Infrastructure Bills Do Not Lead To Recovery, Only Increased Federal Control

by | Apr 9, 2021 | Headline News | 8 comments

Do you LOVE America?

    Share

    This article was originally published by Brandon Smith of Alt-Market.us at The Birch Gold Group. 

    The concept of infrastructure stimulus has been hyped for decades as a kind of cure-all for economic decline. The propaganda runs parallel to the narrative of the “savior” of the Great Depression, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In fact, one cannot examine the presidency of FDR without being bombarded with one-sided worship of infrastructure spending and the “New Deal.”

    The New Deal is often credited in left-leaning literature as being the singular cure for the depression, and FDR by extension has been handed messiah status among leftists. The New Deal is supposedly proof that massive socialized federal and central bank interventions through public works programs is economic ambrosia. So, it’s not surprising that nearly every president since the Great Depression has argued for an unprecedented infrastructure bill when faced with economic collapse. A large portion of the public on both sides of the aisle has been trained to think these programs will save us.

    Biden, in particular, has made historic stimulus spending the very first platform of his administration, and consistently cites FDR and Lyndon Johnson as patron saints of his infrastructure bill. If it worked for them, then obviously it will work for him… right?

    Actually, the New Deal wasn’t a great deal

    In reality, the public works and welfare programs of FDR in particular had very little to do with the ending of the Great Depression. In fact, the New Deal actually made the situation worse.

    Roosevelt’s own Treasury Secretary, Henry Morgenthau, lamented on May 6th, 1939 after two full terms of FDR’s presidency and stimulus programs that the New Deal was a complete failure. He stated to fellow Democrats during a session of the House Ways and Means Committee that:

    “We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work. And I have just one interest, and if I am wrong… somebody else can have my job. I want to see this country prosperous. I want to see people get a job. I want to see people get enough to eat. We have never made good on our promises… I say after eight years of this Administration we have just as much unemployment as when we started… And an enormous debt to boot!”

    High unemployment and declining living standards were an epidemic in the U.S. throughout the 1930s and well into World War II. The Census Bureau outlines the dismal state of the financial system and the U.S. consumer throughout this period in its “Historical Statistics of the United States.” By 1939 the stock market had crashed on multiple occasions, car sales imploded by 30%, business closures increased by 50%, and real estate foreclosures were still near record highs. The New Deal had achieved minimal benefits of limited scope, but not much else. For the average American, it was as if nothing had changed in a decade.

    That said, for certain major companies and big banks, the gains were incredible. Companies like General Electric, IBM, Proctor and Gamble, and JP Morgan saw endless profits during the Great Depression while buying up smaller competitors for pennies on the dollar. Those companies involved in public works programs siphoned government money like a black hole while very little trickled down to American workers. All in all, the Great Depression was a windfall for the corporate elite as wealth was consolidated and centralized into fewer and fewer hands.

    So we have to ask, if the New Deal was a failure and did nothing to solve the depression problem, what did solve it? Some historians and journalists suggest the beginning of World War II and increased defense spending saved America. This is incorrect. As noted by Robert Higgs, the U.S. standard of living continued to decline throughout World War II. It was not the beginning of the war that saved America, but “After the war, genuine prosperity returned for the first time since 1929.”

    How the U.S. led the world out of the war

    The U.S. was one of the only industrialized nations on the planet that had been left mostly untouched by the destruction. Because of this, all other nations had to turn to the U.S. for manufacturing during the long rebuilding process. In Europe, this process carried on well into the 1950s. The U.S. had very little competition, so much so that the U.S. dollar’s reserve status increased to the point of complete dominance. If you wanted access to manufactured goods, you had to trade with the U.S. and to trade with the U.S., you had to have a stockpile of U.S. dollars.

    What I see today is a change in the flow of global commerce – in the opposite direction from the post-war era. Yes, trillions of dollars in stimulus measures have created a short-term reversal of the pandemic collapse. In fact, there is much evidence to suggest the economy is overheating. Price inflation is becoming rampant in numerous sectors.

    In the meantime, U.S. Treasuries are being dumped by foreign investors and the dollar is in decline. Central banks are now dumping the dollar, decreasing their reserves to the lowest level since 1995.

    China is now the world’s largest manufacturing base, leaving very little major industry on U.S. soil. In the background, globalists are calling for a “Great Reset” of the world economy that would centralize monetary policy even further and create the foundation of a cashless society built on a digital reserve currency system.

    What’s the massive infrastructure spending really about?

    I believe, according to the evidence as well as past failures like the New Deal, that Biden’s infrastructure plans will accelerate the U.S. collapse instead of reversing it. The U.S. GDP might increase, but only because it is calculated to include almost every dime the government prints out of thin air and spends. Production of fiat money is not the same as real production within the economy.

    Trillions of dollars in public works programs might create more jobs, but it will also inflate prices as the dollar goes into decline. So, unless wages are adjusted constantly according to price increases, people will have jobs, but still won’t be able to afford a comfortable standard of living. This leads to stagflation, in which prices continue to rise while wages and consumption stagnate.

    Another Catch-22 to consider is that if inflation becomes rampant, the Federal Reserve may be compelled (or claim they are compelled) to raise interest rates significantly in a short span of time. This means an immediate slowdown in the flow of overnight loans to major banks, an immediate slowdown in loans to large and small businesses, an immediate crash in credit options for consumers, and an overall crash in consumer spending. You might recognize this as the recipe that created the 1981-1982 recession, the third-worst in the 20th century.

