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"The fundamental error of our financial policy lies in the attempt to create
wealth by creating currency: it is putting the servant before the master --
the wrong power, in advance. We can create wealth only by producing commodities." The
frequency with which monetary crank schemes are proposed indicates that this
great truth written
by Charles Holt Carroll (148) in 1859 has not yet been learned.
Case in point is Nelson Hultberg and Antal Fekete's call
for a revival of the Real Bills Doctrine (RBD). The Real Bills system
is a form of monetary crankism: at its core is the fallacy that paper can
create wealth. Carroll, one of the most astute critics of paper money, had
it right when he wrote that
the RBD is "the most remarkable and the most mischievous heresy that ever
found an advocate in any science."(267)
Limiting the danger of inflation is the the most prominent reason for using
gold as money. While the supply of gold can at best grow slowly, the quantity
of paper can be multiplied without limit. The resulting inflation erodes the
purchasing power of wages and savings. The Real Bills Doctrine--a theory advocating
the creation more paper money substitutes--cannot be exempt from this evil.
Yet RBD theorists hold that the discounting of bills that they propose is non-inflationary.
They believe that they have discovered Inflation Lite: a miraculous
form of fiduciary media that
facilitates more trade but does not increase prices. Implementation of the
RBD would be a path to inflation; non-inflationary monetary expansion is a
mythical beast.
The doctrine states that banks should be allowed to monetize short-term business
loans. Part 1 presents
an explanation of the monetization bills
of exchange, explain s the difference between transfer
credit and credit expansion,
and exposes the fallacy of a credit shortage. In addition, Part 1 shows that
only savings can fund production, and describes how forced savings occurs in
response to credit expansion.
The proposal advanced by Fekete is a non-solution to a non-problem. Because
it provides no benefit, there is no point in adopting it. In the best case,
something that has no benefit would be harmless. However, the RBD is far from
being harmless. The current article show s that adoption of the RBD would inevitably
be inflationary without any limit. The current article also emphasize s some
subtleties of the Austrian critique of monetary expansion.
The discounting of bills as per the doctrine would introduce fiduciary
media into circulation. The creation of fiduciary media is always inflationary
because the paper notes have equivalent purchasing power to money itself
and therefore affect prices in the same way. Carroll sees the point clearly: "Nothing
is created by this operation but debt-- no capital, value, or wealth whatever--but
price is added to commodities thereby as effectually as if so much gold had
been produced or earned by labor and added to the currency." (137)
A market price is created any time money, or a paper claim functioning as
money, is spent. As Mises explains here,
money prices are formed through the use ofall real money and fiduciary media
in circulation:
If notes are issued by the banks, or if bank deposits subject to check or
other claim are opened, in excess of the amount of money kept in the vaults
as cover, the effect on prices is similar to that obtained by an increase
in the quantity of money. Since these fiduciary media, as notes and bank
deposits not backed by metal are called, render the service of money as safe
and generally accepted, payable on demand monetary claims, they may be used
as money in all transactions. On that account, they are genuine money substitutes.
Since they are in excess of the given total quantity of money in the narrower
sense, they represent an increase in the quantity of money in the broader
sense.
When money is loaned in a credit transaction, the increase in the purchasing
power of the borrower is offset by the saver's withdrawal of purchasing power.
When a saver loans to a borrower, different prices will be created than if
the saver had kept the money instead of loaning it. This is so because the
money loaned will be put to different uses by the borrower than it would have
been by the saver. The borrower might use the money to rent office space, while
the saver might have used it to purchase a car. But there will be no general
tendency toward higher prices in an economy based on transfer credit even when
credit transactions are common.
On the other hand, an increase in the quantity of fiduciary media necessarily
results in a higher market price for some good s because when they are issued,
there is no offset of savings that withdraws demand elsewhere. When a business
sells its bills to a bank for unbacked paper claims, the firm might use their
phony paper money to pay wages to employees, rent office space, or purchase
machinery. Whatever it is, it will sell at a higher price than would be the
case in the absence of the fiduciary media. As Hülsmann explains:
Suppose I get an additional fiduciary banknote of one ounce of silver sterling
from my banker. This banknote permits me to satisfy wants that hitherto were
not sufficiently important to be considered (they were submarginal). If I
pay for a meal in a restaurant with this banknote then, without any doubt,
I have affected market prices. In fact, by my very purchase I have formed
market prices. These prices would have never come into being without the
additional issue of a banknote. Selling the meal to other persons would have
required a price reduction to attract submarginal consumers.
Suppose that a merchant is short of cash but he possesses a bill. He tries
to sell his bill for cash. There are two possibilities: under a system of transfer
credit, he sells the bill by obtaining credit (the transfer of someone
else's savings). Or, if the RBD were adopted, a bank would expand credit and
pay the merchant with fiduciary media. The first potion, borrowing savings,
is more costly to the merchant because the he must offer saver s a sufficient
rate of interest to make them willing to part with their money. The alternative,
fiduciary media, can be printed at nearly zero cost. The bank that prints money
instead of borrowing savings can therefore offer a lower rate of interest.
