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Financing is not funding. Finance is a means of keeping track of
who has agreed to fund what, through contractual arrangements
known as bonds, notes and equity shares. While promises can be
multiplied without limit, the ability to keep them is finite. A
financial promise can be cancelled with other financial
promises, but at the end of the line, if real goods are to be
produced, then a real means of funding must be provided. The
creation of more finance (promises) can never replace the
creation of more real means of funding.
Self-evident
as the above propositions are, economic history is littered with
a long list of attempts to disprove them. The lodestar of
inflationism is the search for a way to create more real funding
out of paper. Antal Fekete's attempt
to resurrect the Real Bills Doctrine is one such
proposal. Fekete's rehabilitation of this long-discredited
doctrine is motivated by an argument that savings are
insufficient to fund production and that
this limitation can be overcome through the issuance
of financial instruments.
The
root of the error in Fekete’s doctrine is the confusion
between finance and funding. Real Bills do not fund anything.
The result of monetizing more bills is merely an increased
quantity of paper claims to the same pool of funding. The
alleged insufficiency of savings to fund investment is based on
a serious misunderstanding of what savings are, compounded by
accounting errors in Fekete’s examples.
I
have dealt with these problems in a series of articles (1
2
3
4).
The current essay illustrates the necessary causal connection
between savings and production through the subsistence fund, a concept that appears in the writings of Austrian economist Richard
von Strigl.
Wealth
is ultimately the ability to consume more goods and services. In
order to consume, there must first be goods suitable for
consumption. (These are called consumption goods or final
goods). Prior to consumption, then, final goods must have
been produced. Goods are costly to produce, so prior to
production, there must be some means of funding the production.
It
is here that Strigl introduced the subsistence fund to explain the relationship between consumption and
production. The subsistence fund is the supply of consumption
goods available at any point in time. In this model, an act of
consumption is a withdrawal from the subsistence fund. The
production of a final good is a deposit in the subsistence fund.
Because
people must consume some goods in order to survive while they
are producing other goods, productive activity can only be
sustained by withdrawals from the subsistence fund.
Consider
the classic example of Robinson Crusoe, who has been shipwrecked
on an island. He sets out to catch fish in order to supply
himself with food. In order to sustain himself, he requires a
daily intake of five fish. The fish are final goods. Working
from dawn to dusk, he can catch ten using his bare hands. He
soon realizes that he could catch twenty fish in the same amount
of time with the aide of a net. However, the net would take ten
days of his time to weave. During ten days of full-time net
making, Crusoe would require a total of 50 fish. Crusoe decides
to dry and set aside five fish each day, until he has
accumulated 50 fish to feed himself during the period of net
weaving.
In
the example, the 50 dried fish form Crusoe's subsistence fund.
When Crusoe adds to the accumulation of dried fish he is saving.
When he consumes the fish during the net fabrication, he is investing.
What is the nature of the net? The net is not consumed directly,
so it is not a final good. The net is a capital good, a
good that was created as a tool that for use in production of
more final goods. The capital stock is simply the total supply of capital goods that
exists at any point.
