It is,
in many ways, the most important debate of our time. Should governments adopt a
policy of austerity or should they try to spend their way out of debt?
Austerity or profligacy… that is the
question. It is a complicated and
difficult question, one that goes largely beyond my own education and training.
Yet, the
debate bears an eerie resemblance to another one with which I am more familiar.
That
would be the debate between repression and expression. Those who see increased
government spending as the proper therapy for the debt crisis echo the notion
that complete self-expression will ultimately be good for your health.
Austerity
feels like repression. Profligacy feels like expression. According to our
culture, the first is bad and the second is good.
I think
it fair to say that most people have only the fuzziest notion of the realities
of the current fiscal crisis.
If so,
that suggests that they form opinions based on other considerations, namely
those that involve cultural values.
As a
nation, we no longer value thrift; we value conspicuous consumption.
If we
do not have the money, we spend anyway because we have a line of credit. We
might not know how we are going to pay off the cheap credit that the bank has
graciously given us, but we have a childlike faith that someone, somewhere, at
some time is going to come along and pay off our debts for us.
If no
one will pay off the debt, we can declare bankruptcy, or default on our loans. This
entails being frozen out of the credit markets, thus, being forced to live within
our means.
If your
lifestyle depends on your access to credit and you suddenly cannot get credit
you will be forced to reduce your spending habits, drastically.
At the
very least, this is painful. It can also produce self-discipline and lead to a
re-establishment of your good credit and a somewhat different lifestyle.
Since
our culture values people to the extent that they spend money and since it recognizes their social value in terms of the spoils the accumulate on their trips to the mall, most of us
feel that living within our means will alienate us from friends and family and
will cause a loss of status and standing.
Obviously,
when you default on a loan, whoever loaned you the money will lose his
investment. And that will affect his personal balance sheet. If he had been
using the interest on the money he loaned you to sustain his own lifestyle, he
will have to spend less, thus diminishing economic activity.
If the
bank loaned you the money, the bank will be forced to write off the bad loan,
thus to take a loss. When the next person asks for a loan the bank will refuse
because it does not have the money on hand. If you use a credit line to run a
business, and the banks cuts off your credit, you will no longer be able to buy
materials, meet payroll, and so on. Thus economic activity will come to a halt.
The
issues are easier to grasp in personal terms. They are far more difficult to
grasp in terms of the world financial system.
On
the side of profligacy we have Nobel laureate Paul Krugman and the voters of
France. On the side of austerity we have Angela Merkel and famed Fed watcher
James Grant.
Krugman has argued that austerity will
produce a depression. If governments stop spending money government employees
will lose their jobs, they will reduce their spending, and the economy will
grind to a halt.
But,
profligate spending only works as long as you can keep borrowing. The Krugmans
of this world want rich governments to continue to ensure the liquidity of the
credit markets, thus allowing poorer governments to avoid the dread austerity.
The
alternative view says that profligate spending cannot last forever, that
producing more worthless money will produce so much inflation that no one will
want to lend money any more.
After
all, why would you accept 5% interest over a year or two when you know that the
currency will inflate at a 10% rate?
On
April 28 James Grant went into the belly of an organization he has called “the
vampire squid,” that is, the New York Fed, to offer his views on the dread
deflation. Grant argued cogently that the alternatives are ill-defined. In
truth, he said, profligate spending only produces a temporary inflation. In the
end it produces the worst kind of deflation.
Anyone
who thinks that the choice is between austerity and profligacy has gotten it
grievously wrong.
Grant
argued that profligacy was instrumental in producing the worst deflation, the deflation of asset prices.
Grant argued that there are two kinds of deflation. In the first, prices decline
because business becomes more productive and efficient. Prices on computers
and television sets, among other things, have become drastically cheaper over
time.
And
yet, since central bankers refuse to accept even this level of mild deflation, Grant
adds, they “monetize assets and push down interest rates.”
This is
like when the bank offers you money at 0% interest for a year. It feels like
free money; you feel wealthier; you take the money and you buy something; you to
pay up for your purchases because your enhanced credit line is making you feel
especially flush.
