This opening skit in last week's Saturday Night Live nails the economic relations between China and the US. Funny stuff. Deficits, health care, cash-for-clunkers, stimulus jobs…nothing is safe.
Enjoy
This opening skit in last week's Saturday Night Live nails the economic relations between China and the US. Funny stuff. Deficits, health care, cash-for-clunkers, stimulus jobs…nothing is safe.
Enjoy
Clearly, today most Americans would identify the weak job market as the biggest problem facing the country today. While the job market will recover on its own eventually, there is a desire in many quarters to roll out a second stimulus package to promote job growth. As Paul Krugman noted in a recent NYT opinion piece, the standard American approach to stimulus is to focus on expanding the economy as a whole with the assumption that jobs will follow. The traditional approach makes a great deal of sense during a run-of-the-mill recession. The problem today is that some of the dislocations in the economy and job market are so large, it could take many years to retrain and relocate the unemployed, particularly among the large pool of unemployed manufacturing and construction workers. In addition, the downturn in employment in construction and manufacturing are the result of long term or secular trends, not purely cyclical unemployment. To stimulate jobs among this large pool of unemployed workers, we should increase our investment in infrastructure on a sustained, multi-year basis.
"Blue collar" job losses
Of the 6.7 million jobs lost in the United States since 2007, nearly 58% were lost in construction and manufacturing. These largely male, "blue collar" occupations have seen such large losses that women now make up more than 50% of the workforce for the first time in history. Over 2.2 million jobs have been lost in manufacturing, but as can be seen in the chart below, the decline of manufacturing (dark green line) as a share of employment is in line with the historical trend. Manufacturing employment as a percent of total non-farm employment has fallen pretty much in a straight line from about a third at the end of World War II to under 10% today. As I have written previously (see here), this decline is due primarily to the consistent increase in manufacturing productivity. Manufacturing production has continued to grow and has largely maintained its share of GDP, even while employment has plunged. In other words, even if there was a large rebound in manufacturing, the vast majority of manufacturing jobs that have been lost in the last decade are never coming back.
Chart 1: Employment by Sector as a % of total Non-Farm Employment
Source: Economy.com, author's calculations
Construction employment (the maroon line) has consistently run at around 5% of the total workforce since World War II. The 5% number makes sense, and is in line with the long term trend in real estate investment, which has run at about 5% of GDP as well.
Chart 2: Private Investment to Nominal GDP
Source: Economy.com, author's calculations
Chart 2 shows the annual numbers through 2008, and 2009 will show a further plunge in private investment in both business equipment and real estate. In addition, given slower demographic growth and the large overhang of unsold homes, potential foreclosures and homeowners in negative equity situations, there is no reason to expect a strong rebound in real estate investment anytime in the next five years.
Where will new jobs come from?
On Chart 1 we can see that there has been a secular increase in the share of jobs going toward "white collar" occupations like health & education (orange line), business & professional services (office & tech jobs, pink line) and leisure & hospitality (light purple line). Of these careers, health, education and non-administrative office jobs tend to require time-consuming and expensive training, and it's hard to envision the government laying out a vision of promoting employment in leisure & hospitality jobs as the route to a strong America.
Having a large pool of angry, unemployed men does not for pleasant politics make. The traditional US government approach of using tax cuts and interest rate cuts to stimulate private spending and investment will not work in the near term (for reasons I outline here). For reasons I won't get into in this article, it also appears that the world economic system is not quite ready to be geared toward stimulating US export growth and trade surpluses. That leaves the US government directly stimulating demand.
Invest in infrastructure
In normal circumstances, I am not one to argue for more government intervention in the economy. However, these are certainly not normal circumstances. I am advocating the government committing to a sustained, multi-year program of increased investment in the nation's infrastructure as a way of both directly creating demand and stimulating private investment. I am not advocating a boondoggle like the stimulus bill from early this year. The US needs to target infrastructure investments that directly improve the long-term productivity of the US workforce by laying out a long-term plan and set of priorities. The investment should have the following goals:
If carried out in a thoughtful way (i.e. not driven by parochial real estate interests), such a program would make America stronger in the long term while creating near term construction jobs and stimulating domestic manufacturing.
