitting in the global economy’s catbird seat? How could the U.S. still not be the first destination of global capital in search of safe (although historically low) prospective returns?
Well, Armageddon is not around the corner. I don’t believe in the imminent demise of the U.S. economy and its financial markets. But I’m afraid for them. Apparently so are many others, among them the IMF (International Monetary Fund), the CBO (Congressional Budget Office) and the BIS (Bank of International Settlements). I hold on my lap as I write this September afternoon the recently published annual reports for each of these authoritative and mainly non-political organizations which describe the financial balance sheets and prospective budgets of a plethora of developed and developing nations. The CBO of course is perhaps closest to our domestic ground in heralding the possibility of a fiscal train wreck over the next decade, but the IMF and BIS are no amateur oracles – they lend money and monitor financial transactions in the trillions. When all of them speak, we should listen and in the latest year they’re all speaking in unison. What they’re saying is that when it comes to debt and to the prospects for future debt, the U.S. is no “clean dirty shirt.” The U.S., in fact, is a serial offender, an addict whose habit extends beyond weed or cocaine and who frequently pleasures itself with budgetary crystal meth. Uncle Sam’s habit, say these respected agencies, will be a hard (and dangerous) one to break.
What standards or guidelines do their reports use and how best to explain them? Well, the three of them all try to compute what is called a “fiscal gap,” a deficit that must be closed either with spending cuts, tax hikes or a combination of both which keeps a country’s debt/GDP ratio under control. The fiscal gap differs from the “deficit” in that it includes future estimated entitlements such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid which may not show up in current expenditures. Each of the three reports target different debt/GDP ratios over varying periods of time and each has different assumptions as to a country’s real growth rate and real interest rate in future years. A reader can get confused trying to conflate the three of them into a homogeneous “fiscal gap” number. The important thing, though, from the standpoint of assessing the fiscal “damage” and a country’s relative addiction, is to view the U.S. in comparison to other countries, to view its apparently clean dirty shirt in the absence of its reserve currency status and its current financial advantages, and to point to a more distant future 10-20 years down the road at which time its debt addiction may be life, or certainly debt, threatening.
I’ve compiled all three studies into a picture chart perhaps familiar to many Investment Outlook readers. Several years ago I compared and contrasted countries from the standpoint of PIMCO’s “Ring of Fire.” It was a well-received Outlook if only because of the red flames and a reference to an old Johnny Cash song – “I fell into a burning ring of fire –I went down, down, down and the flames went higher.” Melodramatic, of course, but instructive nonetheless – perhaps prophetic. What the updated IMF, CBO and BIS “Ring” concludes is that the U.S. balance sheet, its deficit (y-axis) and its “fiscal gap” (x-axis), is in flames and that its fire department is apparently asleep at the station house.
To keep our debt/GDP ratio below the metaphorical combustion point of 212 degrees Fahrenheit, these studies (when averaged) suggest that we need to cut spending or raise taxes by 11% of GDP and rather quickly over the next five to 10 years. An 11% “fiscal gap” in terms of today’s economy speaks to a combination of spending cuts and taxes of $1.6 trillion per year! To put that into perspective, CBO has calculated that the expiration of the Bush tax cuts and other provisions would only reduce the deficit by a little more than $200 million. As well, the failed attempt at a budget compromise by Congress and the President – the so-called Super Committee “Grand Bargain”– was a $4 trillion battle plan over 10 years worth $400 billion a year. These studies, and the updated chart “Ring of Fire – Part 2!” suggests close to four times that amount in order to douse the inferno.
And to draw, dear reader, what I think are critical relative comparisons, look at who’s in that ring of fire alongside the U.S. There’s Japan, Greece, the U.K., Spain and France, sort of a rogues’ gallery of debtors. Look as well at which countries have their budgets and fiscal gaps under relative control – Canada, Italy, Brazil, Mexico, China and a host of other developing (many not shown) as opposed to developed countries. As a rule of thumb, developing countries have less debt and more underdeveloped financial systems. The U.S. and its fellow serial abusers have been inhaling debt’s methamphetamine crystals for some time now, and kicking the habit looks incredibly difficult.

