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Reading about the US dollar has once again brought home to me just how little
our economic commentariat understand about the links between exchange rates,
money supply and the balance of payments. Even today misconceptions about the
balance of payments are still deeply rooted in mercantilist thought. Mercantilists
came to theorise that an increased volume of gold would have the effect of
stimulating production and increasing national wealth. They therefore concluded
that an export surplus would make a country prosperous. They further reasoned
that a trade deficit would eventually drain the kingdom of precious metals
and thereby impoverish it.
Like so many economic fallacies it did contain a kernel of truth but its main
premise was demolished by David Hume who explained in an essay, published in
1752, why it is impossible for a country on a gold standard to lose its stock
of gold. The theory is pure monetarism. He rightly pointed out that when a
country suffers a gold drain its price level will fall and the price levels
of the gold importing countries will rise. Therefore the flow of gold will
be reversed by changes in relative price levels until the trade balance is
once again restored.
In other words, falling prices in the deficit country raises the value of
gold while rising prices in the surplus countries lowers the value of gold.
Hume recognised that gold was only a commodity without intrinsic value and
therefore was subject to the laws of supply and demand. The astonishing success
of the gold standard in stabilising international trade in the nineteenth century
(no balance of payments crises for the US and Britain in those days) seemed
to more than amply confirm Hume's theory.
Hume's only error was to assume that gold flow movements and thus money supply
changes would only occur in prices rather than output and trade. Now the classical
school stressed, as did the mercantilists, the role of money in the economy
and the means by which economic conditions were transmitted from one country
to another. Therefore international considerations strongly influenced monetary
policy. This is why central banks used the discount rate to influence gold
flows. Nevertheless, the gold standard brought the kind of monetary stability
of which we can only dream.
It was observed that changes in exports and imports occurred without changes
in the flow of gold. In other words, these changes took place within the gold
export and import points. The reason for this is that changes in expenditure
quickly reversed the flow of goods. So if a country ran a trade surplus the
domestic spending it generated would increase the demand for imports without
changing the 'price level'.
The sort of exchange rate problems we now battle are the product of monetary
policies that basically assume more is better, more being currency and credit.
So when a country expands its money supply -- let us say dollars -- not only
is the demand for domestic goods and services increased, so is the demand for
imports because the increased stock of money now exceeds the residents' demand
to hold money.
This raises the demand for imports causing a current account deficit to emerge.
Moreover, foreigners now find themselves in an identical situation. They too
now find that the supply of money exceeds their demand to hold it. This excess
of They unload these excess dollars by buying imported goods or foreign currencies.
This causes more dollars to hit the foreign exchange market thus forcing down
the exchange rate.
Naturally a depreciation leads to higher import prices. This in turn misleads
many commentators -- especially those paid to know better -- to claim that
depreciations are inflationary. This argument was used extensively by Weimar
politicians to explain the most devastating inflation ever visited on Germany:
it was, according to them, caused by a persistent passive balance of payments.
However, it can never be sufficiently stressed that basically it is inflations
that cause depreciations, not the reverse. Ludwig von Mises was very clear
on this point:
Foreign exchange rates rise because the quantity of the [domestic] money
has increased ... The balance of payments doctrine overlooks the fact that
the extent of foreign trade depends entirely on prices. It disregards the
fact that nothing can be imported or exported if price differences, which
make the trade profitable, do not exist. (Ludwig von Mises On the Manipulation
of Money and Credit, Free Market Books, 1978, p. 31).
Hence credit expansion raises nominal incomes which sucks in imports causing
a deficit on the balance of payments: this in turn results in a loss of foreign
reserves as the central bank struggles to maintain an untenable exchange rate.
From this it follows that there are only three ways in which balance can be
restored: (a) the deficit country must cease credit expansion, (b) other countries
must inflate their economies, (c) the deficit country must devalue its currency
until the deficit is eliminated.
The exchange rate issue is at heart a comparatively simple on and is based
on the laws of supply and demand. Nevertheless, there is still a lot more to
be discussed at a later date. But always bear in mind that any commentator
who sneers at the nineteenth century gold standard is bound to be totally ignorant
about the subject.
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