Read this excellent article by Martin Wolf in the Financial Times, and be sure to click on the chart, which I have also pasted below:

The private financial balance (net borrowing or net saving by households and businesses) plus the government financial balance must equal the net capital inflow from abroad. In the 2000s, the US was running a deficit in both the private and government accounts, which had to be offset by a positive net capital inflow from abroad. A net capital inflow for abroad must be offset by an equal current account deficit, which for the most part means a trade deficit.
Of the high-income countries, notice that in 2006 nearly all were running trade deficits, except Japan and Germany who were running trade surpluses. Also notice that Japan and Germany have been running a high positive private balance (i.e. businesses and households are high net savers). Japan and Germany have essentially been deflationary countries since the early 1990s, when the Japanese debt bubble burst and when Germany reunified. Both have been borrowing demand from abroad to partially offset their shortage of private demand.
The US, Spain, Ireland and the UK have been running private deficits. The US and the UK have been running private and government deficits. The twin deficits were therefore offset by large trade deficits.
Since the Great Recession, all of the countries listed have become high net private savers and all are running large government deficits. The large government deficits are necessary to offset the collapse in private demand. With all countries turning down at once, there would be no one to make up for domestic demand shortfalls. While international imbalances have become smaller, Japan and Germany remain net exporters and and the rest remain net importers.
As I have been saying over and over, for the US (and Spain, and Ireland and the UK) to dig out of the financial hole, we need to start running a trade surplus. Ideally that would come from an increase in foreign demand for US goods and services, and not by a deflationary bust in the US. For this to occur, a structural change will need to occur in the global economy that promotes balanced international capital flows. For a period we need countries like China, Japan and Germany to run trade deficits. Such a structural change does not seem at hand. Until that time, the US's only escape valve is for a weak dollar to support exports and to drive dollar investment abroad. The investment abroad will flow into emerging market financial bubbles, which will increase foreign demand and reduce the trade deficits in developed markets.
Without structural change, the likely outcome is continued high government deficits, low US interest rates, a weak dollar and financial bubbles in emerging markets. This is the trend to ride for this business cycle…just be sure to get off before it blows up.
Floyd Norris from the New York Times hits the nail on the head with this article. Bankers get paid so much because the system lets financial firms make so much money.
In my last post I outlined how I'd assess the quality of future GDP growth. I expected to see near term growth coming from a combination of of export growth and government spending near term with business investment eventually taking the baton from government near term. I also said how I would not want to see growth that comes from consumption of consumer goods (with a high propensity to import) and housing investment. (I use nominal GDP vs. real GDP, becuase I care about actual cash changing hands, and inflation is relatively low.)
The change in nominal GDP from Q2 to Q3 was $150.3 billion. Personal consumption expenditures was up $162.6 billion, although $39.4 billion came from increased sales of autos and $48.1 billion came from gasoline and other fuels. Imports of autos increased $43.2 billion, meaning that the increase in auto sales, partly fuelled by the "cash for clunkers" program, was a net drag on GDP growth. We also imported $42.1 billion of petroleum products. In other words, the net effect on GDP from domestinc demand in the auto and petroleum sectors (excluding changes in inventories) was a net gain of $2.2 billion. Exports of autos and parts increased $20.2 billion thanks to increased demand abroad.
Residential construction increased $15 billion, or about 10% of the net increase in GDP. Given the excess supply already existing in the housing market, I consider this to be low-quality growth, spurred temporarily by the first-time buyer tax credit.
Business investment added $2.9 billion to GDP growth, more than all of which came from a smaller decline in changes in inventories. Business investment in structures fell $24.5 billion and investment in software and equipment fell $1.7 billion. I expect investment in structures (largely commercial real estate) to continue to fall and for investment in inventories, software and equipment to start to rise.
Government spending added $28.6 billion to growth.
Exports increased $69.5 billion and imports excluding autos and oil was up $32.6 billion, a net increase of $36.9. Imports of autos and oil was $85.3 billion, accounting for 72% of the increase in imports. Thus the net drag from total net exports was $48.4 billion.
If we strip out the effect of housing investment, domestic auto sales and domestic oil consumption, "quality" GDP growth was $128.5 billion, or 3.7% nominal GDP growth. Government spending accounted for $28.6 billion of that growth, meaning $99.9 billion of nominal GDP growth came from "quality" private sources. That would have yielded 2.9% nominal GDP growth.