Credit expansion allows the merchant to pay less interest- - which means he
receive s more cash- - for his bill.
Consider the situation of a merchant who needs some quantity of cash to pay
current expenses, and who owns a bill of exchange. Suppose that a bank operating
according to the RBD is willing to offer him exactly as much cash as he needed
for his bill. Then, under a system of strict transfer credit, the bank would
offer him less than that amount because of the higher cost of borrowing savings
compared to creating fiduciary media. Starting from the same initial conditions
in a transfer credit system , the merchant would not be able to sell his bill
for enough cash to pay his obligations.
There are two possibilities here. One is that he might be bankrupt. As I explained
in Part 1,
this is not a bad thing; it is part of the market's process of allocating resources.
The assets do not go away, or even necessarily cease to be productive. The
firm's creditors would take over the ownership, the assets would be revalued
at lower prices, and in more solvent hands might be put to more better use.
The other possibility is that the merchant can reduce his costs. Suppose he
is able to do so by negotiating with his suppliers for lower prices , or with
his employees for lower wages , or by purchasing fewer inputs. Then transactions
would occur but at lower prices than under a system of credit expansion. This
example illustrates how, under a flexible price system, prices change to facilitate
transactions rather (rather than what?). There is no need for an "elastic" monetary
system when prices can move.
There is a difference between the price of a bill under transfer credit and
under the RBD. The difference consists of purchasing power shifted from one
person to another by the monetary expansion that occurs when fiduciary media
are issued. The additional purchasing power of the merchant only comes into
existence at the expense of all other money holders elsewhere, by diluting
the value of their monetary units. The issuance of fiduciary media, then, enables
the seller of the bill to obtain something that they could not afford in
economic terms , at the expense of the rest of the population who find
their own money to be worth less as a consequence.
It defies logic to say that something is true and is not true at the same
time. For the system of monetizing bills of exchange to be non-inflationary
would mean that it did not result in higher prices. Yet the entire motivation
for the system is to enable business transactions that could otherwise only
take place at lower prices, or not at all.
It is claimed that paper money printing , if done according to the rules of
the RBD , is not inflationary because the paper finances the production of
particular goods and then goes away. There are two problems with this. First
is a serious misunderstanding of the nature of productive activity. The paper
does not fund production. There is no
way that paper by itself can fund production, only the goods
purchased with the paper fund production. The holder s of the phony paper
notes are only able to buy existing goods because they can outbid others
who were not so lucky as to be sitting next to the printing press. The only
way to provide goods more cheaply is to produce more of them through savings,
work, and investment.
Second, this line of thinking rests on the idea that certain money somehow
corresponds to specific goods. Under a commodity money system, money is a good
in the economy that functions as the medium of exchange. Money prices are the
exchange ratios between money and goods. Money prices are formed through the
interaction of all money holders (who in aggregate own the total money supply)
and all goods owners (who in aggregate posses all goods) in the economy. There
is no specific identification between money and any particular goods. In the
process of price formation, money is acquired in order to be spent, and then
acquired again and spent again, forming price at each exchange along the way.
The explication
of this point by the French economist J.B. Say could not be improved upon:
The silver coin you will have received on the sale of your own products,
and given in the purchase of those of other people, will the next moment
execute the same office between other contracting parties, and so from one
to another to infinity; just as a public vehicle successively transports
objects one after another.
There do exist instruments that are collateralized by particular goods. These
are known as bonds, equity shares, etc. But these instruments are not money.
The evaluation and pricing of these instruments is complex because they are
heterogeneous and carry different degrees of credit risk. Even collateralized
bills of exchange are subject to market risk. Firms can produce inventory and
then find themselves unable to sell it.
There are additional fallacies in the association of monetized bills with
particular goods. Fiduciary media are created at a distinct point when they
are loaned into existence. This is called the "point of injection." When a
bank expands credit by monetizing a bill, the point of injection is the credit
market. However, the point where this new paper enters the spending stream
does not limit its effect on prices to that point. As Mises explained, "variations
in the value of money always start from a given point and gradually spread
out from this point through the whole community."
Even for short-term loans, there is nothing about spending of new money that
limits its purchasing power to the production of those particular goods in
process (in process? What are "goods in process"? Do you mean in the process?
Is it necessary to have "in process" in this sentence? If not, take it out.
It's a very long sentence) that were the collateral for the monetized bill.
In the short term , as in the long term , people receive wages, buy groceries,
pay rent, go on vacation, and fill up their gas tank.
