It
won’t be easy to put the genie back in the bottle
The
date May 21, 2003, should be remembered as a historic landmark. On this
day Aladdin Greenspan let the genie out of the bottle. The genie is now
at large, entirely on its own, roaming around the world, visiting
disaster upon the economies wherever it may go: a depression possibly
worse than that in the 1930's. Aladdin hasn’t got a clue how to put it
back in the bottle because, if he tried, the genie would threaten to
plunge the world into another bottomless pit: that of hyperinflation.
Aladdin sowed the wind to let the world reap the whirlwind.
As
the reader probably gleans it from the above, the genie symbolizes bond
speculation. Greenspan testified before the Joint Economic Committee of
Congress on that fateful day, explaining the strategy the Fed has
developed to combat deflation. He would climb the yield curve, that is,
go out to buy government bonds of all maturities, if need be up to and
including the 30-year Treasury bonds, in an effort to push interest
rates down thereby enlarging the monetary base that would, according to
him, contain the weakness in prices.
It
is a long shot from open market purchases of bonds to a buoyant price
level. After all, once in circulation, the new money created by the Fed
is no longer under its control. It is under the control of the
speculators. They will not necessarily deploy it in the commodity or
stock markets, as the Fed is hoping. They may see a better opportunity
for profitable speculation elsewhere, say, in the real estate or the
bond markets. The trouble is not that the Fed is following a script that
has become stale. The trouble is that the Fed has given away the store
by telling speculators that all remaining risks have been taken out of
bond speculation. They can now bid up bond prices to unimaginable
heights unopposed. This could also be an act of desperation on the part
of the Fed. According to this script, the speculators are being bribed
by risk-free opportunities not to dump the bonds that would reduce them
to worthlessness.
This
bet is on the house!
Bond
speculators are sitting on a huge pyramid of paper profits they have
accumulated as short term rates of interest rates were pushed down from
over 20 percent in 1980 to a little over 1 percent in 2003. A measure of
the pyramid is the Derivative Bubble, now $140 trillion strong,
consisting mostly of bets that interest rates will fall further. We are
witnessing the biggest bull market ever, in anything, anywhere, at any
time in all history. There has never been a bubble of that size and
ferocity before. Tulipomania, the South Sea Bubble, the Mississippi
Bubble, the bubble of the Roaring Twenties all pale in comparison.
Lately,
speculators have been itching to cash in on their huge winnings,
especially in view of the fact that foreign private and official holders
appear poised to reduce their holdings of U.S. Treasury securities.
Greenspan knows that a bubble so big as this cannot be safely deflated.
It could trigger hyperinflation. So he has recourse to a desperate
gamble: he is bribing the bond speculators. As the barker at the fair,
he is crying to them: "Hang on! The bond bull is far from getting
tired! Don’t get out, the fun has just started! Your next bet is on
the house! Profits are free for the taking! No risks involved!"
Surely
this is an unprecedented sight: the central banker bribing the
speculators with promises of untold riches free for the taking. Nothing
like this has ever happened in history before, and probably never will.
The central banker tips you off to place your bet that the bond price
will go up, and, bingo! You have won the jackpot.
Firms
falling like flies in autumn
It
sounds crazy but is true nevertheless. All this would be very comical if
there wasn’t a sad part to it. The Greenspan announcement was designed
to prevent prices from weakening and the stock market from collapsing.
Yet its effect will in all likelihood be highly deflationary. Falling
interest rates will ratchet down prices, and falling prices will ratchet
down interest rates even more. As prices fall, the Fed raises the ante
and buys more bonds, giving away more free gifts to the speculators.
Both prices and interest rates fall into the abyss, and the economy is
plunged into deep depression. The capital structure of productive
enterprise is fatally weakened. Firms fall like flies in autumn. There
is great pressure to cut debt and inventory. Cutting debt lowers
interest rates, and cutting inventory lowers prices more. Those firms
that can’t do it fast enough are mercilessly forced into liquidation.
There is growing unemployment, and falling demand will kick prices down
further. Even some of the healthiest firms succumb as they could not
collect receivables from their fallen brethren.