All-in-all, not bad.
Over the past several weeks I've started several posts with titles like "Time for the Fed to Raise Rates", "Where are the adults?", "Time to cut the Deficit" and "Time to Stand up to the Chinese". Each time, however, I've thought about the facts and stopped. As I've stated many times before, the Dynamist tries to be a neutral observer of how the world actually is, not a prescriber of how the world should be. In a perfect world, I would like to see a more stable set of economic policies that promote balance and equilibrium. In the real world we have something very different: a volatile set of economic policies that try to promote long term equilibrium by shifts in short term disequilibrium. The US government adopts aggressive new policy imbalances to deal with old economic imbalances. The first step in developing an economic outlook is to assess the imbalances in the economy and to prioritize how and when they will get dealt with. As I have done so, I have come to the conclusion that our government is actually doing pretty well under the circumstances.
How we got here
The last 40 years or so have been a period of transition between the "old economy" and the "new economy". The new economy is the R&D-centric, globalized economy driven by technology, biotech and health care, financed by equity, based in the Northeast, parts of the Upper Midwest and the Pacific Coast. The old economy is the consumption-centric economy driven by automobiles, residential investment, petroleum, mass agriculture, mass media and retail, financed by debt, based everywhere but prominent in the Sunbelt and Rust Belt.
Government policy in the time of transition has been a hodge-podge that has favored both economies, allowing the new economy to thrive and supporting globalization, while continuing to heavily subsidize housing, petroleum, mass agriculture and cheap imports (with an overvalued dollar) and encouraging the over-production of automobiles. The US military subsidizes both economies, investing in new technologies and protecting the flow of oil from the Middle East.
So while some of the new economy innovations like derivatives and hedge funds helped us get into the mess we're in, the real problem has come in the collapse of the old economy. Securitized housing and consumer loans are what blew up the balance sheets of US banks. The other, lesser culprits for banking problems are the LBO loans made to buy old economy companies.
The way forward
The way forward is for the Obama administration to complete the transition. Policies meant to prop up the old economy, like "cash for clunkers", the homebuyer tax credit the use of now-nationalized Fannie Mae to effectively dominate the market for housing loans, will only offer short-term salves and cannot lead to sustainable recovery. There is no going back to the old housing, consumer credit and retail bubble.
Other Obama policies have encouraged the transition. The reduction of auto capacity makes sense, as does encouraging the move to hybrid and electric cars. The proposed consumer protection agency, the proposed reining in of financial system leverage and other financial market reforms should discourage consumer borrowing. Long term I would expect to see Fannie Mae dismantled and perhaps an end to the favorable treatment received by corporate borrowing over equity financing. The proposed cap-and-trade scheme, for all its flaws, would also encourage the move away from imported petroleum, the biggest source of our structural trade deficit. Even health reform, if it is structured in a way that doesn't stifle innovation, will be a benefit if it levels the health care playing field between small businesses and large corporations.
One of the core tenets of Dynamism is that the American people tend to elect the right government for the times. They will shift around control of the presidency and congress to adjust for imbalances that build up. The US system also leaves the opposition in a powerful enough position that they can help prevent excessive imbalances from building up. The American people were right to favor conservative economic policies over the past 30 years. They were also right to support Obama last year. At some point, when deficits become the most important problem, they will elect a Republican congress. That time is not likely 2010, however.
GDP Outlook
Thanks to the TARP, the Fed's "unconventional measures" and some deft maneuvering by Treasury, the financial system has been stabilized, although many of its underlying problems remain. Now that the financial system is stabilized, GDP can grow. GDP always wants to grow. GDP growth is driven by business competition, which leads to innovation, which leads to investment and hiring, and so on. Business competition gets interrupted when there are financial sector problems. In business competition, there are always businesses on the rise and businesses in decline. In good times, the declining businesses are shielded a bit from their core problems. In bad times those problems are magnified. Recessions accelerate the trends that are already in place. Thus the continued shift of employment from manufacturing to health care. After a bubble, however, a recession can also mark a major turning point. I would argue that we are witnessing a major turning point in housing, energy and retail.
