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In a recent talk he gave at the London School of Economics Bernanke basically
laid out the thinking behind his monetary strategy with the statement: "Put
out the fire first and then think about the fire code." This is code for flood
the US economy with dollars and then worry about the inflationary consequences
for the country. No wonder he saw nothing wrong with letting the monetary base
explode by 107 per cent (from just under one trillion dollars to nearly three
trillion dollars) from 8 August last year to 9 January.
It appears that Obama1 thinks that Bernanke is a genius who will save his
economic bacon by underwriting his irresponsible spending schemes. According
to this story line the banks will start running down their excess reserves,
the economy will begin to recover and unemployment will fall: revenues will
rise and Obama's reckless spending binge -- funded in part by severe cuts to
the nation's defence's -- will be kept afloat.
But what about inflationary pressure from Bernanke's reckless monetary policy?
No problem. As inflation begins to accelerate he will slow it down by gradually
withdrawing money from the economy by selling Treasury bonds. Moreover, this
monetary tactic will have little or no effect -- so they think -- on the dollar.
In their eyes the US will remain a save haven for foreign investors. Hence
this 'defensive' demand for dollars will act as a barrier to a significant
devaluation. In addition, countries with large dollar balances -- think China
with its trillions in greenbacks -- will not be eager to drive down the value
of their 'fixed' dollar assets by dumping greenbacks. How wonderfully ingenious!
Obama gets the best of both worlds and a second term. Best of all, the Democrats
get a permanent majority.
There is just one problem. There is no way this scheme can possibly work.
What it does stand a good chance of doing, however, is wreaking absolute havoc
with the economy and exchange rates. The fundamental problem is that as a true
believer in the Keynesian cult Bernanke has no real understanding of money,
and certainly no grasp of capital theory.
Let us assume that all goes -- at least initially -- as hoped and that the
banks start lending and business starts borrowing. The banking system operates
on a 10 per cent required reserve ratio. What this means is that even if only
half of the newly expanded monetary base was fully loaned out this would increase
the money supply by about four trillion dollars. In other words, the monetary
base is so huge -- thanks to Bernanke -- that running down excess reserves
by a comparatively small amount could lead to a massive credit expansion.
(It needs to be stressed at this point that neither Obama nor Bernanke are
relying on the so-called stimulus to rescue the economy. Obama's big spending
program2 is intended to entrench big government behind the smoke screen he
calls a stimulus while Bernanke's monetary shenanigans are meant to be the
real driving force behind economic recovery).
The fatal flaw in this monetary scheme is Bernanke's failure to understand
that money is not neutral. He, along with virtually all other economists, assume,
tacitly or otherwise, that the money supply affects only the level of prices
while individual prices are determined by the forces of supply and demand.
As such, it is not possible for monetary expansion to create malinvestments
that will have to be liquidated at a later date.
The concept of neutral money is another dangerous fallacy and one for which
America is currently paying a high price. Money enters the economy at various
points where it then raises the demand for goods. The result of this demand
ripples out to the rest of the economy. By this means those who receive the
new money first are the winners. The last ones to get the money are the losers.
This is called the "Cantillon effect"3. If the new money enters the economy
through the capital market due to interest rates being forced below their market
clear rates then the demand for capital goods will be disproportionally increased.
We call this the "Wicksell effect".
The result is that a boom is triggered, the higher stages of production are
over-extended, malinvestments are created, the boom comes to an end, unemployment
rises and malinvestments emerge in the form of idle capacity. This is a brief
sketch of the classic boom-bust cycle.
Should all of the new money enter the economy at the lower stages of production
consumption will be greatly increased at the expense of the higher stages of
production where the marginal productivity of labour is invariably higher because
of the ratio of capital to labour. The result is that investment moves into
the lower stages of production where investments tend to be less time consuming
and hence labour productivity is lower, meaning real wages would have to fall.
Therefore it does not matter at which points Bernanke injects new money into
the economy because his injections will immediately act to distort the nation's
production structure. The larger the injections and the longer they continue
the larger will be the distortions. Now these injections are like a monetary
magnet in that they continue to attract resources. Because of the nature of
inflation these expanded economic activities will require more and more money
to maintain themselves. In addition, the monetary expansion will eventually
fuel further rises in domestic prices as aggregate monetary demand rises.
Should some clever little central banker get it into his head that he can
control the situation by simply slowing down the rate at which the new money
is injected into these economic activities he will find himself sorely frustrated.
As soon as he tries it economic activity will begin to slow, output will fall
and unemployment will rise. This will happen as surely as night follows day.
But this is the good news. The monetary injections will have raised nominal
incomes which in turn will raise the demand for imports and exert a downward
pressure on the dollars
With surging prices at home and a depreciating exchange rate foreign holders
of greenbacks might just decide that they have had enough and start a run on
the currency by dumping their dollar balances forcing the fed to raise interest
rates and trigger a recession. If you think this is pretty ugly, then it is
my melancholy duty to inform you that there is even worse to come.
Fed figures reveal that in the first quarter of 1980 "household debt service
payments and financial obligations as a percentage of disposable personal income" was
15.9 per cent. This figure had risen to 19.05 in the third quarter of 2008.
There is no doubt that the US has been on a massive borrowing binge, one that
was fuelled by the fed's irresponsible monetary policy. (It only has two monetary
stances: tight and loose with loose being the norm. From October 1997 to January
2009 it expanded the money supply by about 120 per cent4). This suggests that
the rise in interest rates would also set off a financial bloodbath among debtors.
And why would America be in this mess? Because Bernanke designed a Machiavellian
monetary policy intended to support Obama's fanatical worship of Big Government.
1. Obama is so ignorant of the economic history of the 1930s
that he really believes that Roosevelt's "initial steps did actually work".
The problem, according this great economic historian, is that Roosevelt went
for "a balanced budget, and then what you had was a recession within a depression." Pure
unadulterated drivel by a complete economic ignoramus. (see here and here)
This is so bad he must be getting it from Krugman -- or should that be Bernanke?
2. A great many Americans are beginning to wake up to the fact
that Obama conned them. This spending package is the bigest barrel of pork
in American history and is part of a strategy to make the Democrats a permanent
majority in government. By the time this lot got throught with economy Argentina
would look like an economic miracle in comparison.
3. This problem was heavily discussed during the Bullion Controversy
that Walter Boyd's open letter to Prime Minister Pitt started in 1801. It's
a great pity that the world's central bankers are completely ignorant of this
extremely important episode in the history of economic thought.
4. Austrian definition of the money supply: Cash, demand deposits
with commercial banks, and thrift institutions, government deposits with banks
and the central bank.
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