On
Crusoe’s island we can see the connection between savings,
investment, the capital stock, and the subsistence fund. If
Crusoe ate all his fish on the day that he caught them, then he
would never increase the size of his subsistence fund. If he
saves and invests in capital, then he can create a larger
subsistence fund by using the capital. Strigl explains this
here:
Production
can only be maintained if each attained subsistence fund is used
to support another round-about method of production. It is not,
then, the fact that a subsistence fund exists which makes the
continuation of production possible, but the way in which this
subsistence fund is used: It must not be used in a “purely
consumptive” way, but rather in the sense of “reproductive
consumption,” in the sense of consumption which simultaneously
assures further production…. these consumption goods must be
used in such a way that, simultaneous to their expenditure, a
later attainment of a new return of consumption goods is
assured. (p. 12)
[all
citations to Strigl from Capital
and Production]
One
difference between the example and a modern economy is that in
the example, savings and investment proceed sequentially, while
in a modern economy they are done in parallel. In example, the
subsistence fund is produced in its entirety before the
investment in the net is started, and the fund is completely
consumed by the time the net is done. More realistically, in a
modern economy with a large population, an advanced division of
labor, and a large accumulated capital stock, the creation and
the depletion of the subsistence fund proceed in parallel. Every
day, some final goods are produced, while other final goods are
consumed. Over the course of one year, one year’s subsistence
fund is produced and consumed in continuous increments, even
though one year’s subsistence fund never exists as a stockpile
at any single point in time. As Strigl explains,
In
addition to the subsistence fund, we always find unfinished
products in the various stages of maturity. The supply of
unfinished products is built up in such a way that in each
following week a subsistence fund large enough for one week’s
needs will be finished. Each time, the finished available
subsistence fund of the economy is reduced to a minimum.(p. 13)
Another
difference between the example and a modern economy is division
of labor. In the example, Crusoe saved, invested, produced
capital goods, and final goods. In an advanced economy, with
continuous production and consumption proceeding alongside each
other, some producers create final goods, while others consume
those final goods and produce different final goods or capital
goods, all at more or less the same time.
In
the example, savings are stockpiled, while in a modern economy,
the stockpiling of finished goods is of less importance. In
modern times, large inventories are not necessary as long as
goods are supplied at about the same time and in the same
quantity that they are demanded for consumption. Under these
conditions, as Strigl explains, the size of current inventories
will be small compared to the total subsistence fund:
The
always available subsistence fund [i.e. inventory of finished
goods] will be reduced in importance even more as compared to
the overall supply of goods in various stages of maturity.(p.
13)
Even
in a monetary economy, in-kind savings is not entirely replaced
by monetary saving-and-investing – some stockpiling does
exist. For example, when a consumer purchases a refrigerator
with a ten-year life, then he has saved a stockpile of ten years
in of refrigeration. Even if no new refrigerators were produced
over the next ten years he could continue to have refrigeration
by using up the saved stockpile of refrigeration. The same could
be said of cars, homes, and other long-lasting consumer goods.
In
the Crusoe example, the same person created the final goods
(fish) and the capital good (net). In an advanced economy,
different people generally do these functions. When these
functions are separated, the question arises, how are people who
are not producing final goods able to consume final goods? Where
does their supply of final goods come from? Their supply of
consumption goods can only come from the subsistence fund.
Strigl here elaborates:
the
production of consumer goods must also “support”…the
creation of durable factors of production and the appropriation
of raw materials, i.e., it must supply these production
processes, which themselves produce nothing that can be directly
considered consumer gods, with those consumer goods necessary
for the subsistence of those employed in these production
processes. (p. 19)
Over
time, as capital goods are used, they tend to wear out or are
used up. The capital stock requires continuous new investment in
order to maintain its capacity to produce the subsistence fund.
Remember Crusoe. With daily use, his net will wear out. The
creation of a new net would require either another new period of
savings-and-investment, or ongoing minor repairs.
The
entire existing capital stock is necessary to produce the
current subsistence fund. If the subsistence fund is not to
gradually shrink, then the entire existing stock of capital must
also be repaired, maintained, or replaced. This capital
investment can only be funded out of the subsistence fund. As an
economy grows and becomes more complex, the funding of capital
repair and replacement consumes a large, and generally
increasing, proportion of the subsistence fund itself. As Strigl
explains, "the continuation of production is only possible
if this subsistence fund is again used so that the various
integrated production processes can be carried on
continuously." (p. 13).
How
can the entire capital structure be maintained out of the
subsistence fund? Strigl responds:
-
The
subsistence fund must support everyone who is involved in
producing the finished product.
-
The
subsistence fund must support everyone who is involved in
producing raw materials for the production of means of
subsistence.
-
The
subsistence fund must support everyone who is involved in
the production of machines (relatively durable factors of
production); that is, of those machines used directly in the
production of consumer goods as well as those which are used
in the production processes that precede the production of
consumer goods.