Residential investment has been declining as a percent of GDP since 2005, while personal consumption expenditures as a percent of GDP have been flat. Because personal consumption is less volatile than business investment, it usually rises as a percent of GDP in a recession. As an aside, also notice that the big surge in consumption as a percent of GDP came during periods of supposedly "supply-side" tax cuts in the early 1980s and early 2000s (and late 1990s, with the cuts in capital gains taxes on equities and housing).
Clearly a key pillar of demand during the recession has been the government.
While residential investment as a percent of GDP has fallen by 2 percentage points since 2005, government spending has risen by the same amount. Government spending is now back up to the levels of the 1980s and still below the levels of the 1950s and 1960s. Going forward, increased infrastructure and health care spending will likely be offset by decreases in spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and by state and local governments, meaning that government spending will likely remain in the 21% of GDP range for the intermediate term.
Where I'd like to see the next wave of demand come from would be exports.
The drag of net imports has been reduced by more than 3 percentage points of GDP since 2005, but this has been driven more by the collapse of imports than by an increase in exports.
The key will be to see if exports start increasing as a percent of GDP while imports are stable or declining. As I've said many times before, a sustained reduction in our trade deficit or the creation of a trade surplus driven by export gains would be the most effective and least painful way to reduce US public and private indebtedness.
Once the recovery has clear traction, business investment should recover.
Business investment as a percentage of GDP is at the lowest level since recessions in the 1950s, a period when business investment was effectively suppressed by government policies. The recovery in investment is likely to be "U" shaped, like in the early 1990s. I expect stabilization by the fourth quarter of 2009, but no real sustained increases until late 2010 at the earliest.
Summary
In summary, when examining GDP during the upcoming expansion, look for the following:
We should also expect to see a reformation of the corporate tax code, lowering rates across the board while eliminating some of the subsidies for old economy industries.
Because the US Government is a very large actor in the US economy, and because many of the same principles that apply to analyzing economic cycles applies to politics as well.
Maybe Ron Paul was on to something (9/30/08)
Is the North rising again? (10/16/08)
Was 2008 a realigning election? I’m thinking it probably was. (11/5/08)
Crony Capitalism still Reigns Supreme (4/20/09)
The New Deal’s great mistake (5/3/09)
Post-Lehman: The Banking Oligopoly Reigns Supreme (9/15/09)
David Brooks backs up the Dynamist (9/18/09)
The GOP Will Not Repeal Obamacare (3/23/10)
US Politics: The Middle Class is Still Up for Grabs (10/31/10)
In the third quarter of 2009, we have seen some pretty significant market shifts relative to the second quarter. To refresh yourself on how my market valuation model works, please refer to this page.
Inflation and the Treasury Yield Curve
As I outlined in my May 25th post "Inflation is not a threat (yet)", I look at the treasury curve, the dollar and gold to take the market's pulse on inflation.
The TIPS spread, which is the difference between the nominal yield on bonds less the yield on the Treasury Inflation Protected Security (TIPS) has seen some interesting shifts. While the 10-year inflation rate has remained right around 1.7%, the 5-year inflation rate rose from 0.8% on May 25 to 1.7% at the end of Q2, to 2.2% at the end of Q3. The 30-year inflation rate, on the other hand, has fallen from 2.2% on May 25 to 2.0% at the end of Q3.
Embedded in these numbers is the assumption that inflation surges from zero today to average 2.2% per year over the next 5 years. Inflation is then expected to slow to 1.3% per year from 2015 to 2019, before averaging 2.1% per year for the 20 years after that. This scenario is plausible. It implies a surge in economic activity after all the stimulus currently in the pipeline, before re-succumbing to the disinflationary undertow as the economic cycle turns down several years from now.
My other near-term inflation signals are also flashing yellow. Gold has traded to slightly higher than $1000 per ounce, and the dollar is very close to the bottom of its long term trading range. They aren't yet past the point where I'll start screaming that the Fed needs to hit the brakes, but they are right at the edge.
What does a flattening of the real yield curve mean?
