Consumers Can Restore the Economy
When I was young talk about millions of dollars impressed me. When I was older talk about billions of dollars dismayed me. Now, regular talk about trillions of dollars, especially government spending, nauseates me. People never seem to learn that they control the fate of the American economy.
It is far too easy to blame in bad times or thank in good times Wall Street, the government, or super-rich and powerful financial entities. In actual fact it is always the spending of money by the general population on consumer products and services, housing, cars, or investments that drives the economy. The core problem is that the public does not act in concert to serve its own interests but, instead, takes its cues from the external world and puts its trust in the wrong people and entities.
In other words, besides all the blame that rightfully can be heaped on many others for the current recession, it is also true that the public through its dollars drove the nation and the world into the current meltdown, mostly by using far too much borrowing. They got suckered into using easy credit. True, in many cases, they acted on incorrect and intentionally misleading information and were taken advantage of. But so much of this consumer behavior was driven by greed or stupidity. Confidence was placed in government regulation, Congress, mortgage and other financial companies, banks, and more generally in the plutocracy that runs everything that matters. We had delusional prosperity because most of the population had willingly let themselves be deluded or manipulated by the power elites running the government and the economy. In essence, consumer power was usurped or pirated by the worst people in our society.
Here is the most critical fact. Consumers control over two thirds of the economic activity of the nation. Long before the current economic meltdown I kept writing about the potential political power of consumers. To get desired government actions, millions of consumers could threaten to cut their spending in order to get actions, like stopping the
Now that the economic meltdown has hit us very, very hard it is critically important for people to understand that depending on the usual power groups to turn the economy around is dumb. Thinking that President Obama, Congress and various federal agencies, in particular, will save us is continuing the delusional thinking that has been like a chronic disease.
American consumers must understand that literally within days and weeks THEY themselves could turn around the economy. I was struck by data from the Federal Reserve that there is, even after the grotesque economic meltdown, presently a historic amount of cash is in bank and money market accounts, an astounding $8.85 trillion. Look at that number again. Relative to all the government bailouts and likely actions to stimulate the economy, that number is remarkable. That humongous amount of cash (not the value of homes and investments) comes to about $29,000 for every man, woman and child in the nation, or roughly $88,000 per household.
Your first thought may be "I don't have that kind of cash!" In fact, economic inequality has risen terribly in recent years, helped by various public policies, making the affluent rich and the rich super-rich (and most of the middle class poorer). This means that much of this national cash belongs to a relatively small fraction of the population, perhaps 20 to 30 million people.
No matter how much cash we have, we must put our faith in ourselves more than the government or the business and investment sectors to turn the economy around. The more cash you have, of course, the greater your potential power to push economic recovery. We often hear about consumer confidence. Whether people are in the mood to spend or whether they have become too afraid for their personal financial security, causing them to spend as little as possible.
To turn the stock market and just about every segment of the private sector around, 10 to 20 million Americans must grab their inherent consumer power and start spending and investing with gusto, from home appliances, computers, cars, clothing, furniture, new homes, travel, and so on.
The stock market would immediately start to climb up, retail stores would stop closing, the automotive sector would resume producing cars, companies would start rehiring and the news media would start pumping out good news that, in turn, would trigger still more consumer confidence and spending. Suddenly, a positive spiral of economic activity replaces the hoarding of cash that has driven the negative economic spiral.
Think of that number $8.85 trillion again. Think of it relative to the billions and trillions constantly talked about to spur economic recovery through bailouts and other government actions, all of which must somehow channel money into consumers' pockets or make credit for them more available. A modest fraction of all that cash, say a quarter, has the economic power to do more good than anything the government does. Better than all those government actions is the absolute certainty that rapid increases in consumer spending and investment would definitely drive the economy upwards. Positive consumer confidence can feed on itself psychologically, become a viral message that shoots the economy forward, reverses unemployment, makes stocks and mutual funds and, therefore, retirement accounts more valuable, and so on.
