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24 May 2009
I told you so - The work of the Collection Agency goes main stream
Well, well, well. Here at the Agency we have spent a couple of years waiting
for the US economic establishment to go public with the Deflation / Depression
Recovery Plan, what we call The Eggertsson Theory and this week we got it.
Lucky subscribers can now take solace in the fact that the author was right
and the small quarterly payments were worth the effort. I can take great pleasure
in saying "I told you so", not because I want to inflate my ego but because
I know some people took note of what I said and prepared their portfolio accordingly.
That gives me a warm feeling inside, unlike Gordon Brown I didn't "save the
world" but I did help some individuals.
Enough of the touchy feely stuff and back to the subject at hand, the public
announcement that you, the public, will accept the threat of inflation because
it's "less painful" than any other solution.
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"May
19 (Bloomberg, Rich Miller) -- What the U.S. economy may need is
a dose of good old-fashioned inflation.
So say economists including Gregory Mankiw, former White House adviser,
and Kenneth Rogoff, who was chief economist at the International Monetary
Fund. They argue that a looser rein on inflation would make it easier for
debt-strapped consumers and governments to meet their obligations. It might
also help the economy by encouraging Americans to spend now rather than
later when prices go up.
"I'm advocating 6 percent inflation for at least a couple of years," says
Rogoff, 56, who's now a professor at Harvard University. "It would ameliorate
the debt bomb and help us work through the deleveraging process."
"Anybody who has been a central banker wouldn't want to see inflation
expectations become unhinged," says Marvin Goodfriend, a former official
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. "The Fed would have to create
a recession to get its credibility back," adds Goodfriend, now a professor
at Carnegie Mellon University's Tepper School of Business in Pittsburgh.
Bernanke, 55, said the risk of deflation was receding and that the Fed
was ready to reverse course when needed to maintain stable prices and prevent
an outbreak of undesired inflation. The Fed has implicitly defined price
stability as annual inflation of 1.5 percent to 2 percent, as measured
by a price index based on personal consumption expenditures.
Given the Fed's inability to cut rates further, Mankiw says the central
bank should pledge to produce "significant" inflation. That would put the
real, inflation-adjusted interest rate -- the cost of borrowing minus the
rate of inflation -- deep into negative territory, even though the nominal
rate would still be zero.
If Americans were convinced of the Fed's commitment, they'd buy and borrow
more now, he says.
Faster inflation might be preferable to increased unemployment, or to
further budget stimulus packages that push up the national debt, says Mankiw
"There's trillions of dollars of debt, in mortgage debt, consumer debt,
government debt," says Rogoff, who was chief economist at the Washington-based
IMF from 2001 to 2003. "It's a question of how do you achieve the deleveraging.
Do you go through a long period of slow growth, high savings and many legal
problems or do you accept higher inflation?"
John Makin, a principal at hedge fund Caxton Associates in New York, wants
the Fed to go further and target the level of prices instead of simply
a rate of inflation. Such a policy would mean that if inflation fell short
of 2 percent over a period of time, the Fed would have to push inflation
above that rate subsequently to make up for the shortfall and keep prices
rising on the desired trajectory.
While that might sound radical, it's the same sort of policy that Bernanke
advocated Japan follow in 2003 to fight deflation. In a speech in Tokyo
that year, then-Fed Governor Bernanke called on the Bank of Japan to adopt "a
publicly announced, gradually rising price-level target."
Warren Buffett, chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. in Omaha, Nebraska,
suggested that faster inflation was all but inevitable.
"A country that continuously expands its debt as a percentage of GDP and
raises much of the money abroad to finance that, it's going to inflate
its way out of the burden of that debt," he told the CNBC financial news
television channel on May 4, adding, "That becomes a tax on everybody that
has fixed- dollar investments."
Can you say credible expectations of future inflation? Here it is then, in
the raw and in the main stream media. Welcome to the public acceptance of Eggertsson
Theory upon which the hopes of Keynesians and Monetarists are now completely
reliant. The hope is that the public and business believe that the irresponsible
actions of the Federal Reserve will cause an inflationary effect in the future
and react accordingly.
Eggertsson Theory shows that the adoption of Quantitative Easing and Zero
Interest Rate Policy is not enough to engender a defence against deflationary
forces. What is needed is a change in the perceptions of market players, from
the top to the bottom, allowing a change in spending and saving patterns.
I refer readers to this excerpt from The
Future Actions of The Federal Reserve And US Govt Are Known, An interpretation
of The Deflation Bias and Committing to Being Irresponsible by G B Eggertsson,
made public in April 2008:
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Let me explain why, for the Fed and Government, there was no "Minsky Moment" but
