Yet another take on the deflation and inflation argument…

by drwasho on Jan 21, 2010

Happy new year one and all,

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I was paying a visit to Steve Keen's website, as I often do from time to time, when I came across his repost article from Mish Shedlock.  Mish, a well known Austrian school commentator, was making the case that the economy was going to experience a very severe debt deflationary depression (the dreaded triple D).  This of course fits in perfectly with Steve Keen's long term views for America and Australia.  It is an excellent article, and he's written other similar articles of a high quality that he links to.  The main points of the article were:

"1) Lending comes first and what little reserves there are (if any) come later.
2) There really are no excess reserves.
3) Not only are there no excess reserves, there are essentially no reserves to speak of at all. Indeed, bank reserves are completely “fictional”.
4) Banks are capital constrained not reserve constrained.
5) Banks aren’t lending because there are few credit worthy borrowers worth the risk."

His overall assessment of the deflation/inflation debate can be summarized by his concluding remarks from an article entitled 'Fiat World Mathematical Model':

"What happens next depends somewhat on the political will of the central banks and politicians. However, it depends more on the psychology of the borrowers. If consumers and businesses refuse to spend and instead pay back debts (or default on them along with rising unemployment), the picture simply is not inflationary, at least to any significant decree.

The credit bubble that just popped exceeded that preceding the great depression, not just in the US but worldwide. Thus, it is unrealistic to expect the deflationary bust to be anything other than the biggest bust in history. Those looking for hyperinflation or even strong inflation in light of the above, are simply looking at the wrong model.

At some point the market value of credit will start expanding again, but that is likely further down the road, and weaker in scope than most think."

Now, it appears that the mainstream Austrian school economic thought is that we're heading down a purely inflationary path due to unprecedented levels of fiat money creation by governments around the world, including Australia.  Mish is among a few who take a contrarian view to this prevailing thought.  Like Steve Keen, who's a post-keynesian, I like Mish's analysis a lot, but I reach different conclusions as to the outcomes.

One of the most useful contributions Mish has made is clarifying the terms: inflation and deflation.  Both are the expansion or contraction, respectively, of the supply of money and credit.  Many times we tend to leave that last one out.  The way Mish reaches the conclusion of a massive debt deflationary depression is that he focuses on the contraction of credit due to the massive current and future wave of credit defaults.

Consider this example, a bank has 50 IOUs representing 50 different mortgages worth $100K each.  The total amount of money lent out by the bank is $5 000 000.  50 people receive the loaned money, the bank holds on to the IOU pieces of paper and over time the bank receives monthly principal/interest repayments.  Suddenly, 49 out of the 50 individuals cease to make principal/interest repayments due to either unemployment or higher interest rates.  These individuals walk away from their mortgages and the bank is left holding these mortgages with no one servicing these IOUs.  Insult turns to injury when the mortgage/IOUs drop in value considerably due to falling house prices.  The bank then has to mark-to-market a loss of $4 900 000 worth of 49 IOUs on their balance sheet.  It could be even worse if the bank leveraged money against these used these IOUs.

Now I can only assume that both Mish and Steve look at this example as a textbook case of deflation.  The money supply, made up of money (cash) and credit (IOU paper) has contracted in this case (remember that banks essentially treat credit money (i.e. IOUs) like cash money on their balance sheet).  The bank is left in ruins and takes a massive hit on it's balance sheet and share price.  It is facing insolvency.  What happens next, one of two things:

1)  The bank goes bankrupt

2)  The Feds bail them out

Ok, so option number 1 is out, unless you're a competitor with Goldman Sachs, in which case they'll let you go under (sorry Lehman Brothers).  Option number two involves using sovereign debt/tax payer money and/or freshly printed money by the central bank to purchase the banks worthless IOUs, now labeled 'toxic assets'.  The bank are recapitalized at 100 cents on the dollar and balance sheet goes from red to black; the share price begins to rise.  Question: is that deflationary?  We'll make it even harder, let's say the Feds only bail them out at 20 cents on the dollar, is that still deflationary?

The answer is no.  This is where both Mish and Steve Keen might be missing something.  Both Mish and Steve point out that even if a magical printing press were to print $5 trillion dollars out of thin air and you buried the money into the ground, no actual inflation would occur as the money hasn't touched or circulated within the real economy.  So now there's a distinction between active and passive money and credit.  This is important to remember this for next point:

Back to the example, the initial $5 000 000 lent-out by the bank is active money, it is in the hands of 50 people who have given it to 50 other people in exchange for a house, this cash is circulating within the real economy.  The $5 000 000 IOUs the bank sits on is "passive credit", it doesn't really circulate in the real economy like cash (yes it can be bought and sold as a credit instrument, but by in large it sits there and does nothing).  It is only a demand for money to be paid back over time.  For all intents and purposes, the IOUs are buried in the backyard.  When the IOUs are devalued due to falling house prices, the bank loses $4 900 000 of passive credit.

Mish and Steve may call this a black hole of $4 900 000, but in reality it will not suck this amount of money from the real economy directly from people's wallets.  Ultimately it will be written-off.  By definition this was a deflationary outcome, but in the real economy, no money has been withdrawn from circulation.  Yes the promise of future money is gone, but in the present, circulating money isn't sucked into a piece of paper demanding to be filled by $4 900 000.