A major point in Fekete's writings is
that bills are liquidated within 91 days or less. The fiduciary media are withdrawn
from circulation after a short time, so they can't do much harm, or so we are
told. Those who defend the doctrine say the theory rests heavily on the belief
that credit extended for 91-day-or-shorter periods is economically, fundamentally,
different than credit for longer periods.
Numerology notwithstanding, there is nothing special about the number 91.
There is no economic distinction between loans shorter than or longer than
a certain number of days. It makes as much sense to say that purchases of bananas
should be paid in gold coin while strawberry consumption should be funded with
bank credit expansion. All stages of production - including shipping partially
finished goods in process--consume real resources that have alternative uses.
All credit must be borrowed (whether for a short or a long time) from the same
potential pool of savings, namely , present goods. Present goods are scarce
in the present. There exists nothing with which to fund investment other than
present goods that have been saved. The choice is only whether the savings
are voluntary (as they would be if they were offered on true credit) or forced
(as would be the case when fiduciary media are issued).
The focus on the life cycle of a particular bill is misplaced. It is the total
volume of credit expansion and contraction in the banking system that is responsible
for inflation and deflation within an economy. The life expectancy of any particular
bill of exchange does not provide a measure of the credit expansion that would
occur if the RBD were implemented.
If, as Mises wrote on
this subject, "When the loan is paid back at maturity, the banknotes return
to the bank and thus disappear from the market," then there would be only a
small amount of credit expansion, followed by an equal-sized credit contraction.
But, he continues, "this happens only if the bank restricts the amount of credits
granted .... The regular course of affairs is that the bank replaces the bills
expired and paid back by discounting new bills of exchange. Then to the amount
of banknotes withdrawn from the market by the repayment of the earlier loan
there corresponds an amount of newly issued banknotes."
Mises reminds us that
The fatal error of Fullarton [a member of the Banking
School] and his disciples was to have overlooked the fact that even
convertible banknotes remain permanently in circulation and can then bring
about a glut of fiduciary media the consequences of which resemble those
of an increase in the quantity of money in circulation. Even if it is true,
as Fullarton insists, that banknotes issued as loans automatically flow
back to the bank after the term of the loan has passed, still this does
not tell us anything about the question whether the bank is able to maintain
them in circulation by repeated prolongation of the loan.
During the historical debates between the Currency
School and the Banking
School, the latter made a similar argument. They maintained that banks,
by expanding credit, were only accommodating the "needs of trade." They argued
that the issuance of unbacked paper notes was a market mechanism that arose
simply to fill a need for a certain quantity of credit.
This argument runs aground on the following problem: the demand for credit
is not independent of the volume of bills issued. To say otherwise ignores
the impact of money supply on money demand.
Unlike for other goods, money demand depends in part on money supply. To understand
this, first consider why non-money goods do not behave this way. It is quite
reasonable to suppose that an increase in the supply of lawnmowers will more
fully meet existing demand. For every new lawnmower that is produced, a previously
sub-marginal purchaser will be supplied. But there is no reason to think that
an increase in the supply of mowers will change the existing level of demand
because the value of lawnmower to one homeowner does not depend , for the most
part , on how many other people have mowers.
But money is different. Unlike other goods, the supply of money influences
the demand for money. The reason is that the services provided by money depend
on the purchasing power of a single unit, while the purchasing power of each
unit depends on the total supply. This is explained as follows.
People hold cash in order to have a certain amount of real purchasing power,
not any fixed number of money units. The number of money units required to
provide the desired amount of purchasing power depends on the purchasing power
of a single unit. But the purchasing power of each money unit depends , in
part , on the total quantity of money circulating. If the quantity increases
through inflation, prices increase which caus es the purchasing power of each
unit to decrease. As the unit purchasing power decreases, people will need
more units of it to carry out transactions at the same real prices, so money
demand will rise.
Imagine that you were in another? Italy before the transition from the Italian
Lira to the Euro. You are used to carrying around some quantity of Lira in
your wallet. Now you must determine how many Euros to carry around for the
same purpose. It is impossible to answer this question unless you know the
prices, in Euros, of various goods that you might wish to buy. The purchasing
power of the Euro is nothing other than the inverse of the prices in Euros
of goods. If a newspaper cost €1, you might carry around €10 in your
pocket, while if the same paper were priced at €1000, you might need to
hold €10,000 to get through your day.
If credit expansion is taking place then fiduciary media will be issued. For
the same reason that money demand increases when money supply increases, money
demand will increase as credit expands. But in this case, the fiduciary media
will satisfy some of the demand for money. This is precisely what would happen
if the RBD were adopted. As more bills were discounted and more fiduciary media
would enter the system, prices in general would increase. At a higher level
of prices, more credit would be needed to finance the same investments as before.
The demand for money and credit to complete the same volume of transactions
would increase. A self-reinforcing spiral of increasing credit supply, increas
ing prices, and increasing demand gets created that in the end would be limited
only by the solvency of the banking system.
