Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 1 Num. 12 ====================================== ("Quid coniuratio est?") ----------------------------------------------------------------- [CN Editor -- The local all volunteer radio station, WEFT 90.1 FM, has a 1-hour show at 10 A.M. on Saturday mornings called "News From Neptune." The following is a partial transcript of their June 11, 1994 broadcast. Co-hosts are Paul "The Truth" Muth, and Carl Estabrook.] [...] MUTH: ...The other thing unique this week is that I heard a business correspondent mouth something that I have been talking about vis-a-vis Fed [Federal Reserve] policy for awhile. And that was, he frankly said that this isn't so much an anti-inflationary policy of keeping... well, when the Fed was backing off on the interest rate very slowly, uh, and now raising it again -- when it doesn't look like inflation is around... What was Rukeyser's(?) comment that I wanted? -- "Inflation neurotics". ESTABROOK: Yeah. MUTH: But what *I* thought was happening -- and then I heard from a person from NPR [National Public Radio]. I forget who it was, but it was on the nightly business report on Thursday. What really was going on was keeping the "spread" wide. The "spread" is historically high, uh, 3 percent, roughly, I think. ESTABROOK: You should say what we mean by the "spread" here. That's the difference between the *real* interest rate -- the difference, basically, between what banks are lending money at and what they're paying for the money themselves. [CN Editor -- In other words, the Fed loans money to the banks at 3 percent interest. If the banks then charge customers, say, 4 percent to borrow this money, the "spread" is the difference between the two rates of 3 and 4 percent: 1 percent. If the spread is high (e.g. the bankers do not pass on the Fed's lower rates to their customers), the banks make more profit on the money they lend.] MUTH: Right. Right. How much... Generally it's [i.e. the spread] been about 1.5 percent, historically. But it's up to 3 [percent] now. It may have backed off a little bit from that in the raising of the rates. ESTABROOK: So you're suggesting that the policy that's been followed by the Fed and the federal government, together, has been sort of the "Banker's Recovery Act of 1994," Paul? Is that it? MUTH: Indeed. And they didn't have to pass it through Congress... ESTABROOK: Funny about that. MUTH: ...and they didn't have to be embarrassed by having these huge figures that we cited earlier with [Charles] Keating; how much money is being used to bail out the S&Ls. It's being done, uh, by the bankers, themselves. ESTABROOK: So Clinton *did* get his stimulus package. The point was, it just wasn't for the rest of us. It was for the bankers. And they were stimulated. MUTH: And it's quite clear that the profits for banks have been quite good. And the people knew... people who were on the inside, which doesn't... not, not evoking a *huge* conspiracy. But people who have the money and are playing the markets knew that bank stocks were gonna fare well with this kind of policy. And they've, uh, cleaned up again! ESTABROOK: Well, I remember, it was about a year ago, that there was much talk about the unsoundness of the American banking system for a variety of reasons -- including a sort of "historic sclerosis" -- and you don't hear that talk much anymore. And the reason is, I think, exactly as you describe. That what we have here is (by a supposedly "populist" administration), we have a, uh, vast national conspiracy to restore the health of the banks. I've said for awhile that when the evening news talks about "the economy" and how "the economy" is doing, reasonable people translate that word "economy" into the phrase "rich people's money." So we say, "The economy is getting better," -- "Rich people's money is getting better." "The economy is doing worse," -- "Rich people don't have quite so much money as they used to." That's really what's at stake and what we've seen from our supposedly "liberal" administration, is, an aggressive attempt to make sure that rich people's money is O.K. They've done fairly well on that score, huh? MUTH: And so it's "Trickle Down, Plus," basically. ESTABROOK: Only, as we found last time around, it doesn't trickle down very much, does it? MUTH: Well that's... That goes without saying. That's just part of the camouflage. ESTABROOK: Well, in fact, I'm not sure it *does* go without saying, my friend. Because there is such persiflage put forth by the, let's say the "economics profession" (to take a laughable example) about what's happening in the American economy, that it's sometimes difficult to break through the propaganda. Take the issue of wages: We find supposedly competent economists tell you that, "Things are getting better for American wage earners." Well, in fact, that's false. Real wages in this country have been declining for 20 years. The figure that is often given is about 15% over the last 20 years. But Doug Headwood's(?) excellent newsletter put forth, last week, another way of thinking about this that I think is worthwhile. He says, if you look at it in terms of the amount of time it takes for someone earning the average hourly wage -- the *average* now -- to make the equivalent of a household's yearly expenses, *that* figure is up 43 percent over 20 years. That is, it takes you almost half again as long to work to earn the money you need to spend on your basic household expenses. If you want to buy a house, that figure is up 45 percent. For a new car, the average is 57 percent. To pay for a year at an elite college (and this shows, it seems to me, the greater diversion between rich and poor in this country), the figure is up 75 percent over the last 20 years. Now what we have here is a sort of "dumb-bell" shape to the demographics. That is, the middle gets stretched away and we have a two-tiered society, a two-tiered economy. The rich are doing well. Those whose income has risen the equivalent of 75 percent find it no more trouble to send their kid to a good college now than they did 20 years ago. But for those on the other end of the extreme, what was technically possible 20 years ago is now outside of the realm of possibility. Owning a house, say. Sending a kid to an elite college. And this is the sort of change, this is the sort of decline in *real* wages that's even much more serious than the numbers -- even when they aren't "cooked". MUTH: There's a lot of ways of obscuring this. For one, if you focus on the wage earners, then all the people that are living on their inherited wealth and those kind of dividends from stocks, etc. All that money is set aside. You're not looking at that. You're really looking at people that are working. And a lot of times when you see "income," you know, gross average income, reported, all those other figures are put in. So it's quite, you know... And then you can also use the family earning. And that, uh, that factors in the fact that most people who are in families are in two-income earner families. So, uh... ESTABROOK: Right. MUTH: ...that doesn't acknowledge the decay of the quality of life that's come about because of that. ESTABROOK: Absolutely. And that's a crucial point. Part of the problem is that that's been covered over by people saying, "Well, what we have here is just a more just relationship between men and women in the workplace." And insofar as that's true, that's obviously to be applauded. But in *fact* what's happened is that under cover of that, they've produced a situation you just described. And that's clearly a decline in the quality of life of most people in this country. [CN Editor -- Muth/Estabrook seem to be saying that (1) to maintain their standard of living, American families were forced to rely on both spouses being wage earners, and (2) this grim necessity is disguised as being *only* attributable to feminist advances. I wish to add my own theory: The overseers gave the nod to feminism so as to increase the labor pool and drive down the cost of wages.] The work of professional economists is often a matter of obscuring what people know from their own experience. And people aren't fools. People know what's happened to their working life over the last generation. An awful lot of time is spent by our public agencies, whether the Presidency or the Federal Reserve agency [sic, Fed is not a public agency] or academic economists, in trying to obfuscate these facts and trying to "manufacture consent" to a situation that's more and more difficult to consent to. 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