|
The US economy is facing a challenging time for which Americans can thank
the Fed's appalling monetary mismanagement, not to mention the lousy economics
of the economics profession that is telling us that what the Good Ol' US of
A needs now is damn good dose of inflation. In the meantime the Obama administration's
spending spree would shame a bunch of drunken sailors. At least sailors spend
their own money.
Obama is not only going to spend the earnings of the present generation of
Americans but also their grandchildren's earnings and probably their grandchildren's
as well. Come to think of it, the way his atrocious spending mania is going
future Americans might not have much of an income to spend. (I am still getting
emails from Obama cultists telling me that Bush is making him do it). Bernanke's
disgusting monetary policy is building up a massive head of inflationary steam,
symptoms of which are already making their presence felt. For some months now
the prices of long-term treasuries have been trending down, meaning that yields
have been rising. People who bought treasuries last year have suffered significant
losses. I think even more losses are on the way.
Last week China and Russia publically declared that they are taking steps
to diversify their foreign currency reserves, code for dumping dollars.
Who can blame them? Under Obama American finances have become a total mess:
deficits are absolutely massive and unsustainable, government spending is out
of control, debt is rocketing while monetary expansion is unprecedented. This
is a sure-fire formula for rising interest rates and accelerating inflation.
None of this fazed the media Pollyannas who reported that last week's 30-year
bond market auction was a success and signalled the beginning of an upward
trend in bond prices. These commentators overlooked two vital points. About
half the bonds were bought by central banks. A clear case of collusion that
cannot be maintained. The second point is that when inflation starts to accelerate
bond yields will have to rise. There will be no stopping them unless the Fed
decides to withdraw all those greens it printed. Not very likely.
The principal problem is Bernanke's vulgar Keynesianism. (I think the major
difference between Keynes and today's Keynesians is the same difference between
a social drinker and a dipsomaniac). Despite the historical fact that forcing
interest rates down below their market clearing rates does not bring lasting
employment and a permanent boom central banks still insist on doing it, egged
on by academic economists.
Mankiw is right to point out that Bernanke is targeting inflation. But it's
the only thing that Mankiw got right as evidenced by his view that "the goal
could be to produce enough inflation to ensure that the real interest rate
is sufficiently negative... " Apart from the fact that it is impossible to
target the rate of inflation Mankiw's prescription would make for more
unemployment in the future.
Even if interest rates became sufficiently negative to generate an expansion
in production and an increase in the demand for labour the resulting 'recovery'
would be unsustainable. Prices would rise as would interest rates. The dollar
would come under increasing pressure and balance-of-payments problems would
emerge. The Fed would find itself having to slam on the monetary brakes again.
As for government borrowing raising aggregate demand, which is what Obama's
supporters are claiming, this is plain nonsense. Genuine borrowing always means
a transfer of purchasing power and not an aggregate increase in purchasing
power. Of course, when government borrowing is funded by monetary expansion
then total purchasing power in terms of dollars does increase. We call this
inflation.
The borrowing angle that critics of Keynesianism are using to condemn Obama's
reckless borrowing is sound economics but still misses the point. Keynesians
argue that borrowing in a recessions does not crowd out investment because
of the existence of idle resources in the form of unemployed labour and capital.
The critics respond that the crowding out occurs when taxpayers find they have
to fund the interest repayments on the loan. Moreover, there is no guarantee
that the projects on which the funds were spent will not involve future economic
losses that will have to be made up out of increased government spending which
means either more borrowing, higher taxes or both.
Although this criticism is sound it cannot capture the full picture: that
requires capital theory. Even where the government engages in genuine borrowing
this could still seriously damage investment even if there exists a significant
amount of idle resources. It can do this by directing expenditure toward consumption
instead of investment. If one looks at the so-called boom of 1936-37 one will
see that most of the expansion took place in the consumer goods industries
while the capital goods industries badly lagged. (And it was the capital goods
industries that won the war despite the level of capital consumption during
the 1930s).
But of course we have to deal with Bernanke's reckless monetary policy. When
monetary expansion is used to fund government spending crowding out occurs
when the increased spending raises the demand for consumer goods and thereby
attracts resources from the higher stages of production which in turn shortens
the production structure. We call this capital consumption.
As a rule new money enters the economy through the capital market as a result
of interest rates being forced down. This results in a disproportional increase
in the demand for capital goods because the further away the capital good is
from consumption in terms of time the great will be the effect on its value
as the discount rate falls. This results in greater investment in more productive
but time consuming projects that ultimately increase total output. We call
this the "Wicksell effect".
We have now returned to bond prices and interest rates. Because the long term
rate is rising -- and is expected to continue to rise -- we should not expect
to see an expansion of investment in more productive though more time consuming
projects. Should long term rates continue to climb the distinct possibility
of capital consumption in the higher stages of production could emerge.
Whichever way one looks at it Obama's economic policies are -- at the very
least -- a recipe for stagnant living standards.
|