How
is it that Greenspan, in command of an army of research economists,
could make such an enormous blunder? Well, these people are just a bunch
of sycophants. They will say only what the boss wants to hear. Just read
the report Deflation: Determinants, Risks, and Policy Options
(April 30, 2003) on the website www.imf.org.
These so-called economists are steadfast in their determination to
ignore the bubble. They look at the pro’s, but not at the con’s.
They deny the ratchet-down effect. They vehemently object to the
suggestion that falling interest rates may cause prices to fall rather
than rise. Therefore I now take great care to explain the ratchet-down
and its operation in detail, and hereby challenge anybody to find a weak
point in my argument.
Suppose
we take the example of a stream of payments at the annual rate of
$60,000. It could be visualized as the income of a bread-winner. In
order to attach a value to it, we capitalize it at the going rate of
interest. If it is 6 percent, then the capitalized value of the payments
stream of $60,000 is $1 million. That is the capital sum one must have
in order to reap the given payment-stream at the given rate of interest.
The
capitalized value of the same stream of payments will be higher or
lower, according as the rate of interest is lower or higher. In
particular, if the rate of interest falls, the capitalized value of the
payments stream rises. There is no mystery about this inverse
relationship. At the lower rate it will take a larger capital sum to
generate the same stream of payments. In our example, as the rate of
interest falls from 6 to 3 percent, the capital sum required will rise
from $1 to $2 million, assuming that you want to generate the same
annual income of $60,000. That’s right, by a stroke of the pen (or,
shall we say, by a click of the mouse) capital values can be drastically
altered, without adding to or taking away from the park of physical
capital in the economy. Moreover, these changes will affect all
productive enterprises across the whole spectrum, and affect them in the
same way: adversely.
Every
productive enterprise must earmark part of its capital for the purpose
of backing payroll. That part of capital is called the wage fund. The
size of the wage fund is proportional, not to the payroll itself, but to
its capitalized value calculated at the current rate of interest. If the
rate of interest changes, so must the wage fund. The Iron Law of
Payrolls tells you how: if the rate of interest is cut in half,
then the wage fund must be increased two-fold. This is so because
capital tends to flow from the less to the more promising applications.
As the rate of interest falls, capital will adjust to the new
environment. The way to keep it is to augment it. In case the enterprise
hasn’t got sufficient capital reserves to answer this need, or if it
can’t increase its capital in a hurry, then there are three choices.
Either wages must be cut, or some workers must be laid off, or the firm
must go out of business. It’s no use pretending that you can get
around the Iron Law by continuing ‘business as usual’ with an
impaired wage fund. Creditors will force you into bankruptcy. Of course,
this is harsh justice. Of course, you are not responsible for cutting
the rate of interest in the first place. Of course, you are an innocent
victim, the whipping boy to be punished for other people’s crimes.
However, creditors are not running a charity: they will not advance new
credits to a firm suffering from deficiency of capital.
Incredibly
low level of scientific understanding
Nor
is this all. Payroll is just one of the many streams of money payments
the firm has to meet. Another is payment of interest on past borrowing.
If it cannot immediately refinance debt then, again, the firm must have
sufficient capital reserves to meet the increased burden. Then there are
taxes, rents, utility bills, or any other regular payments that arise in
the ordinary course of doing business. If they are not cut immediately,
then the firm must have capital reserves sufficient to cover the
increase in the capitalized value of these payment-streams as well. In
most cases, such huge capital reserves are not available. The
alternative is retrenchment or liquidation.
Please
note that falling interest rates hit all productive enterprise at the
same time, by making new demands on their capital structure. The burden
of doing business is increased across the entire economy. Few firms go
out of business voluntarily. Most choose to retrench. They downsize.
This means cutting inventory and debt, hoping against hope that they can
get away without cutting wages. We have already observed that as they
cut inventory, prices fall; and as they cut debt, rates of interest
fall. When all this comes to naught, firms must cut wages and jobs.
Demand weakens further. The pit of depression is dug, ready to swallow
the national economy. The initial push comes from the central banker
giving the green light to speculators. That Greenspan has done. The
rest, the sliding down through the chute of the deflationary spiral, is
automatic.
