Critique
of Central Banking
By
Henry C K Liu
Part I: Monetary
theology
Part II:
The European Experience
Part III-a: The US
Experience
Part III-b: More on the US
experience
Part III-c: Still More on
the US Experience
Part III-d: The lessons of the
US experience
This article appeared in AToL
on December 21, 2002
Hyper-inflation is
destructive to the economy generally but it hurts wage earners more
because of wage stickiness and inelasticity, causing wages to fall
constantly behind the hyper-inflation rate. Hyper-inflation keeps
prices rising so fast that it tends to reduce the volume of business
transactions and to restrain economic activities. Hyper-inflation has
brought down many government throughout history, and thus
monetary-policy makers have developed a special sensitivity toward it.
For private business, loss of sales under hyper-inflation can sometimes
be temporarily compensated by inventory appreciation if the interest
rate is below the inflation rate, but under such conditions credit to
finance inventory would soon dry up.
Moderate inflation
benefits both the rich and the poor, though not equally, because it not
only keeps asset prices rising, of which the rich own more, it also
equalizes wealth distribution, making the rich less privileged.
Moderate inflation enables the middle class to raise its standard of
living faster through borrowing that can be paid back with depreciated
dollars, as most homeowners in the United States have done in recent
decades. Lenders would continue to lend under moderate inflation even
if real interest rates yield a narrower or even a slightly negative
spread over the inflation rate, because idle money would suffer more
loss under moderate inflation and because moderate inflation reduces
the default rate, thus making even a narrow spread between interest
rate and inflation rate profitable to lenders. Moderate inflation also
stimulates growth, which means a larger economic pie for all even if
the slice of the pie for lenders may be smaller. Moderate inflation
negates the fatalistic American folklore that the rich get richer and
the poor get poorer, and enables the American dream of social and
economic mobility.
Deflation increases the
purchasing power of money, but it puts upward pressure on unemployment
and downward pressure on aggregate income. Thus, given a choice between
deflation and hyper-inflation, owners of real assets tend to prefer
hyper-inflation, under which wage earners are forced to into lower real
wages after inflation. Policy makers always hope that hyper-inflation
can be brought back under control within a short period of crisis
management, before political damage sets in. Central banks in desperate
times would look to hyper-inflation to "provide what essentially
amounts to catastrophic financial insurance coverage," as US Federal
Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan suggested in a November 19
address on International Financial Risk Management to the Council on
Foreign Relations (CFR) in Washington.
Over the past two and a
half years, since February 2000, the draining impact of a loss of US$8
trillion of stock-market wealth (80 percent of gross domestic product,
or GDP), and of the financial losses associated with September 11,
2001, has had a highly destabilizing effect on the aggregate
debt-equity ratio in the US financial system, and has pushed the ratio
below levels conventionally required for sound finance. Total debt in
the US economy now runs to $32 trillion, of which $22 trillion is
private-sector debt. This private debt now is backed by $8 trillion
less in equity, an amount in excess of one-third of the debt. Greenspan
attributed the system's ability to sustain such a sudden rise of
debt-to-equity ratio to debt securitization and the hedging effect of
financial derivatives, which transfer risk throughout the entire
system. "Obviously, this market is still too new to have been tested in
a widespread down-cycle for credit," Greenspan allowed.
In recent years, the
rapidly growing use of more complex and less transparent instruments
such as credit-default swaps, collateralized debt obligations, and
credit-linked notes has had a net effect of transferring individual
risks to systemic risk. Greenspan acknowledged that derivatives, by
construction, are highly leveraged, a condition that is both a large
benefit and an Achilles' heel. It appears that the benefit has been
reaped in the past decade, leading to a wishful declaration of the end
of the business cycle. Now we are faced with the Achilles' heel: "the
possibility of a chain reaction, a cascading sequence of defaults that
will culminate in financial implosion if it proceeds unchecked. Only a
central bank, with its unlimited power to create money, can with a high
probability thwart such a process before it becomes destructive. Hence,
central banks have, of necessity, been drawn into becoming lenders of
last resort," explained Greenspan.
Greenspan asserted that
such "catastrophic financial insurance coverage" should be reserved for
only the rarest of occasions to avoid moral hazard. He observed
correctly that in competitive financial markets, the greater the
leverage, the higher must be the rate of return on the invested capital
before adjustment for higher risk. Yet there is no evidence that higher
risk in financial manipulation leads to higher return for investment in
the real economy, as recent defaults by Enron, Global Crossing,
WorldCom, Tyco, Conseco and sovereign Argentine credits have shown.