In my May 25th post I discussed how the proper rate for overnight money is around 2.75% if inflation is averaging 2% per year. This would deliver a zero percent after-tax, after inflation rate of return, which is what you should earn for taking no risk. That would imply an equilibrium overnight TIPS spread of 0.75%. In my equilibrium model, I have assumed an upward-sloping real yield curve of 1% for the 2-year, 1.5% for the 5-year, 2% for the 10-year and 2.5% for the 30-year. The current TIPS real yield curve is 0.5% below my "equilibrium" along the curve from the 5-year on. The difference between the 0.75% overnight real yield and the higher yields further out is driven by uncertainty regarding future inflation volatility, which increases as the time horizon gets longer. If the TIPS curve has flattened, that implies that future inflation volatility assumptions have come down.
Much of the flattening move came in the last week after Fed Governor Kevin Warsh wrote an Opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal declaring that the Fed would be vigilant about removing stimulus if inflation became a threat. In other words, they wouldn't make the mistake they made earlier this decade, when they let inflation run and were too slow to remove monetary accommodation. If a flatter TIPS curve becomes a permanent feature of the financial markets, then asset yields would come down permanently and asset values would rise permanently.
What happens to my market equilibrium assumptions?
(As a reminder, I use the yield of various Vanguard bond mutual funds for my market rates of non-treasury bonds, my treasury yield curve information is from the PIMCO web site and my S&P 500 earnings estimates come from Standard and Poors)
The rally in TIPS is catching up to the rally in the bond market generally and allowing the intermediate and long ends of the treasury, muni and corporate bond markets to be in proximity to fair value, while the short end of the curve is still overvalued.
The equity market (S&P 500) is about 22% overvalued if you feel the proper return is 7% per year. 7.1% per year would imply a 5% equity risk premium in after-tax terms to the 30-year treasury bond. The market is currently pricing in an equity risk premium of about 4.5%, which is low by historical standards, but in line with the drop in TIPS term risk premiums.
What level of S&P 500 earnings am I using?
As a reminder, I am using the long-term trend for inflation-adjusted AS REPORTED earnings. The next twelve month trend earnings number I am using is $56.56, and assume it grows at its historical inflation-adjusted rate of 1.64% plus the market long-term inflation rate of 2%. In the press you often hear a higher number for earnings, which is the operating earnings number for the next twelve months. Operating earnings allows for companies to exclude the effects of all of the poor acquisitions and perma-restructurings they conduct. The long term trend in as reported earnings gives a much more accurate view of accrual of value to the equity holders. With the S&P at 1030, the price to trend forward earnings ratio is 18, well above the long term average of about 14. The actual top-down, as-reported earnings number projected by S&P analysts for 2009 is only $39.35.
Conclusion
It's tough to have conviction about this market. It's good that the embedded volatility premium in the market has declined, but if it rises again (which it very well could) valuations of bonds and stocks could fall a great deal. Rising tax rates could hit the valuations of stocks and bonds pretty well, too. With inflation signals flashing yellow, the Fed could very well start pulling back stimulation soon. I have made a series of adjustments to my investment model to justify the shifts occurring in the markets. Either we've entered into a permanently low-return world, in which case these markets make sense, or we're rationalizing the effects of cheap liquidity and are in for a rude awakening sometime in the not-too-distant future.
Given a lot of unexciting choices, I like muni bonds, hedged with cash, a bit of gold and crossed fingers.
Disclosure: I am not a financial advisor. Seek investment advice from your own financial advisor.
I am on the record as someone who thinks the war in Afghanistan, as currently contemplated, is a waste of US blood and treasure. I was also someone who was hopeful that Bush could have figured out some way to pull a "Nixon-goes-to-China" by opening relations with Iran. He did not live up to that hope. Obama has suggested the he would reach out to Iran, but it usually doesn't work that way. Iran views Obama as a dove and thus is plowing ahead with its nuclear program figuring it will not face any real consequences.
George Friedman of Strategic Forecasting ("Stratfor") lays out Obama's choices in the article attached below. He also thinks Afghanistan is basically unwinnable in the near term. He also thinks that Obama is being backed in to making his choice soon.
1. He can attack Iran and increase forces in Afghanistan (still leaving us stuck in Afghanistan)
2. He can withdraw from Afghanistan and ignore Iran (leaving all our allies in the lurch)
3. He can increase forces in Afghanistan and ignore Iran (the worst outcome)
4. He can withdraw from Afghanistan and attack Iran (the most logical strategy, politics aside)
Neither of these options seems particularly attractive.