    In other words, the choice is stagflation, or deflationary depression.

    Finally, I would point out that there may also be an ulterior motive for the deluge of federal dollars into state economies through public works. Currently, Conservative states are increasingly willing to risk the consequences of returning to business as usual, regardless of federal mandates. Resistance is building against pandemic-related restrictions.

    Red states are also seeing a far superior financial recovery when compared to blue states. Blue states have sabotaged themselves with lockdowns while red states have remained more open. However, the Biden Administration is hell bent on keeping pandemic restrictions in place nationwide

    What if infrastructure spending plans are designed to trap red states into compliance with future covid mandates? What if the goal is to bribe these states with trillions in stimulus, but only if they submit to federal authority? I suspect that Biden’s public works bill is partially intended to be a blue state bailout, and money will be withheld from any conservative state that refuses to conform to lockdowns.

    Only time will tell what the true agenda is, but this much is undeniable given the facts at hand: Biden’s plan is either an act of desperation, a deliberate attempt to pull the rug out from under the U.S. dollar and the economy to jump-start the globalist reset or a scheme to lock state governments into obedience over pandemic restrictions.

    Whatever else Biden’s “New New Deal” is, it is certainly NOT a plan for economic recovery.

    URGENT ON GOLD… as in URGENT

    It Took 22 Years to Get to This Point

    Gold has been the right asset with which to save your funds in this millennium that began 23 years ago.

    Free Exclusive Report
    The inevitable Breakout – The two w’s

      Related Articles

      Comments

      Join the conversation!

      It’s 100% free and your personal information will never be sold or shared online.

      8 Comments

      1. Clearly this “infrastructure” program is being used for the much needed “blue state bailout”. Idiotic (D) states & big cities need massive financial bailouts. As New York (D), California (D), Illinois (D), and other Demonrat states and cities hurl themselves toward bankruptsy, they need to steal money from fiscally responsible states. Sad that the folks doing the right thing must suffer from greater TAXATION so we can bail out the big spenders. But let’s just call it INFRASTRUCTURE.

        • My point being that FDR’s “New Deal” and Biden’s “Infrastructure” programs begin from the same premise. The Demonrat idea that we can SPEND our way out of bankruptsy. During the 1930s that type of idealism contributed to a decline in the “standard of living” for most Americans and huge national DEBT. If we do the same thing, why should we expect a different result?

        • Most of us are going to starve to death in the immediate future, as well the violence and disease accompanying the mass starvation will sweep many away… So we must’nt fret small potatoes, but embrace your demise by the conniving and profligacy and treachery of the likes of nutsy pelousy, and di nazishitstein, and billy masturgates, and wimpsy grahamcracker and his dingledorck buddy bbbitch mcCornhoe… Farewell cruel world. For the good and righteous failed to notice the degeneracy and evil creeping in – and then coward like children once the nasty was revealed.

          • The writing has been on the wall for over 20 years.
            Poverty is the future and there’s nothing we can do to about it.
            Too many people and too few GOOD paying jobs is not long term sustainable.
            A lot of comfortable lifestyles are going to be reduced to poverty over the next 10-15 years.
            Feel for the parents of spoiled kids.
            Spoiled kids will turn on their parents because they no longer get everything they want.
            Feel for all the men that are married to high maintenance women.
            An attractive woman is NOT going to live in poverty if she doesn’t have to.
            You will be traded in for a wealthy man.
            It’s a great time to be single and zero kids.
            It’s a great time to be old.
            It’s going to get MUCH worse than this.
            Buckle up and hang on.

      2. No no
        That’s not what I’m saying to you at all.
        Four weeks ago when the calves were weaned …they were half size of what they are now .
        100% growth in 4 weeks .
        What part of that are you not getting ? Alfredo ?

      3. In the novel and movie called Tobacco Road, and a lane in our local mountains, as well as tax shelter countries, private interests cover the cost of infrastructure, privately.

        It was not accomplished by some chickenhawk, fat on the public dole. Corporate welfare is never “conservative” but always wasteful theft of private resources, earned by useful people.

      4. Let me dispel all of the inaccuracies and fantasies about infrastructure spending, and in particular “future growth”. There will be NO FUTURE GROWTH. PERIOD. THE END. At present the Disjointed States of America can barely sustain 5 million bbl/day oil production domestically, far short consumption. We tear through 20 – 22 million bbl/day. There is not enough ‘recoverable’ oil left world wide for (just) the USA to maintain its dilapidated infrastructure, let alone replace it or repeat what the world did in the last 150 years… Yes indeed people, most of us are going to perish fairly soon – in the next few years. I just LOVE shit with motors…

      Commenting Policy:

      Some comments on this web site are automatically moderated through our Spam protection systems. Please be patient if your comment isn’t immediately available. We’re not trying to censor you, the system just wants to make sure you’re not a robot posting random spam.

      This website thrives because of its community. While we support lively debates and understand that people get excited, frustrated or angry at times, we ask that the conversation remain civil. Racism, to include any religious affiliation, will not be tolerated on this site, including the disparagement of people in the comments section.