Now enter the Feds, who make up for some of the posted loses by lending the bank some cash.  This money can then be used for future loans, or if the bank isn't prepared to lend, it will turn to the foreign exchange (Forex) market for speculation in order to collect some interest.  This action is inflationary as the supply of money has expanded.  This is also active money that will circulate in the real economy either through commercial loans or Forex.  Don't underestimate the use of money by banks in Forex, which turns over $2 trillion per day!  They can easily place the money into a carry trade between the Australian-US dollar.

Apply this example to the entire banking industry and the same conclusions still stand: while technically there will be a deflation in the money supply, this will be on the passive credit side of things.  Since the financial institutions are the major players sitting on this mountain of IOUs, they will be the losers who face insolvency (as they already have).  However, due to the governments actions, and the future inflationary actions by the central banks (which are almost a foregone conclusion), the expansion in the active money supply to bailout banks will have a net inflationary outcome.  This will be immediately evident in asset price inflation and a weakening dollar, which will in turn raise the cost of oil, commodities and food prices.

In the case of the US, the very real threat of massive inflation from sovereign debt interest servicing, and you've got a strong case for an inflationary depression over the next 5-10 years.  The insolvency and underperformance of the banks will contract the level of credit expansion we've been used to these few decades.  This will significantly threaten both medium and long-term productive loans/investments and more importantly short-term consumer debt-driven spending, which is the foundation of both the US and Australian economy.  This will be a deflationary force behind the recession, in the sense that it may lead to lower asset prices.  However, as the governments around the world are adopting the time-honored Keynesian solution of stimulating aggregate demand, both government deficits and actions by the central banks will be a major and overriding inflationary force in the economy.  The idea that money is being withdrawn from economy by these debt 'black holes' is fallacious, even money that is being paid back to the banks is being used for speculation by the banks in Forex.  Deflationists are also underestimating the willingness of governments to take over the demand for credit to new and uncharted levels.

In truth, the economy is in need of a contraction of credit/money and restructuring towards production, savings and trade.  History has demonstrated that credit liquidation, inaction by the government and the central banks (i.e. no bailouts) is the fastest way to restore a healthy economy (e.g. the 'forgotten' depression of 1920-21 in the US).  This process will be very painful, very hard, but will be prolonged only by government intervention aimed at slowing or preventing this action from occurring.  If they continue with Keynesian-style intervention and money printing, welcome the start of a very long depression.

God bless,

Washington

Responsibility or regulation?

by Justin on Jun 27, 2009

You can't make make this up: the government has decided to introduce new credit laws to punish "dodgy lenders". Not only does every lender now have to be licenced which in itself adds operating costs and red tape, but they're also subjected to laws requiring them to let borrowers "...request a variation to their credit contract if they suffered financial hardship." It's good to see that a voluntary contract between two parties is now worthless in this country. What's next, laws against usury?

It's always the same with the government: if the existing regulation doesn't work then just add yet another layer that strips even more liberties, adds more red tape, increases the costs for private enterprise and ultimately hurts the consumer, the very people they're trying to "protect". As interest rates rise thanks to cumbersome regulation and the inflation of the money supply, watch the government get even more heavy-handed in the loan industry. They will probably condemn lenders for charging "too much", like they can possibly determine what is "too much" or "fair" without the market's price mechanism. Then they'll force down rates, banks will stop lending (they'll probably simply invest themselves) and the politicians will "fight" the huge underground consumer loan industry they created that doesn't take your house, it takes your fingers.

The banks don’t prey on the poor. They offer them a service; no one is forcing them to agree to it. The price is right for them at the time they take the money, that’s perfectly legal. The right to buy or not to buy is vital to economic well-being and, of course, to personal liberty. Individuals need to be responsible for themselves and try to avoid the losses that result from mistakes. If people are constantly bailed out, the loss comes out of the public purse (or the lenders) and they are relieved of personal responsibility. They can then waste and lose just as much as their inherent laziness may dictate!

Remove all of the banking and lending regulation and allow the free market and competition to work. We're on a slippery slope to a place no one wants to go (politicians excluded) and these do-gooders who think they're saving the world are leading the charge, systematically removing individual liberties and freedom as they go. As Ayn Rand said, we support the smallest minority of them all: the individual.

When good news is bad news

by Justin on May 07, 2009

While Federal Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner says the latest retail sales figures[1] show the Government is taking the right steps to fight the economic downturn, the truth is probably the opposite. While I'm going to ignore the blatant issue with cause and effect (we have no idea based on the evidence alone whether the stimulus worked or didn't work. What if retail sales are up on some unrelated issue?), the downturn we're experiencing is a response to an artificially inflated economic structure, not a lack of consumption and spending.

Loose credit, courtesy of the Federal Reserve in the US and our own RBA, was lured into certain sectors and industries in an unsustainable way, known as malinvestment. The natural response is for failed businesses to sell off assets and allow the labour and capital currently held up in those industries to be reallocated.

Some real good news would be further declines in retail spending, which would perhaps indicate that consumers were taking on less debt. They might be saving more. They might be adjusting their time preferences and thinking about long-term plans rather than short-term wants. Unfortunately, it seems that the stimulus is serving its purpose: prolonging the downturn and the misallocation of capital so that the political muppets can claim a victory based on some government statistics.

All of the above (less debt, more savings) are pre-conditions for recovery. The sudden increase in retail sales is only good news if one adopts the crude theory that economies are sustained by consumer spending. Consumer spending is simply the 'reward' for the real foundations of growth: real savings and investment. I find it highly unlikely this recent jump in retail sales are a result of an improvement of those foundations; the more likely answer is that it was caused by further capital destruction for short-term gains.


[1] Source: Sales surge 'shows stimulus success', ABC Australia, 06/05/2009