-
Finally,
the subsistence fund must also support everyone who is
involved in producing the raw materials used in the machine
industry. (p. 18-19)
Producers
can be arranged in a sequence from those who create final goods,
to their suppliers, to their suppliers’ suppliers, and so on.
Each firm in the supply chain takes as input partially finished
goods produced by firms at the next stage of the chain. Only
those firms at the very end of the chain produce final goods.
Note
the special role played by the producers of finished products:
they are the only producers whose output directly
contributes to the subsistence fund. All other producers only
make withdrawals from the subsistence fund. The producers of
capital goods indirectly contribute to the subsistence fund
because the capital stock is necessary for the creation of the
subsistence fund.
The
employees at the firms further back in the chain must make
withdrawals from the subsistence fund in order to sustain their
life while they work. And so must their suppliers, and their
suppliers’ suppliers. Everyone, everywhere must make
withdrawals from the subsistence fund. But how do the owners and
employees of the other firms obtain final goods? The firms
further up the supply chain receive a portion of the subsistence
fund as it is passed on down the line from the end of the chain
in payment for partially finished intermediate goods. As long
all firms continue to create new capital or at least replace
their capital stock, any worker wherever he is in the chain,
will be able to make withdrawals from the subsistence fund.
Again we turn to Strigl for commentary:
The
owner of a firm producing finished consumer goods first pays
from the returns of his production everyone who provides him
with originary factors of production for further production,
then everyone who supplies him with raw materials, and lastly,
everyone who renews his stock of machines. The manufacturer of
machines in turn will be able to “work” with the fund he
receives from the sale of his produced factors of production.
With this fund he in turn pays those who make originary factors
of production available to him, those who sell him raw
materials, and those who deliver replacements for used up
machines. In precisely the same way, the producers of raw
materials will support their production with that fund of
consumption goods which they have attained through the sale of
their products. (p. 19)
If
firms, or their owners, did allocate part of the subsistence
fund toward the repair and replacement of their capital stock
when it wore out, a larger portion of the subsistence fund would
be consumed, the capital stock would not be replaced, and when
machines wore out, the subsistence fund would shrink.
Strigl
above defines the “renewal fund” as that portion of the
subsistence fund that is set aside for the construction or
reconstruction of the capital structure. The renewal fund is
another term for gross savings. On the renewal fund, Strigl wrote:
A
consumer-goods industry equipped with durable factors of
production can continue to work for a while even if no renewal
takes place, if during economic fluctuations the splitting off
of a renewal fund out of returns is not possible. Production
will then only come to a standstill if the equipment is
completely consumed. The production of factors of production is,
however, entirely dependent on being supported by a renewal fund
provided through the consumer good industry. It will come to a
standstill once no renewal fund is accumulated in production.
The renewal fund made available by the consumer goods industry
is the economic successor of the expenditures in the production
of durable factors of production. The renewed availability of
this fund is the precondition for the production of factors of
production being able to work toward the renewal of durable
investments in the consumer goods industry. (p. 25)
Savings
is the diversion of some part of the subsistence fund into the
renewal fund. Note that up to this point, nothing has been said
about money. By understanding savings as a diversion of a part
of the subsistence fund to capital goods producers, the real
process can be seen separately from its monetary aspects.
Savings does not consist of money, nor does the creation of more
money augment savings.
This
is not to deny the importance of money. A monetary economy has a
huge advantage over a barter economy for two reasons: the
simplification exchange (as compared to barter) and the
facilitation of profit-and-loss accounting.
In
particular, consider the second reason: economic calculation.
Profit-and-loss accounting enables all production processes,
both past and those imagined for the future, to be compared in
terms of a single measure. This single measure is the monetary
unit. When a firm makes a profit, it is has added more – in
monetary terms – to the subsistence fund than it withdrew.
Through profit-and-loss accounting, each firm can determine
whether its net impact on the economy is an addition to, or a
depletion of, the subsistence fund.
In
a monetary economy, most people save-and-invest with money,
rather than through stockpiling inventories of consumer goods.