rather a progression of an already foreseen problem. To do this we need
to look at why the Japanese Government and Bank of Japan failed to break
out of a deflationary scenario. Again I quote from G B Eggertsson:
- "The deflation bias is closely related, and in some sense, a formalization
of, a common objection to Krugman's policy proposal for the BOJ. To battle
deflation he suggested that the BOJ should announce an inflation target
of 5% for 15 years. Responding to this proposal, Kunio Okina, director
of the Institute for Monetary Studies at the BOJ, said in DJN (1999): "Because
short-term interest rates are already at zero setting an inflation target
of say 2% would not carry much credibility." Similar objections were raised
by economists such as, e.g., Dominiguez (1998), Woodford (1999), and Svensson
(2001)"
At face value the remarks above would seem to support the Keynesian approach,
that at low nominal interest rates, Government deficit spending and quantitative
easing failed to ignite the inflation required to break out of a deflationary
spiral.
Within the quote though is the important point of inflation expectations.
It is here that the importance of Bernanke's discussion of a targeted inflation
rate and subsequent Fed warnings about inflation expectations remaining anchored
becomes central to the main thrust of policy direction."
So what is the aim of the Federal Reserve, why do they want everyone to
believe inflation is coming? To answer this we go to another article written
by your friendly Collection Agency, "It is 1937 for the Federal Reserve " and
resurrect the remedy applied by FDR to end the deflation he inherited from
Hoover:
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"As FDR took office, there was a noticeable turnaround in expectations.
Firstly, lets see what the baseline was, according to Eggertsson:
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"The reason for the collapse is that the central bank cannot lower
interest rates enough to accommodate deflationary shocks, due to the
zero bound on interest rates and is unable to change expectations about
future policy. This creates a strong deflation bias. The deflation
bias helps explain the severity of the Great Depression, because real
interest rates were excessively high in 1929-33 due to double digit
deflation. This choked spending, especially investment. "Money was
king" during this period. Nobody was interested in investing when the
returns from stuffing money under the mattress were 10-15 percent in
real terms. People gained more, in other words, from holding money
than spending it."
Or as I said, why spend today when it will be cheaper tomorrow? It is
clear that to make the Eggertsson Theory work, the baseline conditions
of the economy should be depressed before allowing the already prepared
stimulus to be released. Compare the conditions in 1933 to those today:
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"The short-term nominal interest rate was close to zero during the
Great Depression. The yield on three month Treasuries, for example,
was only 0.05 percent in January 1933. Further interest rate reductions
were clearly not feasible. Open market operations, in themselves, had
no effect, since money and government bonds were perfect substitutes.
This explains why several observers at the time were skeptical of the
effectiveness of monetary policy and believed that open market operations
were just like "pushing on a string".
-
Despite this, however, monetary policy was far from powerless. While
increasing the money supply at zero interest rate has no effect, expectations
about higher future money supply (once deflationary pressures have
subsided and interest rates are positive again) have large effects
because they change people's expectations about the future price level,
thus reducing real interest rates. What was needed to end the Depression
was a regime shift that changed expectations about future policy in
a credible way. This is precisely what FDR achieved."
With current 3 month yields at at 1.13% and inflation measures well above,
it can be seen why the Fed/US Govt fear a deflationary scenario. The requirement
for a credible policy that will result in rising inflation expectations
is absolute, to ensure that neither the consumer or business is discouraged
from spending or investing. (This has far-reaching consequences, for instance
it would not be in the Fed interest to suppress the price of gold)
With this in mind, let us look at some of the effects that FDR policy
regime change had post 1933:




You know what's coming next.....
Dow Futures June 09:

Bonds issuance:

CPI - All Urban Consumers (B of LS):

Continuous CRB Index (CI ICE / NYBOT) - TFC charts:

Are we seeing the "FDR effect" take hold? It's an important question, remember
back in 1933 the problems were not over for the general economy but that didn't
stop the reflation of various markets. We are seeing a very similar pattern
today which must be due to the same reason as the rise in 1933, the result
of a credible expectation of future inflation.
It is no wonder we are seeing so many articles on blogs, sites and now in
the main stream media talking of inflation.
Right now, for the medium term, I am looking for a higher low (a downturn
this summer would do the trick) and on a breakout of the recent high I would
look to take a position. However, if the Fed move to a tightening stance in
the future I would return to capital preservation mode, anticipating a 1937
scenario.
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