|
Below is an extract from a commentary originally posted at www.speculative-investor.com on
13th September 2007.
The weekly
comments of Dr. John Hussman regularly contain great insights into the
world of stock market investing and should, in our opinion, be read by anyone
wanting to improve his/her understanding of what drives the stock market.
However, almost everything Dr. Hussman writes on the topic of inflation is
flawed.
Take his latest commentary,
for instance. In this commentary he makes some valid points, such as that the
quantity of reserves held by banks no longer determines the amount of lending
conducted by the banking system and that the Fed follows, rather than leads,
the market at interest-rate turning points. But his argument that "inflation
is ultimately always and everywhere a fiscal phenomenon" misses the mark.
According to Dr. Hussman: "Inflation occurs when fiscal policy creates
more government liabilities (either money or debt) than people are willing
to hold at existing prices." And: "...if the government produces a
lot of liabilities in an unproductive economy (as the Germans did in the
1920's, paying striking workers in the Ruhr even though they weren't producing
anything), you get high inflation. It would not have mattered had Germany
paid workers with bonds instead of money -- bond prices would have declined,
raising interest rates, lowering the willingness of people to hold non-interest-bearing
currency, and causing a hyperinflation nonetheless. Inflation is first a
fiscal phenomenon, tempered by economic activity and credit conditions, and
affected only at the margin by "monetary policy"."
Now, Dr. Hussman defines inflation as a rise in the general price level, which
is a problem for a start and probably goes a long way towards explaining why
most of what he writes on the topic is wrong (if you begin with an incorrect
premise and then apply perfect logic then you will certainly arrive at an incorrect
conclusion). Inflation is actually an increase in the supply of money, but
to avoid writing at cross-purposes we will temporarily adopt his incorrect
definition.
Dr. Hussman's assertion, then, is that if the government spends way beyond
its means then the result will be inflation (a fall in the purchasing power
of the currency) regardless of whether the deficit spending is financed in
a way that leads to an increase in the money supply. Furthermore, by stating
that inflation is always a fiscal phenomenon he is, in effect, stating that
a rise in the supply of money will not cause the currency to lose purchasing
power unless it stems from an increase in government deficit-spending.
While we agree that the main contributor to inflation over the long-term is
the growth and associated deficit-spending of government, logic and empirical
evidence tell us that a) declines in the purchasing power of the currency can
only occur when the supply of the currency increases relative to demand for
the currency, and b) large and sustained increases in currency supply inevitably
lead to declines in the currency's purchasing power. The logical argument is
based on the axiom that the law of supply and demand applies to money just
like it applies to everything else in the economic world (the price (purchasing
power) of money will fall if, and only if, the supply of money increases relative
to the demand for money).
Importantly, this logical argument is supported by the historical record.
For example, due to increases in money supply being severely limited by virtue
of the dollar being a claim on a fixed weight of gold, the dollar did not lose
any of its purchasing power during the hundred-year period prior to the establishment
of the Fed; but during the 94-year period since the establishment of the Fed
the US Dollar has lost more than 95% of its purchasing power in parallel with
a massive increase in dollar supply. A substantial chunk of the increase in
the supply of dollars is linked to the expansion of the US Government, but
it was the increase in the money supply and not the expansion of the government
per se that caused the loss of purchasing power. We do acknowledge, though,
that the dollar's purchasing power would have held-up better if the increase
in its supply had been mostly due to private-sector borrowing (perhaps it would
have 'only' lost 80% of its value under this situation as opposed to the 95%
it actually lost). The reason is that the private sector would have used the
new money more efficiently, meaning that there would have been larger gains
in productivity to offset the effects of the money-supply's increase.
Another historical example of how it's the increase in the supply of money
and not the increase in the supply of government bonds that ultimately determines
the currency's purchasing power was provided by Japan's post-bubble experience.
During the 1990s and the first few years of this decade the Japanese Government
issued bonds at a much faster pace than the government of any other developed
country, and yet the Yen held its purchasing power better than any other currency.
This was almost certainly because the supply of Yen increased at a very slow
pace.
Japan's experience supports our view that a large increase in government indebtedness
will NOT cause the currency to lose purchasing power UNLESS the debt is monetised,
that is, unless the issuing of the debt results in the large-scale creation
of money 'out of thin air'. Of course, large increases in government debt almost
always lead to large increases in the supply of money, which is why Dr. Hussman
observes an inverse relationship between the level of government indebtedness
and the purchasing power of the currency.
But what about Dr. Hussman's contention that if the German Government had
issued bonds in the early 1920s instead of printing money then the end result
would still have been hyperinflation? Well, the end result would have been
hyperinflation if the government had printed the money it needed to make the
interest payments on the bonds. However, had the government chosen not to default
indirectly via the printing press then it would have been forced to default
directly on its obligations; and in this case the bonds would have become worthless,
but the money in which the bonds were denominated would have held its purchasing
power.
In summary, there is a huge pile of wrongheaded commentary on the inflation/deflation
topic and most of it is based, one way or another, on the falsehood that the
laws of supply and demand do not apply to money. Dr. Hussman has contributed
to this pile by arguing that the primary cause of falling purchasing power
is the increase in the supply of government bonds and not the (usually associated)
increase in the supply of money. When people argue that a rising oil price
will ripple through the economy and put upward pressure on the general price
level they are also guilty of adding to the pile. This is because they are
failing to point out that a price rise in one part of the economy (the oil
sector, in this case) will have to be offset by price declines elsewhere unless
there is an increase in money supply. And then there are the people who argue
that under certain circumstances the central bank will be unable to prevent
deflation from occurring, regardless of how much money it prints. These people
are contributors to the pile as well because they are, in effect, saying that
the price of a commodity (money, in this case) can be independent of its supply.
|