Here again we see the error in the idea that particular fiduciary media are "backed" by
specific goods and are therefore non-inflationary. The money prices of goods
are formed by the interaction of everyone who has a money balance and everyone
who has something to sell in exchange for money. This means that the goods
in process, in the case of a non-monetized bill, have already been priced given
the existing supply of money. When the bill becomes a fiduciary medium, new
prices are formed, through the interaction of all money and fiduciary media in
relation to the same set of goods. This will result in higher prices for the
goods in relation to the new total supply of money and fiduciary media.
We turn to Mises for
a restatement of this argument:
It is not true that the maximum amount which a bank can lend if it limits
its lending to discounting short-term bills of exchange resulting from the
sale and purchase of raw materials and half-manufactured goods, is a quantity
uniquely determined by the state of business and independent of the bank's
policies. This quantity expands or shrinks with the lowering or raising of
the rate of discount. Lowering the rate of interest is tantamount to increasing
the quantity of what is mistakenly considered as the fair and normal requirements
of business.
Carroll provides
a historical example:
Adam Smith supposed that an excess of convertible paper currency could not
be circulated, because the excess would at once return upon its issuers for
redemption. This is one of his errors, and the more surprising because of
the experience of France with Law's banking sixty years before the "Wealth
of Nations" was written. For four years the inflation continued there, until
general prices advanced fourfold, indicating a fourfold expansion of the
currency, and yet the currency did not return upon the bank for redemption
to any inconvenient extent until a few weeks before its doors were closed
in hopeless insolvency, although money was rushing out of the country all
the time. It is a question of confidence on the part of the people; if they
prefer the paper to money, and do not call upon the bank for payment, there
is no difference in effect between and inconvertible and a so-called convertible
currency, and, as we see in the example of France, it is easily possible
to press upon a credulous community as much convertible as an intelligent
people will bear of an inconvertible currency.
Inflation of consumer prices is harmful to employees and business firms for
many reasons. People get inflated into higher tax brackets, retired people
living on fixed incomes are impoverished, the purchasing power of wages does
not keep up with prices, among other reasons.
It is too simple to say, as
Hultberg does, that Rothbard and other Austrians have rejected the RBD
because it is inflationary, if they mean that a demonstration of the stability
of the CPI under the RBD would rebut Rothbard's critique. Austrian economists
see inflation as more than changes in final goods prices. A further clarification
of the Austrian critique of credit expansion will help distinguish the Austrian
view from the RBD and show that this criticism is groundless.
While economists of the Austrian school would deplore these evils, they are
have done heroic work in drawing attention to an even bigger problem. If banks
can lower the rate of interest by expanding credit, one might ask, why not
encourage this to enjoy the benefits of a lower interest rate all the time?
Mises and later Hayek investigated the relationship between the organization
of an economic system and bank credit expansion. What they found was that the
below-market interest rate brought about by credit expansion is a temporary
phenomenon. The below-market rate of interest distorts the productive structure
of the economy, resulting in a wasteful boom-and-bust
cycle. During the transition from boom to bust, the interest rate will
rise to or above its market rate.
Austrian economists have been critical of inflation not only for its effects
on the purchasing power of money, but also because the credit cycles waste
scarce accumulated savings. All credit expansion causes a credit cycle to some
extent, whether or not ordinary consumer price inflation shows up. When an
Austrian economist says that a monetary system, such as the RBD, would be "inflationary," they
do not necessarily mean that would result in an increase in end goods prices.
Nor would it be sufficient to say in response to the Austrian that "if end
goods prices did not rise under that system, then everything is fine."
Credit expansion can coexist with stable or even declining prices as measured
by inflation indexes, as they did for example in the 1920s and the 1990s. During
a period of credit expansion alongside rapid investment in new technology resulting
in high productivity growth, prices
will not fall as fast (or not rise as fast) as they otherwise would have
in the absence of credit expansion.
Selgin's Less
than Zero: The Case for a Falling Price Level in a Growing Economy is
an economic a history of periods during which overall prices fell due to
productivity growth in excess of the growth in the supply of money. While
wages did fall in nominal terms, nominal prices fell faster. Far from being
anti-labor, these were periods of rising real wages. Selgin explains that
prices in England fell so rapidly during 1873-1896 that economic historians
who believe that falling prices must indicate a depression cannot explain
the general prosperity of this period. The standard of living of laborers
improved because their lower nominal wages were able to purchase more goods
at even lower nominal prices.
It is unfortunate, as Mises wrote,
that "no one should expect that any logical argument or any experience could
ever shake the almost religious fervor of those who believe in salvation through
spending and credit expansion." The complex rationalization that Fekete presents
for discounting bills of exchange should not obscure that the essence of the
Real Bills system is, to cite Mises again, "Stones into Bread".
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