We sure could use some national leadership that motivates and inspires use of consumer power, rather than all the blabbering about what the government should or should not do. Americans have the choice to depend on politicians or to depend on themselves. Either use YOUR cash-power or remain victims of greed and corruption, as well as the inevitable incompetence of politicians and government officials. Consumer power awaits you. The nation needs it to avoid still more massive federal deficits and borrowing and inevitable tax increases. We the people must do much than vote; we must use our dollars to save our own financial health. Unless we shift our thinking and spend, we will stay in economic hell for a long time. We are the economic stimulus solution we've been waiting for.
[Contact Joel S. Hirschhorn through delusionaldemocracy.com.]





I'll get out my credit card and go shopping right away then.
I think we need another answer. Maybe the economy is way too big and we need to discard businesses that make crap so we can retain those that are useful. We should also deal very seriously wiht the dishonest lenders who made all these bad loans in the first place, from the creidt cards to the mortgages.
January 7, 2009 3:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
If you can you should probably clean up your debt and put away a little for a rainy day.
January 7, 2009 3:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
My only debt is to my house, which has a 6% fixed rate mortgage and a value that still exceeds the loan.
PS - It's raining right now. I'm out of work and looking for a job, which is why this site is blessed with all my posts.
January 7, 2009 4:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
Assuming cash in the bank parallels the distribution of wealth in the US, in 2001 10% of the population owned 71% of the wealth, with the top 1% controlling 38% of the total wealth in the US. Conversely the bottom 40% of the population controlled less than !% of the wealth. Unless you were writing this blog for Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, et al, I don't think my going out and spending my savings on behalf of the economic recovery is going to do much. Jest sayin'.
January 7, 2009 4:33 PM | Reply | Permalink
Where had the top 10% put the money? My guess is that the money went overseas into building the economies of other countries. Now that are complaining about why things are not better over here.
January 7, 2009 6:16 PM | Reply | Permalink
It's all about the cost.
THE COST OF LIVING
LIVING.
I still believe the way out of this mess is to reduce the interest rates on homeownership.
As long as WE fear the loss of our homes; every cent we make, we’ll insure that we keep a roof over our families head.
We’d like to buy different furniture, but we won’t spend the money.
We’d buy a big screen TV but we won't spend the money.
We’d buy a new vehicle, but we won't spend the money.
And the reason we won't spend the money on non-essentials is; that it is more important that we have set aside a reserve, for the house payment, for the essentials. Water, Food and shelter.
Lower my cost of living, not my standard of living and I'll have disposable income.
Lower my cost of utilities and I'll have more disposable income.
Lower my cost of healthcare and I'll have more disposable income
We wouldn’t need credit, if we could afford to live without it..
Until we address lowering the cost; all other attempts to solve our problems are chasing the wind.
Ecclesiastes 2:10-11 (New International Version)
10 I denied myself nothing my eyes desired;
I refused my heart no pleasure.
My heart took delight in all my work,
and this was the reward for all my labor.
11 Yet when I surveyed all that my hands had done
and what I had toiled to achieve,
everything was meaningless, a chasing after the wind;
nothing was gained under the sun.
Having done all other things and finding nothing gained, but more costs in the form of deficits, and the problem still with us.
A Trillion is a lot, and we really can't afford to mess this one up.
Who will rescue us, when we find out that building roads and parks will not have lowered
THE COST OF LIVING?
January 7, 2009 7:04 PM | Reply | Permalink
Well, things start always in a small thing. The way of spending is a strong factor, which affect the economy today. This is a lesson to learn for many. Payday loans can provide a ray of sunshine for someone in a financial bind; I've been searching for some sunshine amid the country's financial crisis. I found some articles that talk about why recession is good and things we can expect, or not expect, in 2009. If nothing else, consumers will learn from the mistakes of 2008 and start the New Year with better spending and savings habits. I hope it is not too late for us to change our mistakes f0r the 2008. Check out this article if you, too, are searching for good news during these dark days or to learn about payday loans.
January 15, 2009 3:33 AM | Reply | Permalink