Thus,
merchants and other sellers can charge higher prices because people have access
to cheaper credit.
Of
course, the time will come—it always does—when the bills come due and the debt
must be paid off. At that point, the consumer’s credit dries up and the bank is
burdened with non-performing assets.
The
result is a rush to sell everything and anything at the cheapest possible price…
short sales, foreclosures. This produces the real deflation that Grant sees the
Fed engineering.
Instead
of waiting to be rescued by another Fed-engineered asset bubble, we should live
within our means. For Grant that means a return to the gold standard.
In
Grant’s words:
For reasons you never exactly spell out,
you pledge to resist "deflation." You won't put up with it, you keep
on saying—something about Japan's lost decade or the Great Depression. But you
never say what deflation really is. Let me attempt a definition. Deflation is a
derangement of debt, a symptom of which is falling prices. In a credit crisis,
when inventories become unfinanceable, merchandise is thrown on the market and
prices fall. That's deflation.
What deflation is not is a drop in prices
caused by a technology-enhanced decline in the costs of production. That's
called progress. Between 1875 and 1896, according to Milton Friedman and Anna
Schwartz, the American price level subsided at the average rate of 1.7% a year.
And why not? As technology was advancing, costs were tumbling.
Long before Joseph Schumpeter coined the
phrase "creative destruction," the American economist David A. Wells,
writing in 1889, was explaining the consequences of disruptive innovation.
"In the last analysis," Wells proposes, "it will appear that
there is no such thing as fixed capital; there is nothing useful that is very
old except the precious metals, and life consists in the conversion of forces.
The only capital which is of permanent value is immaterial—the experience of
generations and the development of science."
Much the same sentiments, and much the same
circumstances, apply today, but with a difference. Digital technology and a
globalized labor force have brought down production costs. But, the central
bankers declare, prices must not fall. On the contrary, they must rise by 2% a
year.
To engineer this up-creep, the Bernankes,
the Kings, the Draghis—and yes, sadly, even the Dudleys—of the world monetize
assets and push down interest rates. They do this to conquer deflation.
But note, please, that the suppression of
interest rates and the conjuring of liquidity set in motion waves of
speculative lending and borrowing. This artificially induced activity serves to
lift the prices of a favored class of asset—houses, for instance, or Mitt Romney's
portfolio of leveraged companies.
And when the central bank-financed bubble
bursts, credit contracts, leveraged businesses teeter, inventories are
liquidated and prices weaken. In short, a process is set in motion resembling a
real deflation, which then calls forth a new bout of monetary intervention. By
trying to forestall an imagined deflation, the Federal Reserve comes perilously
close to instigating the real thing.
The immediate solution is to destroy the debt that should never have been created in the first place, but we don't like that because it hurts.
ReplyDeleteWe essentially have a completely unhinged credit system at this point in the cycle.
Basically the system is unstable and bad things will eventually happen because the models don't track reality.
Here's the best snippet I can come up with from Doug Noland within the 30 seconds I'm dedicating to this comment. I've read basically all of his material (see www.prudentbear.com):
"In respect for economic history and brilliant but long-dead monetary thinkers, some years back I assigned the “inflationist” label to the outspoken Keynesians. Paul Krugman now calls his analytical/policy adversaries the “austerians,” an entertaining update to the wretched “liquidationists” and “Bubble poppers” from bygone eras. In this epic battle of inflationists vs. austerians, I’ll place my bets on the superior constructs of the “austerian” analytical framework. And, as the perennial optimist, I remain hopeful that contemporaneous analysis will at some point help (re-)expose the many flaws and misrepresentations of inflationist ideology.
To be sure, those promoting only more aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus ignore Credit theory and financial history. There is absolutely no discussion of Credit Bubbles or financial Manias – as if there’s no evidence that either has ever existed. Dr. Krugman proposes only more egregious deficits and central bank monetization without factoring in myriad risks, including the risks of Credit revulsion, currency collapse and global financial meltdown. Rather than 2008 developments alerting officials to systemic Credit collapse vulnerability, the inflationists have hung their (and everyone's) hats on the specious “100-year flood” premise.