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OBAMA'S MOVE: IRAN AND AFGHANISTAN
By George Friedman
During the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign, now-U.S. Vice President Joe Biden said that like all U.S. presidents, Barack Obama would face a foreign policy test early in his presidency if elected. That test is now here.
His test comprises two apparently distinct challenges, one in Afghanistan and one in Iran. While different problems, they have three elements in common. First, they involve the question of his administration's overarching strategy in the Islamic world. Second, the problems are approaching decision points (and making no decision represents a decision here). And third, they are playing out very differently than Obama expected during the 2008 campaign.
During the campaign, Obama portrayed the Iraq war as a massive mistake diverting the United States from Afghanistan, the true center of the "war on terror." He accordingly promised to shift the focus away from Iraq and back to Afghanistan. Obama's views on Iran were more amorphous. He supported the doctrine that Iran should not be permitted to obtain nuclear weapons, while at the same time asserted that engaging Iran was both possible and desirable. Embedded in the famous argument over whether offering talks without preconditions was appropriate (something now-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton attacked him for during the Democratic primary) was the idea that the problem with Iran stemmed from Washington's refusal to engage in talks with Tehran.
We are never impressed with campaign positions, or with the failure of the victorious candidate to live up to them. That's the way American politics work. But in this case, these promises have created a dual crisis that Obama must make decisions about now.
Iran
Back in April, in the midst of the financial crisis, Obama reached an agreement at the G-8 meeting that the Iranians would have until Sept. 24 and the G-20 meeting to engage in meaningful talks with the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany (P-5+1) or face intensely increased sanctions. His administration was quite new at the time, so the amount of thought behind this remains unclear. On one level, the financial crisis was so intense and September so far away that Obama and his team probably saw this as a means to delay a secondary matter while more important fires were flaring up.
But there was more operating than that. Obama intended to try to bridge the gap between the Islamic world and the United States between April and September. In his speech to the Islamic world from Cairo, he planned to show a desire not only to find common ground, but also to acknowledge shortcomings in U.S. policy in the region. With the appointment of special envoys George Mitchell (for Israel and the Palestinian territories) and Richard Holbrooke (for Pakistan and Afghanistan), Obama sought to build on his opening to the Islamic world with intense diplomatic activity designed to reshape regional relationships.
It can be argued that the Islamic masses responded positively to Obama's opening — it has been asserted to be so and we will accept this — but the diplomatic mission did not solve the core problem. Mitchell could not get the Israelis to move on the settlement issue, and while Holbrooke appears to have made some headway on increasing Pakistan's aggressiveness toward the Taliban, no fundamental shift has occurred in the Afghan war.
Most important, no major shift has occurred in Iran's attitude toward the United States and the P-5+1 negotiating group. In spite of Obama's Persian New Year address to Iran, the Iranians did not change their attitude toward the United States. The unrest following Iran's contested June presidential election actually hardened the Iranian position. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad remained president with the support of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, while the so-called moderates seemed powerless to influence their position. Perceptions that the West supported the demonstrations have strengthened Ahmadinejad's hand further, allowing him to paint his critics as pro-Western and himself as an Iranian nationalist.
But with September drawing to a close, talks have still not begun. Instead, they will begin Oct. 1. And last week, the Iranians chose to announce that not only will they continue work on their nuclear program (which they claim is not for military purposes), they have a second, hardened uranium enrichment facility near Qom. After that announcement, Obama, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy held a press conference saying they have known about the tunnel for several months, and warned of stern consequences.
This, of course, raises the question of what consequences. Obama has three choices in this regard.
First, he can impose crippling sanctions against Iran. But that is possible only if the Russians cooperate. Moscow has the rolling stock and reserves to supply all of Iran's fuel needs if it so chooses, and Beijing can also remedy any Iranian fuel shortages. Both Russia and China have said they don't want sanctions; without them on board, sanctions are meaningless.
Second, Obama can take military action against Iran, something easier politically and diplomatically for the United States to do itself rather than rely on Israel. By itself, Israel cannot achieve air superiority, suppress air defenses, attack the necessary number of sites and attempt to neutralize Iranian mine-laying and anti-ship capability all along the Persian Gulf. Moreover, if Israel struck on its own and Iran responded by mining the Strait of Hormuz, the United States would be drawn into at least a naval war with Iran — and probably would have to complete the Israeli airstrikes, too.