The direct purchase of capital goods, as, for example, starting
a business, and the indirect purchase of capital goods, through
financial assets, are both examples of saving-and-investing.
Finance
can augment production as well by facilitating intermediation
between borrowers and savers. Increased financial intermediation
enables savings to be invested more efficiently. The creation of
public impersonal capital markets a greater array of production
possibilities to be evaluated and purchased by savers.
However,
neither monetary calculation nor financial intermediation
changes the nature of savings. Savings is always an allocation
of some portion of the subsistence fund to the renewal fund.
Monetary savings is a transfer of the saver’s ability
withdrawal from the subsistence fund to the investor who
receives the monetary savings. As
Dr. Shostak says, “Various producers who have exchanged
their produce for money can now access the [subsistence fund]
whenever they deem this to be necessary.“ Strigl points out
that, while most people think in terms of the monetary process,
money is simply a means a representational tool:
Nothing
much will change in [the process of saving and investment] if
this process in a monetary economy is finally hidden behind a
“veil of money”; if the entrepreneur who builds up a renewal
fund does not know that the money he receives in return for his
products and deposits in a bank “represents” a subsistence
fund; if he who borrows money from the bank is not aware that in
so doing he draws from a renewal fund of means of subsistence
provided elsewhere in the economy, and that is he pays back the
money, he will in turn provide a renewal fund or some products
produced with its assistance.
We
are now in a position to show the errors in Fekete’s doctrines
about savings from the point of view of the subsistence fund.
First,
his theory relies on a distinction between fixed capital and
“circulating capital”, which he defines here:
Similarly,
the flow of myriad goods from producer to market also undergoes
a remarkable metamorphosis when it gets within sight of the
consumer. Adam Smith was the first to notice this interesting
phenomenon. He formulated the concept of social circulating
capital. By this he meant the mass of finished or semi-finished
consumer goods which has reached sufficient proximity and is
moving sufficiently fast to the ultimate cash-paying consumer so
that its destiny of being consumed presently can no longer be in
doubt.
and:
It
is hard to see how thoughtful people can treat the notion, that
circulating capital no less than fixed capital must be financed
out of savings, with respect.
The
differentiation of circulating capital from fixed is a
distinction without a difference. There are capital goods and
final goods. There is no third category: so-called
“social circulating capital” is just plain capital.
Ninety-days-from-final goods are in principle no different than
900-days-from-final goods in that cannot be consumed. If they
cannot be consumed, they are not the real means of funding for
any productive activity, and therefore not part of the
subsistence fund.
Production,
properly understood, is the entire activity of bringing raw
materials to the point of consumption. This point has been
reached when no more withdrawals from the subsistence
fund are necessary to goods to the point where they can be
consumed. Shipping, warehousing, retailing, marketing, and other
parts of the production process of moving these goods are
costly. These costs can only be funded -- in real terms -- by
withdrawals from the subsistence fund. There is no other real
source of funding than the subsistence fund with which to carry
out these activities.
There
is nothing other than the subsistence fund with which to fund
capital construction. That part of the subsistence fund
allocated to investment is the renewal fund. The goods in the
renewal fund must have been saved: that is the only way they
could get there.
The
issuance of Real Bills is a means of financing, not a means of
funding. A financial instrument records an agreement concerning
real funding. Bonds, bills, notes, etc. come into being to
record an a promise by the funder to provide a portion of the
subsistence fund under their control, at some point in time, for
the real funding of some productive activity. As Shostak
clearly explains,
Payment
is always done by means of various goods and services. For
instance, a baker pays for shoes by means of the bread he
produced, while the shoemaker pays for the bread by means of the
shoes he made. (Both shoes and bread are part of the pool of
funding as they are final goods).
Real
Bills are a means of finance, not a means of funding. Real Bills
do not form a part of the subsistence fund. Creating more
“real bills” will not do the work of savings because the
bills themselves cannot be consumed. On the contrary, the goods
that they are issued against are capital goods, which will
require additional debits from the pool of funding in order to
complete their journey. An accounting that added the market
value of capital goods to the subsistence fund would make the
subsistence fund appear larger than it is in reality. But this
would be nothing more than an optical illusion achieved by
double counting.