Higher risks in finance engineering merely provided higher returns from
speculation temporarily, until the day of reckoning, at which point the
high returns can suddenly turn in equally high losses.
The individual management
of risk, however sophisticated, does not eliminate risk in the system.
It merely passes on the risk to other parties for a fee. In any risk
play, the winners must match the losers by definition. The fact that a
systemic payment-default catastrophe has not yet surfaced only means
that the probability of its occurrence will increase with every passing
day. It is an iron law understood by every risk manager. By socializing
their risks and privatizing their speculative profits, risk speculators
hold hostage the general public, whose welfare the Fed now uses as a
pretext to justify printing money to perpetuate these speculators'
joyride. What kind of logic supports the Fed's acceptance of a natural
rate of unemployment to combat inflation while it prints money without
reserve to bail out private speculators to fight deflation created by a
speculative crash?
It has been forgotten by
many that before 1913, there was no central bank in the United States
to bail out troubled commercial or investment banks or to keep
inflation in check by trading employment for price stability. The House
of Morgan then held the power of deciding which banks should survive
and which ones should fail and, by extension, deciding which sector of
the economy should prosper and which should shrink. At least the House
of Morgan used private money for its predatory schemes of controlling
the money supply for its own narrow benefit. The issue of centralized
private banking was part of the Sectional Conflict of the 1800s between
America's industrial North and the agricultural South that eventually
led to the Civil War. The South opposed a centralized private banking
system that would be controlled by Northeastern financial interests,
protective tariffs to help struggling Northeast industries and federal
aid to transportation development for opening up the Midwest and the
West for investment intermediated through Northeastern money trusts.
Money, classical
economics' view of it notwithstanding, is not neutral. Money is a
political issue. It is a matter of deliberate choice made by the state.
The supply of money and its cost, as well as the allocation of credit,
have direct social implications. Policies on money reward or punish
different segments of the population, stimulate or restrain different
economic sectors and activities. They affect the distribution of
political power. Democracy itself depends on a populist money policy.
The concept of a Federal
Reserve System was first championed by Populists, who were ordinary
citizens, rather than sophisticated economists or captured politicians
or powerful bankers. In 1887, a group of desperate farmers in Lampasas
county, Texas, formed the Knights of Reliance to resist impending ruin
by "more speedily educating themselves" about the day when "all the
balance of labor's products become concentrated into the hands of a
few". It became the Farmers Alliance, which by 1890 had flowered into
the Populist Movement. The Populist agenda was a major reform platform
for more than five decades, giving the nation a progressive income tax,
federal regulation of railroads, communications and other public
utilities, anti-trust regimes, price stabilization and credit programs
for farmers. Lyndon B Johnson was the last president with strong
populist roots but tragically his populist domestic vision of the Great
Society was torpedoed by the Vietnam quagmire.
The core issue behind the
Populist Movement was money. Populists attacked the "money trusts", the
gold standard, and the private centralized banking system. The spirit
of this brief movement was captured by Lawrence Goodwyn in his book Democratic
Promise: The Populist Movement in America. Falling prices of farm
produce were the catalyst of protest. Falling prices were also
inevitably accompanied by usurious interest rates. Both flowed from one
condition: a scarcity of money. Most Americans today do not remember
what historians call the Great Deflation that lasted three decades
between 1866 and 1896. The Great Deflation worked in reverse of
inflation. Inflation puts the rich at a disadvantage and spreads wealth
more widely, allowing the middle class to grow and to enjoy higher
standards of living. Deflation reconcentrates wealth and reduces the
living standard of the middle and working classes. Borrowers face
ballooning nominal debts from falling prices and wages.
Fernand Braudel
(1902-1985) in his epic chronicle of the rise of capitalism showed that
cycles of price inflation and deflation were recurring rhythms in the
world's economies long before the founding of the United States. The
very discovery of America was a great inflationary development by the
increase of money supply in Europe through the plundering of Inca gold
mines. Gold inflation lasted three centuries and was instrumental to
the rise of Europe.