As one of the “Ring” leaders, America’s abusive tendencies can be described in more ways than an 11% fiscal gap and a $1.6 trillion current dollar hole which needs to be filled. It’s well publicized that the U.S. has $16 trillion of outstanding debt, but its future liabilities in terms of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are less tangible and therefore more difficult to comprehend. Suppose, though, that when paying payroll or income taxes for any of the above benefits, American citizens were issued a bond that they could cash in when required to pay those future bills. The bond would be worth more than the taxes paid because the benefits are increasing faster than inflation. The fact is that those bonds today would total nearly $60 trillion, a disparity that is four times our publicized number of outstanding debt. We owe, in other words, not only $16 trillion in outstanding, Treasury bonds and bills, but $60 trillion more. In my example, it just so happens that the $60 trillion comes not in the form of promises to pay bonds or bills at maturity, but the present value of future Social Security benefits, Medicaid expenses and expected costs for Medicare. Altogether, that’s a whopping total of 500% of GDP, dear reader, and I’m not making it up. Kindly consult the IMF and the CBO for verification. Kindly wonder, as well, how we’re going to get out of this mess.
Investment conclusions
So I posed the question earlier: How can the U.S. not be considered the first destination of global capital in search of safe (although historically low) returns? Easy answer: It will not be if we continue down the current road and don’t address our “fiscal gap.” IF we continue to close our eyes to existing 8% of GDP deficits, which when including Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare liabilities compose an average estimated 11% annual “fiscal gap,” then we will begin to resemble Greece before the turn of the next decade. Unless we begin to close this gap, then the inevitable result will be that our debt/GDP ratio will continue to rise, the Fed would print money to pay for the deficiency, inflation would follow and the dollar would inevitably decline. Bonds would be burned to a crisp and stocks would certainly be singed; only gold and real assets would thrive within the “Ring of Fire.”
If that be the case, the U.S. would no longer be in the catbird’s seat of global finance and there would be damage aplenty, not just to the U.S. but to the global financial system itself, a system which for 40 years has depended on the U.S. economy as the world’s consummate consumer and the dollar as the global medium of exchange. If the fiscal gap isn’t closed even ever so gradually over the next few years, then rating services, dollar reserve holding nations and bond managers embarrassed into being reborn as vigilantes may together force a resolution that ends in tears. It would be a scenario for the storybooks, that’s for sure, but one which in this instance, investors would want to forget. The damage would likely be beyond repair.
William H. Gross
Managing Director










ThePessimisticChemist says:
Cutting Medicare or Social Security is the most logical step, however I don’t see that happening. Its not just a Boomer thing, a large number of millenials and gen-x’ers desperately want SS to still be around whenever they are and will do whatever they can to vote it in a little longer.
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2nd October 2012 at 9:21 am
Kill Bill says:
Bernanke is not trying to fix the economy he is trying to save the bank holding companies
Corporations control banks in order to make it easier to create capital. GMAC becamse a BHC in order to get bailed out. Will allowing this system to fail wreck the economy? I dont know. I am not a economythstt or even an accountaint =) But I think its a bad idea to keep bailing out this system in order to save a ‘house of cards’ as GWB called it.
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2nd October 2012 at 10:13 am
AWD says:
“We owe, in other words, not only $16 trillion in outstanding, Treasury bonds and bills, but $60 trillion more”
and another $240 trillion more in unfunded liabilities. Bernake cannot print that much money with all the ink-jets in the world. We may be the last domino to fall, but fall we fill. There is no end in sight for spending and entitlements.
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2nd October 2012 at 11:08 am
ThePessimisticChemist says:
“Bernake cannot print that much money” – AWD
Famous last words.
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2nd October 2012 at 11:31 am
OF says:
That France is actually worse off than Italy hasn´t arrived in Brussels, yet, or so they pretend.
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2nd October 2012 at 11:43 am
DaveL says:
Cutting SS is not the answer. Killing the fuckers who stole that money and spent it on other shit to win votes, IS THE ANSWER.
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2nd October 2012 at 12:07 pm
Bob says:
i wish Bernanke COULD create money faster, and start giving it to the little people where it can do some long-term good.
