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The dismal failure of central bank monetary policy
By Jack Crooks

"Credit expansion is the governments' foremost tool in their struggle against the free market. In their hands it is the magic wand designed to conjure away the scarcity of capital goods, to lower the rate of interest or to abolish it altogether, to finance lavish government spending, to expropriate the capitalists, to contrive everlasting booms, and to make everybody prosperous."
- Ludwig von Mises

It was a cold, dreary autumn day at the central bank. The clocks struck 13. It was another reminder to visitors that all is possible in the neo-Keynesian puzzle palace. For he who controls the money controls the man.

It seems central bankers and their allies still believe all things good flow from credit expansion. They create fancy equations and theorems to justify and rationalize their forays into the free market. It's simply inflationism - which is the essence of Keynesian economics - built upon an elaborate structure of pseudo-science. George Orwell once said, "Man is the only creature that consumes without producing." Sadly, the modern central bank believed him - and the big news this week is the adjustment of interest rates in China.

The results are a wholesale trashing of the world reserve currency and rampant disregard for the long-term external financial position of the United States in order to stimulate "demand". You can see that in the chart below. 

 

The chart above compares the total amount of US dollar debt held by the rest of the world (red line) - a cool US$4.37 trillion - to the trade weighted value of the US dollar (blue line). I have shaded on the chart, 2002 through the second quarter of 2004, showing the massive US Federal Reserve credit-expansion campaign engineered by the push down on the Fed Funds Rate (chart below), dragging the dollar down with it. 

Sure, the Fed was able to juice gross domestic product (GDP) by flooding the globe with liquidity. But "expansion of credit cannot form a substitute for capital", said Ludwig von Mises in his classic, The Theory of Money and Credit. And yet our most esteemed financial commentators confuse credit and capital every day. But it seems George Soros doesn't confuse the two. In his classic book, Alchemy of Finance, Soros wrote:
The act of lending usually stimulates economic activity. It enables the borrower to consume more than he would otherwise, or to invest in productive assets. There are exceptions, to be sure: if the assets in question are not physical but financial ones, the effect is not necessarily stimulative.
Bingo! "... If the assets in question are not physical but financial ones, the effect is not necessarily stimulative." It appears the financial assets took on the bulk of liquidity. Below is a chart of the S&P 500/Industrial Production:

 

And depicting the lack of stimulus, the chart below shows US GDP divided by the money supply - M3. If you examine the period from 2002 onward, you can see that despite all the money the Fed has pumped into the economy, the stimulative impact was scant, just as Soros warned. 

 

But why didn't the credit expansion perform the expected miracles? It's simple, but you won't find the answer in modern economics textbooks.

Credit expansion always disrupts the optimum operations of the market processes, according to von Mises. Conditions may seem desperate with millions unemployed and much idle equipment, but such conditions never justify credit expansion, von Mises warned. He went on to say that such credit expansion will always necessitate a later correction, generally known as a recession.

We are now facing the stark reality of a country and its consumers swimming in debt (household liabilities rose 65% faster than nominal GDP between 2000 and 2003).



The job market is stagnant - new jobs created are not enough to support the new entrants into the labor market. The dollar is crumbling against all major and many minor currencies. And we could soon face the prospect of a world going on strike against US dollar debt. Over the 12 months ending August 2004, 33% of net foreign purchases of long-term US securities have come from the official sector - double the 15% share of the prior 12 months and over four times the portion of the 2000-02 period, according to Morgan Stanley.

Private investors are turning their backs on US securities and the buck. The Asian central banks are still net buyers, for political reasons, but there are signs that ball game is in its late innings.

Here are three major risks to the current arrangement of Asians funding the US, as perceived by Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley.

1. The possibility of protectionism. If Asians don't adjust their currencies, ie, let them appreciate against the dollar, Roach expects the euro will "bear the brunt of what could be a very severe impact" and appreciate considerably. This could force the hand of European politicians and US politicians alike.
2. Rapid accumulation of foreign exchange reserves. This could cause financial instability in Asia.
3. The endgame of Asian development. At some point Asia will have to focus on stimulating domestic demand, which will absorb its surplus savings - its role as "export-led financier of American consumers" is in doubt.

It's no wonder some expect the US to revisit the stagflation of the 1970s. Morgan Stanley's Joachim Fels recently gave these reasons:
1. The world economy has to digest a major increase in oil prices.
2. Just as in the 1970s, monetary policy has been highly expansionary, with real short-term interest rates in the major countries in negative territory for an extended period of time.
3. Government budget deficits rose, partly reflecting an expansionary fiscal policy stance to overcome recession.
4. The established industrialized nations in Europe and North America faced major new competitors in world markets in the 1970s, notably Japan and South Korea.
5. Worldwide productivity growth slowed in the 1970s - we could be on the tail end of the information-technology-induced growth cycle that started in the mid-1990s.