It
is, of course, incredible that Greenspan refuses to see the potential
threat to the economy. To add insult to injury, he has the cheek to
pretend that he is fighting depression (of his own making) by cutting
interest rates, the very act that will activate the deflationary
inferno. The only explanation for his lack of insight is the
extraordinarily low level of scientific understanding which managers of
the regime of fiat currency have, or must have. That regime is capable
of unleashing the most horrendous forces of economic destruction:
deflation or hyperinflation. Managers qualify for the job only if they
have a demonstrated ability to remain blind to these dangers.
Incidentally, hyperinflation is also caused by unlimited bond
speculation, in this case, on the short side of the market. We have
reached the point where deflation and hyperinflation are separated only
by the knee-jerk reaction of the marginal bond speculator. The regime of
fiat currency has a congenital disease, namely, its complete lack of
immunity against destabilizing speculation which will ultimately destroy
it. The only thing managers can do is to try to put off the evil day by
hook or crook. The grandiose act of Greenspan to go out on one limb and
climb the yield curve must be seen as a desperate effort to postpone the
day of reckoning.
To
summarize, falling interest rates fatally overload the capital structure
of productive enterprise across the board by imposing new demands on it.
These new demands have to do with the inescapable fact that at a lower
rate of interest it will take a higher capital sum to generate an
undiminished income-stream expected of productive enterprise. These new
demands crowd out net worth in the balance sheet. Bereft of capital,
productive enterprise goes down in defeat. Collapsing demand is not the
cause of deflation. It is the effect. The cause is collapsing capital
for which the falling interest-rate policy of the central bank alone is
responsible.
"Many
of us can recall a picture of bewhiskered dabbler in the occult,
surrounded by intricate apparatus, engaged in an attempt to turn base
substances into gold. He was known as the alchemist, and he practiced
his art over the course of centuries. Modern streamlining has
dispensed with the whiskers and the gimcracks, but all present-day
governments keep solemnly turning paper into gold and naively believe
that they have accomplished something new, ingenious, and important.
These governments tell their populations that there is no difference
between paper and gold. In fact, they expatiate on the benefits of
liberation from gold, insisting that government deficits are in
reality a national investment, that the public debt is merely a
book-keeping entity since we owe it to ourselves, and that
printing-press money is a synonym for purchasing power. This
propaganda has been going on for sufficiently long in time and
sufficiently broadly in space that all young people in the United
States, who have had no personal experience with the gold standard,
will buy it. Our money magicians of today may, in retrospect, cut as
pathetic a figure as the alchemists of ancient times."
The
above quotation is from an address delivered on September 8, 1949, by
Dr. William W. Cumberland, of Ladenburg, Thalmann & Co., New York.
It shows Greenspan the alchemist, and all past, present, and future
managers of fiat currency, in the correct perspective.
The
ordination of a more expansive liturgy
"The
Heroic Age of the free nations of the world was accomplished under the
aegis of metallic monetary systems. The Industrial Revolution, with
all the material benefits it created, has flourished largely in an
environment of scrupulous devotion to classic precepts. Gold was
universally accepted as surveillant deity which safeguarded society
against fiscal and monetary temptations. The sanctity of contracts was
embodied in the ritual, and gold clauses were inserted to discourage
sacrilege. Then - all inhibitions were swept away. The nation
officially espoused a critical view of sanctions formerly imputed to
an impersonal monetary conscience. It renounced all forms of
allegiance to what was regarded as outmoded superstition or regressive
piety, in order to enjoy greater freedom in pursuing the New Mysteries
of Money Magic. For it was assumed that monetary crises could be
prevented more effectively by purely secular policy - by the rule of
reason, as they called it - than by the compulsion of a once respected
but now disavowed morality. Money was said to have become a compliant
servant, rather than the traditionally stern guardian against the
siren call of financial indulgence."
"The
radical change in official attitudes towards gold was consummated in
response to the doctrine that the Great Depression had been
accentuated by blind obeisance to the gold deity, and economic
recovery was being retarded by a literal interpretation of the
gold-standard commandments. Accordingly, it was ordained that a more
expansive liturgy should replace what was regarded as the too-Spartan
code of monetary ethics to which the nation had long adhered, and all
references to gold were expunged from the transubstantiation ritual
for money. It is quite possible, however, that time has been too short
to reveal the many ways in which the diluted devotional practice can
make itself felt."