There is only a little real inflation because there is only a little real money left! QE is probably a shockingly large percentage of it! The money center banks, when you open them up, are practically EMPTY on a net-net basis! Devoid of Capital! Almost all liabilities, with vaporized assets! Profoundly insolvent. Bernake also appears to be losing the battle to maintain some net-net balance on the global derivatives ledger. Unfortunately, we keep getting closer to what history may refer to as “The Great Flush’.
Create away, Ben! The world will need every dollar just to get within shouting distance of what we used to have!
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2nd October 2012 at 12:10 pm
VietVet says:
What will adding a couple dozen zero’s to the Fed balance sheet harm? I mean, really – what could go wrong? /sarc
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2nd October 2012 at 1:37 pm
AWD says:
Dancing On The Grave Of Keynesianism
“The present value of the unfunded liabilities of the American welfare state, totaling over $200 trillion today, shows where this nation’s Keynesian government is headed: to default. It is also trapped in the quagmire of Afghanistan. The government will pull out at some point in this decade. This will not have the same psychological effect that it did on the Soviet Union, because we are not a total military state. But it will still be a defeat, and the stupidity of the whole operation will be visible to everybody. The only politician who will get any benefit out of this is Ron Paul. He was wise enough to oppose the entire operation in 2001, and he was the only national figure who did. There were others who voted against it, but nobody got the publicity that he did. Nobody else had a system of foreign policy that justified staying out. His opposition was not a pragmatic issue; it was philosophical.”
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2nd October 2012 at 2:33 pm
IndenturedServant says:
AWD said:
“Bernake cannot print that much money with all the ink-jets in the world.”
“Print” is only a figurative term. A few key strokes on the computer and viola—–more taxpayer debt than you can shake a stick at! Hell, if they were required to actually print that $ up, it would put a serious damper on the spending spree!
I_S
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2nd October 2012 at 3:07 pm
Hope@ZeroKelvin says:
In all my years training in and around an inner city emergency room, I came in contact with more than a few people hopelessly addicted to one drug or another. (Except for marijuana, heh, never had a violent disagreeable stoner giving me aggro at 2 am, so there SSS.)
It was always the same story. One after another ER visits with life-threatening medical problems related to their ongoing drug abuse, their miserable worthless lives saved by the wonders of our medical system (at taxpayer expense, arrgh). There were only two outcomes I ever saw: Incarcerated or Dead.
Meth addiction is a perfect analogy to the corrosive and lethal effect of America’s debt addiction and the corruption of our political/financial elites in peddling it.
#1) Meth manufacture is a toxic and lethal process. You risk a literal flaming explosion during the cooking phase. Then there is the criminality of meth distribution. Gee, sort of like the effect of the Fed’s money printing on the value of the dollar, as well as the machinations of the big banks in buying/selling Treasuries, oops, I mean, the newly printed “money”.
#2) Meth use slowly kills the addict, who is too “high” all the time to notice. Meth causes deterioration of every body system, starting with your teeth and finally permanently changing your brain chemistry. But hey! You are feeling so great all the time, you don’t even notice. Sort of like the “high” of easy credit and conspicuous consumption without a real income or means to pay back. Mortgage crisis? Auto industry bailout? AIG?? TBTF banks???
#3) Meth use is a classic example of the law of diminishing returns. You need increasingly amounts of meth to get the same degree of “high”, which lasts for increasingly less amount of time. Gee, QE to infinity anyone?
#4) And finally, chronic meth use destroys that part of your brain where you experience “pleasure” so it becomes impossible to do so even when stopping the drug. Chronic use leads to psychotic behavior, paranoia, extreme aggression, delusions and hallucinations. Gee, does that explain the mood of the American consumer and the recent behavior of our political/financial elites?
#5) Meth use eventually leads to death, just like the US economy is sure as shit heading for a collapse. You only stop a meth addict by locking them up, but sadly, in the USA these days, the criminals are running the prisons and have all the keys, so good luck with that.
Here’s what we will put on America’s headstone:
“Death by Toxic Debt Addiction:
We should have recognized our debt (meth mouth) long before the crash.
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2nd October 2012 at 3:14 pm
Dave Doe says:
Print they will as it’s the only game in town and 95% of the population does not understand inflation to the level of getting mad as hell.
Look for steady devaluation followed by systemic collapse. Currency failures come in the night as a crisis of confidence. We’re nowhere near that yet (general public not TBP crowd).
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2nd October 2012 at 10:51 pm