The US Federal Reserve
System was founded in 1913 presumably to represent the financial
interest of all Americans. In its obsessive phobia of inflation, the
Fed has betrayed its original mandate. The chairman of the Fed in a
true democracy should be a member of the common folks, supported by a
technically competent but ideologically neutral staff, not a Wall
Street economist who applauds "creative destruction" as a preferred
path for growth. Greenspan himself allowed the view of an European
leader in his November address: "What is the market? It is the law of
the jungle, the law of nature. And what is civilization? It is the
struggle against nature."
The creation of the
Federal Reserve System was the result of a confluence of political
pressures. Fundamental among these pressure was the new awareness, as
Braudel hinted, of a heretical proposition that capitalism cannot
sustain price stability through market forces. That proposition may not
be valid, but centuries of experimentation and innovation have yet to
devise a monetary system that can provide permanent market price
stability. It was increasingly recognized that the process of capital
accumulation inherently produces periodic cycles of fluctuating money
value: inflationary "easy money" stimulating economic growth, spreading
wealth from the top down, followed by its depressant opposite "tight
money" slowing down growth, reconcentrating wealth. Just as there is a
business cycle in a market economy, there is a monetary cycle in a
capitalistic system.
This peculiar nature of
capitalism was allowed to work untamed until the arrival of political
democracy. Any government adopting any money system that makes stable
money a permanent feature would eventually confront political upheaval.
There were no golden means of money value where all economic
participants could be treated equally and justly. Technically, the
rules of capitalism decree that money that is fixed in perpetual
equilibrium is a formula for permanent stagnation.
The tight money in the
United States at the beginning of the 20th century was caused by the
restoration of the full gold standard (the Gold Standard Act of 1900)
from the bimetallism that had been used in the US through much of the
19th century. Bimetallism had the fault of "bad money driving out good"
as stated in Gresham's Law, named after Sir Thomas Gresham (1619-79),
although it was controversial as to whether he in fact formulated the
concept. The law states that the metal that is commercially valued at
less than its face value tends to be used as money, and the metal that
is commercially valued at more than its face value tends to be used as
metal, and thus is withdrawn from circulation as money. It is an
indirect confirmation of the validity of fiat money, as all commodities
with intrinsic value would not be used as money given the option.
Permanent tight money
means permanent high interest rates. And the money supply based on the
gold standard after 1900 was inflexible for meeting the fluctuating
demands of the economy. The resultant illiquidity rendered the
financial system inoperative. The liquidity squeeze typically started
in the South and the West when farmers brought their crops to market
and traders and merchants needed short-term loans to finance a seasonal
ballooning of trade. Rural banks were forced to turn to New York for
additional funds. Country bankers and their farm clients learned from
experience that life-or-death decisions over the economies of Kansas,
Texas and Tennessee resided in the Wall Street offices of the likes of
J P Morgan. Thus the term "money trusts" was no radical sloganeering or
activist hysteria. It was a very mainstream term that everyone in the
West and the South understood in the 1900s.
The Populists first
proposed a solution to the money question in August 1886 at Cleburne,
Texas, where the Farmers Alliance held a convention. The "Cleburne
Demand" borrowed from the Greenback Party, which in the previous decade
had fought against the gold standard and defended president Abraham
Lincoln's fiat money, known as greenbacks, backed not by gold but by
government credit, on which the North won the Civil War. Among the
"radical" demands were federal regulation of the private banking system
and a national fiat currency not retrained by gold.
The Populists distrusted
both Wall Street and Washington and wanted an independent institution
to carry out this task. They were openly inflationist, and advocated an
expanding money supply to serve the growing economy and a federal issue
to replace all private banknotes. Their slogan, "legal tender for all
debts, public and private", appears today on Federal Reserve notes.
Orthodox economists of the day scoffed at the proposals. A return to a
populist monetary policy today would be a very constructive alternative
to Greenspan's distortion of Schumpeterean creative destructionism.
The Fed has always
considered it its sacred duty only to fight inflation. Still, there was
a time it forced on the economy the pains of fighting inflation only
after inflation had appeared, as then chairman Paul Volcker did in the
early 1980s. But the Greenspan Fed in the late 1990s was shadow-boxing
phantom inflation based on a theoretical anticipation of inflation from
the wealth effect of an equity-market bubble that was at least
producing a benefit of having unemployment trending below the so-called
natural rate. The Greenspan bubble was actually accompanied by pockets
of deflation, most visibly in the manufacturing and commodity sectors,
mostly caused by excess investment that led to global overcapacity that
fed low-priced imports to the US economy. Deflation has practically
destroyed the farming and several other commodity and basic-material
sectors in the past decade, including steel. It has eliminated much of
US manufacturing. The deflation that faced selected sectors of the US
economy in the past decade had not been market-induced as much as it
was policy-determined. The Fed's fixation on driving inflation lower,
regardless of economic consequences, has caused untold damage to the
economy and forced its restructuring toward an unsustainable debt
bubble.
