The
topic for the last 10 days has been Greece, which then evolves into all the
reasons that the US is not like Greece.
The main reason given is that the US can print as many dollars as it
wants to, because it’s a reserve currency.
This reason is not only false, it’s dangerously so. There are limits to how much currency any
government can issue before inflation wrecks the economy. It's a long standing
tradition for broke governments to pay off by using cheaper metals in coins to
issue more of them or printing more money.
The temptation of paying off the government’s debts in cheaper money is
so hard to resist that the government wants to believe the risks are less than
they actually are.
When money was coins, governments
lessened the amount of silver or gold in them and substituted cheaper materials
so they could issue more coins. One historical example is that Henry VIII was
known as "Old Coppernose" because his early attempts at sandwich
coins allowed the copper in the middle to show through when the silver on his
nose wore off. Henry VII only resorted
to debasing the coinage towards the very end of his reign. The chancellors of his son saw the danger and
quickly put England back on a sound footing, avoiding a crash.
With paper currency, governments
just crank up the presses. In extreme cases, people use wheel barrows full of
currency to buy a loaf of bread, like Germany after WWI, or print $100 trillion
banknotes like Zimbabwe in 2006-2009.
In modern US terms, we
electronically print more money. Calling it quantitative easing doesn't change
what's going on. The ultimate result is convenient only in the short term. It
wrecks the economy and creates political instability. Hitler would have been
trapped in beer halls if it hadn't been for the instability of runaway
inflation.
We're
already a long way down this road. When I was a kid, gold was fixed at $35 per
ounce and silver was fixed at $1.25. A recent gold price was $1,167 and silver
was $15.69. The question of how far we can go is as much a matter of the psychology
of crowds as it is mathematics. At some point investors are going to calculate
the odds of the US returning real value on the bonds and currency issued and
decide it's not worth accepting either of them. They won't be fooled by the
nominal value of dollars, because they will know about how much inflation to
expect. As economist Herbert Stein famously observed, "If something can't
go on forever, it won't."
Keynes
was wrong about the benefits of government spending. If government stimulus worked, Greece would
be booming. There is no magic multiplier for money spent by government.
Government is uniformly less efficient that private enterprise for the very
understandable reason that individual bureaucrats have no incentive to be
efficient. The larger their departments are as measured by budgets and
personnel, the more power they have. If they improve efficiency, they get
budget and personnel cuts as a reward.
If we have learned anything from the
Great Depression and the Great Recession, it's that capricious government
regulation suppresses economic activity, especially entrepreneurial activity.
The hands off recovery under Calvin Coolidge from a steeper recession in 1920
was far superior to the intervention plagued recovery from the 1929 crash. The
decreasing regulation of Reagan was much more effective than the increasing
regulation of Obama in stimulating growth from comparable recessions.
Some desciples of Keynes say that
government debt doesn’t matter because we owe it to ourselves. However, over a
third of the federal debt now is held by foreigners. So even in pseudo Keynesian
terms, current government policy is ill advised.
If
the challenge is inflation, then in my lifetime we've been losing big time.
When I was a kid, gold was fixed at $35 per ounce and silver was fixed at $1.25.
A recent gold price was $1,167 and silver was $15.69. I used to buy a candy bar
for 5 cents and you really could get individual wrapped candy pieces for a
penny.
For
me the issue isn't whether the federal debt has to be paid off, because it’s
true that it really doesn’t have to be completely paid off. The issue is how
big the debt service can get before it eats the rest of the budget.
Quantitative easing has basically monetized the debt during the Obama years.
Interest rates have been held to historic lows which has masked the debt
service problem. At some point all of the money spread around with quantitative
easing is going to start moving around faster than it has moved since 2009. At
that point, inflation will balloon and the Federal Reserve will try to hit the brakes
by raising interest rates. When they do, federal debt service will expand
roughly $60 - $100 billion for each percentage point the interest rates
increase, depending on the maturity structure of short term versus longer term
bonds outstanding. This will throw any contemplated budget balancing out the
window.
Quantitative
Easing money went into excess reserves, that is reserves larger than what's
required to support outstanding bank loans. The liberal assumption that they
have to remain reserves forever is false. The other problem with their argument
is the tacit assumption that inflation will not increase due to any unexpected
shocks in commodity markets. I think this assumption willfully ignores the
chaos in the Middle East which could easily drift into a general, perhaps
nuclear, war.
The classic explanation of inflation
is too much money chasing too few goods.
For me, the explanation of recent low inflation is that the supply of
goods and services kept up with the huge increase in the supply of money, at
least so far. I think this is due at least partially to increased oil and
natural gas production in the US from fracking. Recently, the Saudi Arabian
desire to cripple Iran and Russia by forcing low oil prices played a
substantial role. If a war in the Middle East disrupts world oil deliveries and
the price of oil spikes from $57 a barrel to $130 in a very short time, there
will be massive inflation. At that point the Federal Reserve is going to have
to sell the bonds they bought during multiple QE programs to tighten the money
supply and fight inflation. This will depress bond prices, raise interest rates
and torpedo the federal budget.
I
view a crisis in the Middle East which impairs oil and gas deliveries as very
likely. Liberals may believe that war doesn't
solve anything, but Iran, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Syria,
Hezbollah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and ISIS do not agree. (I don't either.)
When
discussing inflation, liberals like to talk about how much better the “Lifestyle”
of Americans is today. (They talk out of
the other side of their mouths when discussing poverty.) When you start making "Lifestyle"
arguments it usually ends up as nitpicking and semantics. I like to use
concrete examples from my own life. I
used to spend my summers on my grandfather's ranch in Montana. We sold it in
1963. I don't think we could afford to rent it for a week now. When we moved
from Montana to the Chicago suburbs, my dad bought a house for $64,000. It
would go for a million bucks today.
Please
note that the rise in real estate values is a rise in current dollar value, not
actual value. The house my Dad bought is
still the same house. Only the nominal dollar value has increased. The actual
value remains pretty much unchanged. Considering taxes are levied on nominal
values, the federal government wins two ways. They pay their debts in cheaper
dollars and tax illusionary capital gains. I'm not arguing that the standard of
living is stagnant. I am saying that the Federal Reserve is manipulating the
money supply to favor the government at the expense of the rest of us.
Whether you got hurt by inflation or
not depends on how any assets you own were distributed. It also depends on
whether your salary, after taxes, kept up with inflation. If you were trying to
save towards retirement, inflation robbed you of the value of your savings. If
you bought your house for $1 down in 1986, you came out even or maybe a little
ahead. If you work for the government, especially the federal government, no
problem. Your wages were adjusted for inflation. Your savings are minimal but
you have huge pension benefits that are indexed to inflation and are worth
millions in the actuarial present value of the income.
Inflation
makes it hard to estimate economic risk because the way it changes values is
not uniform across asset classes. To paraphrase Orwell, some assets are more
equal than others. When you add the different tax treatment for different
assets, it gets worse. In general, inflation diminishes the information value
of prices, which in turn reduces efficiency in the economy as a whole.
Inflation is not something you wish for. It's something you live through. If the government takes the inflation to
extremes, the economy breaks down, which leads to the government and society
breaking down. Glib talk from liberal
pundits is just whistling past the graveyard.
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