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I have written numerous times on the consequences of the Fed's loose monetary
policy and how it can aggravate the current account deficit. Until recently
figures confirmed my worst fears that the current account was racing along
unabated. But what else should one expect given the monetary boom that the
Fed unleashed. Now the actual CAD figures don't matter -- what matters is the
trend and the reason for it. The reason has already been established and is
now monetary history.
However, it now appears that the CAD might start to shrink as US exports expand.
Nothing surprising here. It is an established fact that when a country's currency
depreciates its exports will expand because their prices are falling in terms
of other currencies. As economists say: the terms of trade have now turned
against the US economy. In plain English this means that That the US will have
to export more if Americans want to maintain their current consumption of foreign-made
consumer goods. (This is called the J-curve effect).
But this in no way vitiates my previous arguments with respect to the CAD
being fuelled by the Fed's loose monetary policy. What is being missed is the
international consequences of this policy. Sometime ago Greenspan warned that
excessive domestic demand could not continue to indefinitely absorb increasing
quantities of imports. This was a clear admission on his part that monetary
policy is the real villain and not the American consumer. Greenspan was not
alone in his thinking. When he was governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia
Bernie Fraser stated:
If demand runs ahead of capacity, it will spill over into imports and widen
the current account deficit (CAD). This is what happened in 1989-90 when
the deficit reached 6 per cent of GDP. On this occasion the CAD is not expected
to increase to the very high levels reached during the lat 1980s. (Reserve
Bank Annual Report, 1994).
Despite this dismal monetary picture the US Treasury still argues -- as does
the Australian Treasury -- that cheap imports have helped hold down inflation.
And it is this import/inflation argument that brings us to the heart of this
matter. I have stressed in previous articles that loose monetary policies create
malinvestments that eventually emerge as 'excess investment' and rising unemployment.
Unfortunately this fact is scarcely understood and rarely discussed in public.
If it were then the reasoning would be readily extended to imports.
The US has generated 'excess demand', i.e., it implemented an inflationary
policy. Eventually the CAD started to deteriorate as the economy starts sucking
in more imports. But imports do not come from Santa's workshop. They are produced
by foreign firms which have responded to increased US demand by directing production
away from domestic demand. The longer the US persisted with an inflationary
policy that directs foreign production toward satisfying US demand the greater
will be foreign malinvestments.
As these firms and industries become more dependent on exporting to the US
they will absorb more and more capital and labour, directing them away from
domestic use. America's record CAD makes this an indisputable fact. But this
analysis leads to the conclusion that rather than holding inflation in check,
rising imports really indicate that the US has been exporting its inflation
to its trading partners. So even if these exporting countries do not allow
dollar imports to expand their money supplies, as was the case with Eurodollars,
they will still accumulate malinvestments. When the monetary brakes are finally
applied American industries will not be the only ones to suffer*.
It's impossible to say to what extent exporting countries will suffer or even
which countries will suffer the most. But we can say that any country with
a poor history of political stability might well find itself sorely tested
if a significant number of its industries have come to depend on US demand
for their prosperity. Such countries cannot afford to have hundreds of thousands
put out of work, which might happen if America's demand for imports were to
plunge.
Naturally, that government intervention in the market place in the form of
a criminally loose monetary policy is the real destabilising factor behind
crises in international trade is not something that is generally recognised
-- thanks to Keynesian thinking. Just as naturally, when the crisis emerges
it will be capitalism, not meddling governments, that will get the blame. It
will be no different in the US.
This monetary view of the current account deficit is based on the fact that
money is not neutral, meaning that increasing the money supply distorts the
price structure, a phenomenon that was discussed by a number of classical economists.
These discussions took place within the framework of gold standard and the
consequences of paper money on the exchange rate and trade.
Therefore it shows why it was ridiculous for Mr Des Moore to dismiss my argument,
as he did, on the grounds that it is not within the "traditional explanation".
If anyone has doubts about this matter allow me draw your attention to Joseph
Schumpeter's observation that "the 'classical' writers without neglecting other
cases, reasoned primarily in terms of an unfettered international gold standard".
(The History of Economic Analysis, Oxford University Press, 1994, p.
732).
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