The Fed has flooded the globe with credit. And it isn't working, to say the least. But, amazingly, some believe the Fed has achieved success. I would contend, any more of this kind of success and we'll soon see the words "banana republic" increasingly used in the same sentence with "the United States".

A big-time market player keeps the faith
A friend sent me this e-mail note: "Your free-market fans will enjoy the following write-up by Paul McCulley of PIMCO. With capitalists like this, who needs socialists?" With that introduction, I read McCulley's October missive titled "Managing It Forward" with interest. I can honestly say I wasn't disappointed.

For the record, Paul McCulley is managing director at Pacific Investment Management Co (PIMCO). That may not sound like much, but if you consider that the amount of money PIMCO controls would probably dwarf the GDP of most medium-sized countries, you will begin to understand why I refer to McCulley as a big-time market player.

To put it mildly, I was stunned by McCulley's zealous belief in central-bank omnipotence and his zeal for monetary tinkering. If you are a disciple of Keynes general theory, McCulley will make you proud. But if you believe, as I do, that central-bank tinkering is the primary cause of monetary and business cycle chaos, McCulley's views read like a Stephen King novel.

In talking about firms de-leveraging their balance sheets in 2002, McCulley said that if firms had become infected with "irrational gloom" it could have led to a "debt-deflation spiral". Interesting reasoning, I thought.

First, who is to judge the market's gloom as rational or irrational? What's the benchmark? Why was their gloom not perfectly rational? And why do McCulley and almost every financial commentator on Earth continue to believe deflation is so terrible?
It is a common myth among laymen and economists alike, that falling prices have a depressing effect on business. This is not necessarily true ... Deflationary credit contraction greatly helps to speed up the adjustment process, and hence the completion of business recovery, in ways as yet unrecognized. The adjustment consists, as we know, of a return to the desired consumption-savings pattern ... Credit contraction returns the economy to free-market proportions much sooner than otherwise.
- Murray Rothbard, America's Great Depression
In short, deflation is the means in which an economy cleanses itself. Yet the Fed fights the deflationary beast and McCulley cheers them on. He writes: "And so it was in the summer and fall of 2002, with capitalism itself being called into question as a going concern. In such self-feeding, deflationary circumstances, it is the unambiguous duty of the central bank to:
  • publicly commit to use the printing press for (high powered) money to reflate; and then, putting action to words,
  • continue to print money until asset prices go up and stay up.

    "The Fed recognized this duty and courageously rose to the challenge in November 2002 ..."

    The heroes of this epic adventure of course are Alan (irrationally exuberant) Greenspan and Fed governor Ben (roll the printing presses) Bernanke. Riding in on white horses with guns blazing, our heroes shred the Fed Funds Rate to 1%. But this drama isn't enough for McCulley - he wants more.

    "Indeed, if anything, the Fed, in my judgment, should have fired its anti-deflationary weaponry sooner than it did, with more gunpowder. In the matter of fighting deflationary risks, the Mae West Doctrine applies: if a little is good, more is better and way too much is just about right. The Fed's 75-basis-point cumulative easing in 2002 and 2003 was somewhere between better and just about right," McCulley writes.

    Because, of course, we can't let the unhampered market operate without the wise intervention of government, can we, Mr McCulley?

    "Karl Marx was one of the first to maintain that business crises stemmed from market processes. In the 20th century, whatever their great positive differences, almost all economists - Mitchellians, Keynesians, Marxians, or whatnot - are convinced of this view. They may have conflicting causal theories to explain the phenomenon, or, like the Mitchellians, they may have no causal theory at all - but they are all convinced that business cycles spring from deep within the capitalist system," said von Mises.

    Sadly, the views of people like McCulley prevail when it comes to the implementation of US monetary policy. And here is what it's brought us: a couple of percentage points on the GDP statistic, a debasement of the currency value, soaring deficits, massive consumer indebtedness, asset bubbles, structural unemployment, and a funding arrangement with Asia that has effectively given away US sovereignty of our financial future.

    Don't worry. Just remember, 2 + 2 = 5.

    Jack Crooks has traded in global equity, fixed income, commodity, and currency markets for more than 20 years. He is president of Black Swan Capital, a currency advisory firm - BlackSwanTrading.com.

    (Copyright 2004 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact content@atimes.com for information on our sales and syndication policies.)
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    Oct 30, 2004
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