The
above quotation is from an article "An Eagle for Christmas?"
by Merle Hostetler, Manager, Research Department, Federal Reserve Bank
of Cleveland, in Business Trends published by that bank, December
20, 1952. Greenspan would not tolerate in his organization free-thinking
researchers like Hostetler. The new researchers must parrot slogans such
as:
"Among
the causes of deflation we find adverse expectations and confidence
effects."
"We
must develop a communication strategy highlighting the ability and
commitment of policymakers to contain deflation."
"From
now on we must target inflation aggressively but with a buffer
zone."
"Fiscal
policy must be tailored to credibly boosted aggregate demand."
"More
symmetric attention to risks of falling as well as rising prices is
warranted."
"Aggressive
policies to contain and eradicate deflationary expectations are
essential."
"The
liquidity trap is defined as the combination of a large output gap
calling for monetary stimulus, with zero interest rate blocking
monetary stimulus."
"We
must be shaping expectation through the manipulation of central bank
balance sheet."
I
have culled these slogans from the proceedings of the forum Should We
Be Worried about Deflation? held on May 29, 2003, in Washington,
D.C., as posted on www.imf.org. What
do these slogans tell you about the quality of research conducted at the
Fed and the IMF?
Seizures
of ecstasy and mass delusion
In
1932 financial journalist Garet Garrett published a book with the title A
Bubble That Broke the World. In it he gave a better perspective of
what is happening in the wake of credit expansion.
"Organized
credit is relatively strange in economic life. New and experimental
forms of it are continually being invented and we love to deceive
ourselves with them. We forget that credit in any form represents debt
in some other form. We know about ourselves, that we have seizures of
ecstasy and mass delusion. We know that a time may come when the
temptation to throw the monetary machine into wild motion, so that
everybody may become infinitely rich by means of infinite debt, will
rise to the pitch of mania as it did, for example, in 1928 and 1929.
For
a while the difficulty of not knowing what anything is worth inflames
the ecstasy. Everything will be priced higher and higher to make sure
that it is high enough; there will be the illusion that things are
becoming dear and scarce. They seem to be dear because the value of
money in which they are priced is falling; they seem to be scarce
because people are buying in the expectation that prices will go
higher still. Suddenly doubt appears, then comes awakening, and -
panic. The faith is lost... This is the financial crisis... All of it
has happened. It was not the gold standard that did it; it was
breaking faith with the gold standard that did it."
But the speculative
orgy in 1928 and 1929 was rather mild in comparison to what was to
take place under the watch of Greenspan Fed in the 1990's. The
reaction in 2003 can therefore be that much more devastating. Here is
a quotation from an article "Political Silences" by the same
author that appeared in The Wall Street Journal, September 30,
1952.
"In
a gingerly manner the presidential candidates talked about some of
the effects of irredeemable paper currency, but about how to restore
the honesty of the dollar they have said, if possible, less than
nothing. They are like diagnosticians who have agreed beforehand on
one point. They will ignore the fact of cancer. Irredeemable paper
money, that is, money redeemable in nothing but more of itself, is a
fatal disease with a record of one hundred percent mortality unless
halted in time by radical surgery. It has already cost the people
control of government. It has enabled the government to convert its
own debt into ‘money’ and thereby to fill its own purse. It is
the stuff upon which the self-exalting executive principle of
government feeds. It is morally devastating and corrupts men by
cumulative temptation. It hurts everybody - the rich, the poor, and
the dependent."
Greenspan is such a
diagnostician well-trained in the discipline of ‘political
silences’. Our body economic appears to have cancer as indicated by
the speculative bubble in the bond market. It feeds upon itself and
will, if unchecked, destroy the entire productive sector. Efforts to
engage Greenspan in a meaningful discussion of the bubble and how to
stop the spread of cancer by radical surgery have failed. He is guided
by ‘political silences’. As boasted by his lieutenants, Greenspan
has unlimited power: the privilege of printing unlimited amounts of
fiat money without any countervailing responsibility. He is badly
abusing that power. Greenspan is nursing a bubble that may break the
world. History will be the judge.

© 2003 Antal E.
Fekete
Professor Emeritus, Memorial University of Newfoundland
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