And third, Obama could choose to do nothing (or engage in sanctions that would be the equivalent of doing nothing). Washington could see future Iranian nuclear weapons as an acceptable risk. But the Israelis don't, meaning they would likely trigger the second scenario. It is possible that the United States could try to compel Israel not to strike — though it's not clear whether Israel would comply — something that would leave Obama publicly accepting Iran's nuclear program.
And this, of course, would jeopardize Obama's credibility. It is possible for the French or Germans to waffle on this issue; no one is looking to them for leadership. But for Obama simply to acquiesce to Iranian nuclear weapons, especially at this point, would have significant diplomatic and domestic political ramifications. Simply put, Obama would look weak — and that, of course, is why the Iranians announced the second nuclear site. They read Obama as weak, and they want to demonstrate their own resolve. That way, if the Russians were thinking of cooperating with the United States on sanctions, Moscow would be seen as backing the weak player against the strong one. The third option, doing nothing, therefore actually represents a significant action.
Afghanistan
In a way, the same issue is at stake in Afghanistan. Having labeled Afghanistan as critical — indeed, having campaigned on the platform that the Bush administration was fighting the wrong war — it would be difficult for Obama to back down in Afghanistan. At the same time, the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, has reported that without a new strategy and a substantial increase in troop numbers, failure in Afghanistan is likely.
The number of troops being discussed, 30,000-40,000, would bring total U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan to just above the number of troops the Soviet Union deployed there in its war (just under 120,000) — a war that ended in failure. The new strategy being advocated would be one in which the focus would not be on the defeat of the Taliban by force of arms, but the creation of havens for the Afghan people and protecting those havens from the Taliban.
A move to the defensive when time is on your side is not an unreasonable strategy. But it is not clear that time is on Western forces' side. Increased offensives are not weakening the Taliban. But halting attacks and assuming that the Taliban will oblige the West by moving to the offensive, thereby opening itself to air and artillery strikes, probably is not going to happen. And while assuming that the country will effectively rise against the Taliban out of the protected zones the United States has created is interesting, it does not strike us as likely. The Taliban is fighting the long war because it has nowhere else to go. Its ability to maintain military and political cohesion following the 2001 invasion has been remarkable. And betting that the Pakistanis will be effective enough to break the Taliban's supply lines is hardly the most prudent bet.
In short, Obama's commander on the ground has told him the current Afghan strategy is failing. He has said that unless that strategy changes, more troops won't help, and that a change of strategy will require substantially more troops. But when we look at the proposed strategy and the force levels, it is far from obvious that even that level of commitment will stand a chance of achieving meaningful results quickly enough before the forces of Washington's NATO allies begin to withdraw and U.S. domestic resolve erodes further.
Obama has three choices in Afghanistan. He can continue to current strategy and force level, hoping to prolong failure long enough for some undefined force to intervene. He can follow McChrystal's advice and bet on the new strategy. Or he can withdraw U.S. forces from Afghanistan. Once again, doing nothing — the first option — is doing something quite significant.
The Two Challenges Come Together
The two crises intermingle in this way: Every president is tested in foreign policy, sometimes by design and sometimes by circumstance. Frequently, this happens at the beginning of his term as a result of some problem left by his predecessor, a strategy adopted in the campaign or a deliberate action by an antagonist. How this happens isn't important. What is important is that Obama's test is here. Obama at least publicly approached the presidency as if many of the problems the United States faced were due to misunderstandings about or the thoughtlessness of the United States. Whether this was correct is less important than that it left Obama appearing eager to accommodate his adversaries rather than confront them.
No one has a clear idea of Obama's threshold for action.
In Afghanistan, the Taliban takes the view that the British and Russians left, and that the Americans will leave, too. We strongly doubt that the force level proposed by McChrystal will be enough to change their minds. Moreover, U.S. forces are limited, with many still engaged in Iraq. In any case, it isn't clear what force level would suffice to force the Taliban to negotiate or capitulate — and we strongly doubt that there is a level practical to contemplate.