When the inflationists point to consumer price inflation as the predominant risk to their suggested policy course (and then quickly dismiss it), it just strikes me as disingenuous. They somehow ignore how the current policymaking course is increasingly impairing the creditworthiness of the heart of our and the world’s financial systems. They disregard how these policies have patently contributed to unprecedented global economic imbalances. Moreover, the inflationists somehow remain oblivious that policy interventions have fomented dangerous speculative dynamics throughout global securities markets.
Quite complex dynamics have become critical to macro analysis. From my study of Credit inflations, it is clear that unfettered Credit growth attains a propensity for exponential expansion throughout the upside phase of the Credit cycle. Pro-cyclical policymaking, especially in our age of unconstrained global finance, fundamentally exacerbates Credit boom and bust cyclicality. The current interplay of global Credit cycles is extraordinary: Europe’s Credit Bubble is bursting, China’s (and the developing world’s) is booming, and ours is somewhere in between.
Importantly, in the late phase of Credit excess, in what I refer to as the “terminal phase,” things tend to go haywire. First, the amount of new Credit balloons uncontrollably, while the resulting heightened risk of a bust invariably ensures aggressive pro-Bubble policy interventions. Second, as the quality of the new Credit deteriorates, the overall increase in system Credit risk turns parabolic, imperiling highly exposed (leveraged) financial sectors. Third, this bulge of risky new finance tends to be distributed haphazardly throughout the real economy. In short, well-entrenched Monetary Processes responsible for huge amounts of risky finance foster malinvestment, economic fragility, wealth-redistributions, and destabilizing speculation. “Activist” inflationary policymaking exacerbates these deleterious processes, and the inflationists completely disregard ample global evidence of this harsh reality."
Thank you, JP. The debate about austerity and spending is clearly of great importance. Comments that help us all to understand it are much appreciated.
ReplyDeleteThis debate as presented here is doomed to be never ending. The drunks search for the keys under the streetlamp because the light is better!
ReplyDeleteAll things in the universe "clump" - stars, galaxies, microbes and yes, wealth. Those who have wealth have their hands on the levers to gravitate to more wealth. "Bubbles" caused by short-selling and market manipulation have led to distributions of money that bears no connection to any underlying value. Money has lost its meaning. Its not the loans that are the problem its the interest payments. Why, when interest is near zero for the big players, can a homeowner not write down the interest on his loans? The answer is because that's where the profits are made. Somehow austerity stops with those speculators who are reaping interest profits on collateral that is totally disconnected in value from the loan. So no, the investor doesn't lose his investment when it goes to market value, his investment reaches alignment with reality.
The austerity argument, on its face violates the laws of simple grade school arithmetic. Fire government workers, reduce the number of real "job creators", stores closing due to insufficient customers fire employees and on and on the vicious cycle goes.
Here's the reality, a government's budget is not just a scaled up version of a household budget with the same goals as those discussed around the kitchen table. A nation has resources,human and otherwise. It is the government's job to maximize the use of those resources through fiscal policy as well as commercial enterprise. Are those unemployed in Greece just useless individuals with no value to society? No, it is the failure of the distorted financial system that misappropriates and misallocates resources for the benefit of a few well-placed speculators.
While economics can be complex, most people tend to think in terms of simplicity. For right now Germany=good, Greece=bad. The Germans practiced economic morality, that is a practice of savings, proper interest rates, and the avoidance of debt. When the euro crises began, people started pulling their money out of Greece and other suspect countries and moved it to Germany and any other country they deemed as "safe". If a country develops a good reputation prior to an economic crises, it may find itself flourishing or at least doing okay while other countries suffer during an economic crises.
ReplyDeleteHow can economic morality help a country in the midst of an economic crises? Check out the economic success of South Tyrol in Italy. It's booming while the rest of Italy is in the dumps. It neither had to practice austerity or profligacy.