It is an economic truism
that low inflation for a large, complex economy can only be achieved by
driving certain sectors into deflationary levels. Businesses in these
unfortunate sectors are held in a state of protracted if not perpetual
loss to face bankruptcy and liquidation. This detachment of profit from
real production and the dubious linkage of profit to financial
speculation and manipulation Greenspan accepts happily as Schumpeterean
"creative destruction" (from economist Joseph A Schumpeter, 1883-1950).
Pockets of deflation and bankruptcy are integral parts of systemwide
disinflation that inevitably produces losers who allegedly made wrong
business bets. It turned out that these wrong bets were not against
market forces as much as they were against Fed policy bias. The stable
value of money is to be maintained at all cost, except for speculative
growth, which is translated to mean ever-rising share prices. Rising
share prices, unlike rising wages, are not viewed by the Fed as
inflation, a rationale hard to understand.
But the negatives of
selective deflation are considered by the Fed as secondary and
acceptable systemwide. These losses at various deflationary phases have
included the farmer belt, the oil patch, the timber industry, the
mining sector, steel, the manufacturing sector, transportation,
communication, high technology and even defense. In 1984-85, deflation
had became a fundamental disorder in the economy. Income loss and
shrinking collateral squeezed debtors in deflationary sectors facing
fixed nominal levels of debt that required appreciated dollars to
repay. Raw-material prices fell by 40 percent from their peaks in 1980.
It was a repeat of the 1920s' selective economic damage. Overall prices
throughout the 1980s as reflected by the Consumer Price Index (CPI)
remained around 3 percent and the economy expanded moderately and
continuously. What actually happened was a structural shift of wealth
distribution toward polarization of rich and poor. A split-level
economy was instituted by government policy, between the favored and
the dispensable. In the 1880s and again the 1890s, similar developments
produced political agrarian revolts that historians call American
Populism.
In 1830, there were only
32 miles (51 kilometers) of railroads in the United States. By 1860, at
the start of the Civil War, there were more than 30,000 miles. The
three decades after the Civil War was called the Railroad Age by
historians, a period that saw a fivefold increase in rail mileage. The
rail sector dominated the investment market and was the chief source of
new wealth and baronial fortunes. The Age of Robber Barons, represented
by the likes of Cornelius Vanderbilt (railroads), Andrew Carnegie
(steel), John D Rockefeller (oil) and Morgan (finance), with the birth
of big monopolistic corporations and interlocking holding companies,
was inseparable from railroad expansion.
The private railroads
received free public land in amounts larger than the size of Texas. The
scandalous Credit Mobilier, which built the Union Pacific, paid a
dividend of 348 percent in one year to watered-down shares given to
corrupt members of Congress and state officials, a hundred times that
of convention, even after having billed the company double for runaway
construction cost. The price-fixing and selective price-gouging,
government corruption, stock and business fraud, cost-padding,
stock-watering and manipulation such as insider trading and sweetheart
loans of the Railroad Age made the so-called crony capitalism of which
the United States now accuses a developing Asia looks like child's play.
Notwithstanding the
disingenuous neo-liberal claim that the Asian financial crises of 1997
that devastated the economies in the region were the inevitable result
of Asian crony capitalism, and not of unregulated market
fundamentalism, the scandalous railroad boom of the 1860s in the United
States did not hurt the US economy. Far from it, it heralded in the age
of finance capitalism. The difference was that in the 1860s, the US
opposed free trade and adopted high protective tariffs, government
support of industrial policy and infrastructure development and
national banking. But most important of all, the US of the 1860s was
not victimized by the tyranny of a foreign-currency hegemony, as Asia
is today by dollar hegemony. Just as pimples are the symptoms of
hormone imbalance and not the cause, corruption is often the symptom of
fast growth.