In Iran, Ahmadinejad clearly perceives that challenging Obama is low-risk and high reward. If he can finally demonstrate that the United States is unwilling to take military action regardless of provocations, his own domestic situation improves dramatically, his relationship with the Russians deepens, and most important, his regional influence — and menace — surges. If Obama accepts Iranian nukes without serious sanctions or military actions, the American position in the Islamic world will decline dramatically. The Arab states in the region rely on the United States to protect them from Iran, so U.S. acquiescence in the face of Iranian nuclear weapons would reshape U.S. relations in the region far more than a hundred Cairo speeches.
There are four permutations Obama might choose in response to the dual crisis. He could attack Iran and increase forces in Afghanistan, but he might well wind up stuck in a long-term war in Afghanistan. He could avoid that long-term war by withdrawing from Afghanistan and also ignore Iran's program, but that would leave many regimes reliant on the United States for defense against Iran in the lurch. He could increase forces in Afghanistan and ignore Iran — probably yielding the worst of all possible outcomes, namely, a long-term Afghan war and an Iran with a nuclear program if not nuclear weapons.
On pure logic, history or politics aside, the best course is to strike Iran and withdraw from Afghanistan. That would demonstrate will in the face of a significant challenge while perhaps reshaping Iran and certainly avoiding a drawn-out war in Afghanistan. Of course, it is easy for those who lack power and responsibility — and the need to govern — to provide logical choices. But the forces closing in on Obama are substantial, and there are many competing considerations in play.
Presidents eventually arrive at the point where something must be done, and where doing nothing is very much doing something. At this point, decisions can no longer be postponed, and each choice involves significant risk. Obama has reached that point, and significantly, in his case, he faces a double choice. And any decision he makes will reverberate.
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Copyright 2009 Stratfor.
I was pleased to read David Brooks' column today in the New York Times that (more eloquently) furthers the theme of my last article, "Post-Lehman: The Banking Oligopoly Reigns Supreme", albeit from a slightly different angle. My thesis was that the Obama administration has laid out, and is executing on, a very Hamiltonian restructuring of the financial system, while the Republicans seem to be migrating into the classic Jacksonian camp. This was interesting to me because the two parties are switching places, with the Democrats moving away from their Southern agrarian roots (the Jeffersonian / Jacksonian camp) toward becoming the party of Northern urban elites (the Hamiltonian camp). The Republicans are making the opposite migration. I was focused on finance, because that is the classic cleavage between Hamiltonians and the Jeffersonians dating back to the beginning of the Republic.
David Brooks takes it a step further to use the ancient split as the metaphor to the whole populist reaction to the Obama administration. He (accurately) dismisses the most-popular explanation that has been floating around: that these rubes can't handle the fact that we have a black president. He and I believe the reaction to Obama's policies would have been the same if he were white. While I agree with many of president Obama's goals (and, to a lesser extent, policies), his platform is a classic "we know what's best for you" set of policies being aggressively pushed by an administration that seems to consist mostly of college professors. You don't have to be a racist hick to be alarmed by the massive changes to a huge portion of our economy paid for with an ungodly sum of borrowed money pushed by an elitist group of people with very little "real world" experience.
The Hamiltonians have always favored strong federal authority,
centralized financial power, the use of federal debt and strong
intervention in the economy to promote favored industries. The
Jeffersonians and Jacksonians distrusted the urban elites that pushed
these policies and believed that such policies bred corruption and
therefore favored diffusing power among the people. The history of the United States has always been driven by the tension between these two camps. Whenever one side is given unchecked power, the other side goes crazy.
As Mr. Brooks puts it:
Barack Obama leads a government of the highly educated. His
movement includes urban politicians, academics, Hollywood donors and
information-age professionals. In his first few months, he has fused
federal power with Wall Street, the auto industry, the health care
industries and the energy sector.
Given all of this, it was
guaranteed that he would spark a populist backlash, regardless of his
skin color. And it was guaranteed that this backlash would be ill
mannered, conspiratorial and over the top — since these movements
always are, whether they were led by Huey Long, Father Coughlin or
anybody else.
The Dynamist tries to be as neutral an observer of events and trends as possible. Both the Hamiltonians and the Jeffersonians have valid arguments, but they have different priorities, and those differences will never be bridged. Thankfully, most Americans do not fall neatly into either camp and and are wary of aggressive policies from either side.
I just pray that, through all the Sturm und Drang, in the end the American center holds.