Because
the funding of productive activity is not – in real terms –
done with money, creating more money, real bills, fake bills,
clearing receipts, fractional reserve deposits, fiduciary media,
or any other form of paper adds nothing to the subsistence fund.
These instruments are only claims that enable withdrawals to be
made from the subsistence fund. Creating more of them only
creates more claims against the same subsistence fund.
Fekete
has been a
critic the of 100% gold reserve requirement advocated by
Rothbard and other Austrian economists.
It
follows from my analysis above that a "100 percent gold
standard" will not be able to survive for reasons having to
do with the burden it unnecessarily puts on savings. There
isn't, nor will ever be, savings in sufficient quantity to
finance circulating capital in full, given our highly refined
division of labor and roundabout processes of production.
Luckily, this is no problem, as so much circulating capital to
move merchandise in sufficiently high demand by the final
consumer can be financed through self-liquidating credit.
Advocates of the "100 percent gold standard" must
realize that they have grossly underestimated the degree of
sophistication of the structure of production in the modern
economy. They must also come to grips with the fact that
financing circulating capital with real bills is not
inflationary. Real bills enter and exit circulation pari
passu with the emergence and ultimate sale of consumer
goods.
As
for the idea that the 100% reserve requirement puts an excessive
burden on savings, I have already shown that savings alone must
bear the entire burden of funding production, simply because
there is no other means of funding than savings.
According
to Fekete’s scheme, banks should monetize his beloved Bills.
To monetize a bill means that a bank purchases the bill
with new money substitutes that it creates out of nothing. (If
the bank purchased the bill using its own capital or funds that
had been loaned to the bank for investment purposes, then no
monetization would occur). The money substitutes are usually a
checking deposit but they could be bank notes. They are money
substitutes because circulate at parity with real money, and
they constitute a claim, at face value, on the bank’s
(inadequate) gold reserves.
Now
consider the meaning of the 100% reserve requirement in terms of
the subsistence fund. What this requirement does is to enforce
the rule that everyone who withdraws from the subsistence fund
must also make an equal deposit of equal value in monetary
terms. When a bank monetizes an asset, they have created
purchasing power for the bank out of nothing. The problem with
the monetization of debt (bills or otherwise) is that the bank
is able to make withdrawals from the subsistence fund with its
new money without having made any prior deposits to the
subsistence fund. The creation of credit without savings
represents unfunded consumption, an “exchange
of nothing for something”.
The
error in Fekete’s dream of prosperity through inflation is
that the monetization of Real Bills does not create any new
means of funding. On the contrary it only serves to transfer the
ability to access the existing means of funding from other
holders of money to the bank. Through monetization, the bank is
privileged to make more withdrawals from the subsistence fund
than they are entitled to by their prior productive activity.
Have
the Austrians “underestimated the degree of sophistication of
the structure of production in the modern economy”? In spite
of the many differences between Crusoe’s island and modern
times, the relationship between the subsistence fund and the
capital stock is the same is a logical one and does not change
with size. As Strigl reminds us,
The
more elaborate the temporal partitioning of production into a
number of synchronized production processes, the smaller the
finished available subsistence funds will be. The always
available subsistence fund will be reduced in importance even
more as compared to the overall supply of goods in various
stages of maturity. But
note that nothing changes regarding the function of the
subsistence fund [emphasis
added] (Strigl p. 13)
In
my series of articles on this topic (1
2
3
4),
I have examined the issue of savings, investment, and Real Bills
from several angles. The fundamental question under
investigation has always been the same: can the creation of
additional paper instruments contribute to the production of
more wealth? The answer must always and for all time be no, at
least not until the day that paper promises can transmute
themselves into real goods.

© 2006 Robert Blumen
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Robert
Blumen is an independent software developer based in San Francisco,
California
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