The point here is not to
apologize for corruption but to point out that corruption is part and
partial of finance capitalism, as the savings and loan (S&L)
crisis, the Milken junk-bond scandal and Enrontitis of recent times
continue to show clearly. The real culprit was not corruption but
deregulation. The Telecommunications Act of 1996, for example, which
aimed to create competitive markets for voice, data and broadband
services, unleashed a flood of investment in wireless licenses,
fiber-optic cable networks, satellites, computer switches and Internet
sites, and accounted for much of the new capital that poured into the
economy through Wall Street's equity and credit markets. The same was
true in the energy sector. But the biggest culprit was financial
deregulation.
The deregulation program
under the administration of president Ronald Reagan phased out federal
requirements that set maximum interest rates on savings accounts. This
eliminated the advantage previously held by savings banks in financing
home ownership. Checking accounts that paid interest could now be
offered by savings banks. All depository institutions could now borrow
from the Fed in time of need, a privilege that had been reserved for
commercial banks. In return, all banks had to place a certain
percentage of their deposits at the Fed. This gave the Fed more control
over state chartered banks, but diluted the Fed's control of the credit
market. The Garn-St Germain Act of 1982 allowed savings banks to issue
credit cards, make non-residential real-estate loans and commercial
loans - actions previously only allowed to commercial banks.
Deregulation practically
eliminated the distinction between commercial and savings banks. It
caused a rapid growth of savings banks and S&Ls that now made all
types of non-homeowner-related loans. S&Ls could then tap into the
huge profit centers of commercial-real-estate investments and
credit-card issuing and unsavory entrepreneurs looked to the loosely
regulated S&Ls as a no-holds-barred profit center.
As the 1980s wore on, the
US economy appeared to grow. Interest rates continued to go up as well
as real-estate speculation. The real-estate market was in a bubble
boom. Many S&Ls took advantage of the lack of supervision and
regulations to make highly speculative investments, in many cases
lending more money then the value of the projects, in anticipation of
still-rising prices. When the real-estate market crashed dramatically,
the S&Ls were crushed. They now owned properties that they had paid
enormous amounts of money for but weren't worth a fraction of what they
paid. Many went bankrupt, losing their depositors' money. In 1980, the
US had 4,600 thrifts; by 1988, mergers and bankruptcies left 3,000. By
the mid-1990s, fewer than 2,000 survived. The S&L crisis cost US
taxpayers $600 billion in "bailouts". The indirect cost was estimated
to be $1.4 trillion.
Money supply is a complex
issue and at this moment in history it is a term of considerable
chaotic meaning. The official definition by the Federal Reserve of M1,
2 and 3 is clear (see note 1), but its usefulness even to the Fed is as
limited as it is clear. Greenspan, at the 15th Anniversary Conference
of the Center for Economic Policy Research at Stanford University on
September 5, 1997, with Milton Friedman in the audience, in defense of
the accusation that Fed policy failed to anticipate the emerging
inflation of the 1970s and, by fostering excessive monetary creation,
contributed to the inflationary upsurge, and the claim that some
monetary-policy rules, such as the Taylor rule, however imperfect,
would have delivered far superior performance, admitted that the Fed's
(indeed economics') knowledge of the full workings of the system is
quite limited, so that attempts to improve on the results of policy
rules will, on average, only make matters worse. Greenspan observed
that the monetary policy of the Fed has involved varying degrees of
rule-based and discretionary-based modes of operation over time. Very
often historical regularities have been disrupted by unanticipated
change, especially in technologies, both hard and soft. The evolving
patterns mean that the performance of the economy under any rule, were
it to be rigorously followed, would deviate from expectations. Such
changes mean that we can never construct a completely general model of
the economy, invariant through time, on which to base our policy,
Greenspan asserted. It was an apology for muddling through.
Greenspan admitted that
in the late 1970s, the Fed's actions to deal with developing
inflationary instabilities were shaped in part by the reality portrayed
by Friedman's analysis that ever-rising inflation rate peaks, as well
as ever-rising inflation rate troughs, followed on the heels of similar
patterns of average money growth. The Fed, in response to such
evaluations, acted aggressively under the then newly installed chairman
Paul Volcker. A considerable tightening of the average stance of
policy, based on intermediate M1 targets tied to reserve operating
objectives, eventually reversed the surge in inflation. Greenspan was
careful not to draw attention to the high cost of the reversal.
