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"Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon," so said Milton
Friedman. After that it was down hill. The Chicago school so defined inflation
and deflation that they largely severed the monetary root from which these
phenomena spring. Hence a stable price level was seen as the ideal. (Even the
great Knut Wicksell subscribed to the fallacy of the stable price level).
If prices rose that was inflation: if they fell then it was deflation. The
thought that inflation can be wreaking havoc even though the price level appears
undisturbed was an idea they refused to countenance. To make matters worse,
the fact that inflation and deflation are monetary phenomena has been largely
rejected by the great majority of economists.
Once the idea of a stable price level was linked to Keynes' fallacy of demand
deficiency it was only a matter of time before governments would quickly ramp
up their spending. As the maintenance of full employment became a government
imperative the idea of maintaining a stable price was thrown overboard. We
are now lumbered with the notion of acceptable rates of inflation. The result
is the present world-wide monetary disorder of which the US economy is an important
part.
Unfortunately, rather than reassess their theories mainstream economists still
insist on pushing the same monetary nostrums much as doctors once insisted
on bleeding their patients. Gary Stern, head of the Minneapolis Fed, is a dangerous
example of unrepentant economic orthodoxy. He recently stated that lower oil
price and tight credit have caused expectations of rising inflation to weaken.
That the massive increase in oil prices was due to a world-wide monetary explosion
was not even considered. Some speculators are pointing to a fall in the prices
of zinc, silver, nickel and oil as evidence that inflationary forces are on
the retreat. Be that as it may, their error is the assumption that rising commodity
prices are inflationary instead of being created by inflation.
As the world's largest economy by far, American monetary policy has had a
detrimental effect on the world economy. The first thing to consider is the
effect of monetary expansion on a country's price structure. Money is not neutral.
This means that by increasing the quantity of money the pattern of spending
changes in response to the emergence of new monetary streams. The necessary
adjustment to the price structure that the monetary expansion causes is not
sustainable. As soon as the monetary brakes are applied the price distortions
reveal themselves in the form of bankruptcies, 'excess' capital and rising
unemployment.
It is a known fact that loose monetary policies raise the demand for imports.
This is why countries that inflate faster than their trading partners tend
to accumulate current account deficits. In the case of a comparatively small
economy this will have few consequences for the pattern of international trade.
The case of the US economy is a very different matter.
By running current account deficits fuelled by 'cheap money' policies the
US has, in my opinion, badly distorted the pattern of international trade by
causing its trading partners to direct more resources into producing exports
to the US. Just how bad this situation is we cannot know until the Fed puts
and end to its loose monetary policy.
Free market supporters who claim that cheap imports have the effect of raising
living standards and lowering inflation obviously do not realise that this
situation is an inflationary one that cannot be continued indefinitely. This
is why they remain serenely indifferent to American companies moving operations
offshore. As far as they are concerned, this is simply the free market at work.
The underlying assumption here is the concept of neutral money. If money were
indeed neutral then their conclusions would be correct. But this is not the
case. It ought to be clear to anyone that for money to be neutral price rises
would have to be uniform, e.g., a 10 per cent increase in the money supply
would lead to a 10 per cent rise in the prices of all goods and services. The
great majority of the classical economists fully understood this fact and the
consequences.
What this boils down to is that the Fed's monetary policy artificially raised
the prices of home-produced goods relative to foreign goods. In effect, this
inflationary policy was the equivalent of taxing domestic products while subsidising
foreign goods*. What to do? The sensible thing is to implement a sound monetary
policy. As that is highly unlikely to happen the next best thing is for the
government not to make matters worse by imposing tariffs and more taxes.
This brings us to the candidates for the presidency. Although McCain doesn't
understand the situation he instinctively knows that imposing tariffs and burdening
the economy with more taxes is not going to make things better. He also realises
that lowering tax rates on investments, corporations and capital gains will
encourage the capital formation and hence raise future living standards.
Obama, on the other hand, plans a massive tax hike and more government interventionism
based on the Democrats' view that they are the smartest people on the planet.
The results could make the Carter presidency look like a picnic.
*Australia is having the same problem. Unfortunately our free
market club refuses to discuss this extremely important issue. Is
monetary policy destroying the country's manufacturing base? provides
an insight to how badly our 'free market' economists treat this topic.
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