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Retail sales for the day after Thanksgiving is one of the most over-analyzed
statistics spewed forth each Christmas season. That we have such a day to glorify
consumers is quite a testament to how important consumers are perceived to
be to our economy. Consumer strength has become the bellwether of the strength
of our economy, but in accepting this viewpoint, economists have put the cart
before the horse. People have long ago forgotten that wealth is created through
production, not consumption.
The widespread acceptance of the consumption gauge has also made our government's
objective of presenting the illusion of economic activity an easier task. In
duping Americans, by way of bubble blowing, into a perception of wealth, our
government has kept us consuming, and in fact has spurred us to consume like
never before. The stock and housing bubbles of the last decade will, hopefully,
be the focus of important Austrian-school texts that will eventually lead us
back to real currencies.
A central premise of the Austrian School, that an inflated money supply leads
to misallocation of resources, can be a difficult concept to mechanically visualize.
The recent housing bubble provides an opportunity for clarity. A house, being
a real asset, can gain intrinsic value in only two ways: 1) adding features
to the house (which means one's basis rises along with value) or 2) benefiting
from improving economic activity in the vicinity of the house. It is the second
method which produces real wealth for the owner and also explains why real
estate booms and busts tend to be localized. The nationwide boom in housing
prices, along with the magnitude of nominal gains, lends strong credence to
the case for a bubble.
In the case of housing, misallocation of resources arises from people's perception
of wealth from strong home price gains. Home owners perceive the gains as real
wealth and do not adjust for inflationary effects. They spend these gains on
real goods at a faster rate than their real wealth gains, thereby increasing
debt and lowering savings. The effect may not be apparent on a case-by-case
basis, but when viewing statistics on a national scale, we see that savings
as a percentage of income has gone to zero and that we have a debt bubble that
is far more ominous than the asset bubbles we have recently experienced.
The situation is precarious, but the path our government will take is predictable
with a high degree of certainty. As a nation of debtors, any deflationary cycle
will be unpalatable. Deflation will cause our debts to grow in real terms,
causing great distress to us debtors, and therefore our government has fought
deflation tooth & nail each time it has been a threat. Those battles have
put us in a vicious circle: each deflation-fighting bout has only spurred greater
misallocations, which in turn have only made deflation a greater threat. Despite
our government's tough talk on inflation, they know behind-the-scenes that
deflation is the bigger threat, and the next time we are faced with the prospect,
they will print money in volumes that will make the 2001-05 monetary inflation
look like a blip.
In a healthy economy... that is one in which production, not consumption,
is glorified and in which savings, not debt, is prominent... deflation is a
healthy and natural part of the economic cycle. Deflation cleans the less efficient
participants out of the economy (they are usually the ones burdened by debt),
and increases the value of savings. The combination of these two effects, frees
capital to be used for new production, which spurs economic expansion and wealth
creation.
The theory is such a simple concept that even politicians can grasp it and
would put it to practice if they had an incentive to do so. However, prudent
economic practice is not politically expedient because it greatly limits the
government's ability to tinker with the economy. Not only is the illusion of
economic activity important to a President's desire to fulfill his agenda,
but the illusion of sympathy by way of action is important to the Congressman
who wants to get re-elected.
Economic tinkering, though counterproductive, is endemic to our system. No
political body is going to voluntarily restrict its authority, even to the
benefit of the entire system. Therefore, a reversion to a real money system
is simply impossible without crisis. But even in crisis politicians have a
way of continuing, even exacerbating, the behavior that originally created
the crisis (see Murray Rothbard's, "America's
Great Depression" for the ideal example).
Despite the hopes and efforts of Austrian-school thinkers, a monetary revolution
that hails the return of real money is unlikely without a political revolution
opening the path. The political system must be modified to reduce the incentives
for tinkering and/or to enforce prudent economic practice.
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Deric O. Cadora
www.theDOCument.com
Deric O. Cadora is the editor of The
DOCument, a daily newsletter offering stock market commentary, macro
economic discussion, and technical trade signals. Deric is a professional
investor and the proprietor of Atavia, Inc., a thriving web applications
and web hosting company. His investment experience spans two decades, during
which time he served as principal of a broker-dealer and developed proprietary
statistical trading models.
Copyright © 2005-2009 Deric O. Cadora
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