The 15 years before the
Asian financial crises that began in 1997 had been a period of
consolidating the gains of the early 1980s and extending them to their
logical end, ie, the achievement of price stability. Although the
ultimate goals of monetary policy have remained the same over the past
15 years, the techniques used by the Fed in formulating and
implementing policy have changed considerably as a consequence of vast
changes in technology and regulation. The early Volcker years focused
on M1, and following operating procedures that imparted a considerable
degree of automaticity to short-term interest-rate movements, resulting
in wide interest-rate volatility.
But after nationwide NOW
(negotiable order of withdrawal) interest-bearing checking accounts
were introduced, the demand for M1, in the judgment of the Federal Open
Markets Committee (FOMC), became too interest-sensitive for that
aggregate to be useful in implementing policy. Because the velocity of
such an aggregate varies substantially in response to small changes in
interest rates, target ranges for M1 growth, in the FOMC's judgment, no
longer were reliable guides for outcomes in nominal spending and
inflation. In response to an unanticipated movement in spending and
hence the quantity of money demanded, a small variation in interest
rates would be sufficient to bring money back to path but not to
correct the deviation in spending.
As a consequence, by late
1982, M1 was de-emphasized and policy decisions per force became more
discretionary. However, in recognition of the longer-run relationship
of prices and M2, especially its stable long-term velocity, this
broader aggregate was accorded more weight, along with a variety of
other indicators, in setting the Fed policy stance.
By the early 1990s, the
usefulness of M2 was undercut by the increased attractiveness and
availability of alternative outlets for saving, such as bond and stock
mutual funds, and by mounting financial difficulties for depositories
and depositors that led to a restructuring of business and household
balance sheets. The apparent result was a significant rise in the
velocity of M2, which was especially unusual given continuing declines
in short-term market interest rates. By 1993, this extraordinary
velocity behavior had become so pronounced that the Fed was forced to
begin disregarding the signals M2 was sending.
Greenspan recognized
that, in fixing on the short-term rate, the Fed lost much of the
information on the balance of money supply and demand that changing
market rates afforded, but for the moment the Fed saw no alternative.
In the current state of knowledge, money demand has become too
difficult to predict. In the United States, evaluating the effects on
the economy of shifts in balance sheets and variations in asset prices
have been an integral part of the development of monetary policy.
In recent years, for
example, the Fed expended considerable effort to understand the
implications of changes in household balance sheets in the form of high
and rising consumer debt burdens and increases in market wealth from
the run-up in the stock market. And the equity market itself has been
the subject of analysis as the Fed attempted to assess the implications
for financial and economic stability of the extraordinary rise in
equity prices, a rise based apparently on continuing upward revisions
in estimates of US corporations' already robust long-term earning
prospects. But, unless they are moving together, prices of assets and
of goods and services could not both be an objective of a particular
monetary policy, which, after all, has one effective instrument: the
short-term interest rate. The Fed chose product prices as its primary
focus on the grounds that stability in the average level of these
prices was likely to be consistent with financial stability as well as
maximum sustainable growth. History, however, is somewhat ambiguous on
the issue of whether central banks can safely ignore asset markets,
except as they affect product prices. Greenspan discovered that he had
been very wrong about the "robust" long-term earning prospects of US
corporations by 2000.
Greenspan also admitted
that over the coming decades, moreover, what constitutes product price
and, hence, price stability will itself become harder to measure. In
the years 1997 through 2000, M3 increased by about 460, 600, 500 and
600 billions per year, respectively. In 2001 M3 expanded much more
rapidly - by about $1.1 trillion - to a total of about $8 trillion. The
surge in the money supply since the attacks on September 11, 2001, was
equal to about $300 billion, which significantly represents about 3.0
percent of GDP, this after the Fed injected $1 trillion into the
banking system in the days following the terrorist attacks in New York
and on the Pentagon. Since the beginning of 2000, $8 trillion of stock
market wealth has vanished, that is 80 percent of annual GDP, or the
entire M3 in 2001. Another way to look at these figures is that the
entire face value of the US money supply has vanished through market
correction.
Market participants look
at money supply differently. To M1, 2 and 3, they add L, which is M3
plus all other liquid assets, such as Treasury bills, saving bonds,
commercial paper, bankers' acceptances, non-bank eurodollar holdings of
non-US residents and, since the 1990s, derivatives and swaps, generally
coming under the heading of structured finance instruments. The term
MZM (money with zero maturity) came into general use. The Fed has poor,
if any, information on L and it does not seem to want to know as it
persistently declines to support its regulation or reporting on it.
Over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives now are estimated to involve
notional values of more than $150 trillion. No one knows the precise
amount.
The Office of Controller
of Currency (OCC) quarterly report on bank derivatives activities and
trading revenues is based on call-report information provided by US
commercial banks. The notional amount of derivatives in insured
commercial bank portfolios increased by $3.1 trillion in the third
quarter of 2002, to $53.2 trillion. Generally, changes in notional
volumes are reasonable reflections of business activity but do not
provide useful measures of risk. During the third quarter, the notional
amount of interest-rate contracts increased by $3 trillion, to $45.7
trillion. Foreign-exchange contracts increased by $27 billion to $5.8
trillion. The number of commercial banks holding derivatives increased
by 17, to 408. Eighty-six percent of the notional amount of derivative
positions was composed of interest-rate contracts, with foreign
exchange accounting for an additional 11 percent. Equity, commodity and
credit derivatives accounted for only 3 percent of the total notional
amount.
Holdings of derivatives
continue to be concentrated in the largest banks. Seven commercial
banks account for almost 96 percent of the total notional amount of
derivatives in the commercial banking system, with more than 99 percent
held by the top 25 banks. OTC and exchange-traded contracts comprised
87.9 percent and 12.1 percent, respectively, of the notional holdings
as of the third quarter of 2002.
The notional amount is a
reference amount from which contractual payments will be derived, but
it is generally not an amount at risk. The risk in a derivative
contract is a function of a number of variables, such as whether
counterparties exchange notional principal, the volatility of the
currencies or interest rates used as the basis for determining contract
payments, the maturity and liquidity of contracts, and the
creditworthiness of the counterparties in the transaction. Further, the
degree of increase or decrease in risk-taking must be considered in the
context of a bank's aggregate trading positions as well as its asset
and liability structure. Data describing fair values and credit risk
exposures are more useful for analyzing point-in-time risk exposure,
while data on trading revenues and contractual maturities provide more
meaningful information on trends in risk exposure.
Monetary economists have
no idea if notional values are part of the money supply and with what
discount ratio. As we now know, creative accounting has legally
transformed debt proceeds as revenue. With the telecoms, the
Indefeasible Right of Use (IRU) contracts, or capacity swaps, were
perfectly legal means to inflate revenue. The now disgraced and defunct
Andersen White Paper in 2000, well known in telecom financial circles,
defined IRU swaps between telecom carriers by accounting each sale as
revenue and each purchase of a capital expense which is exempted from
operating results emphasized by Wall Street analysts and investors.
While common sense would see this as inflation of revenue by hiding
underlying true cost, Andersen argued that these capacity exchanges are
not barter agreements, but are sales of operating leases and purchases
of capital leases. Thus by creative accounting logic, swaps are not
acquisition of "equivalent interests" because risks and rewards of
buying a capital lease are greater than those of an operating lease.
Since operating leases are not similar assets as capital leases, there
is logic in booking revenues over the life of a contract when they are
fully paid at closing. It can also be argued that such accounting logic
on the operating leases misleadingly strengthens the value of the
capital assets. Which was exactly what happened.
GE Capital on March 13,
2002, launched a multi-tranche dollar bond deal that was almost doubled
in size from $6 billion to $11 billion, making it the largest-ever
dollar-denominated corporate bond issue. Officially the bond sale was
explained as following the current trend of companies with large
borrowing needs, such as GE Capital, locking in favorable funding costs
while interest rates are low. On March 18, Bloomberg reported that GE
Capital was bowing to demands from Moody's Investors Service that the
biggest seller of commercial paper should reduce its reliance on
short-term debt securities. The financing arm of General Electric, then
the world's largest company, sought bigger lending commitments from
banks and replacing some of its $100 billion in debt that would mature
in less than nine months with bonds. GE Capital asked its banks to
raise its borrowing capacity to $50 billion from $33 billion.
Moody's, one of two
credit-rating companies that have assigned GE Capital the highest "AAA"
grade, has been increasing pressure on even top-rated firms to reduce
short-term liabilities since Enron filed the biggest US bankruptcy to
that date in December. Moody's released reports analyzing the ability
of 300 companies to raise money should they be shut out of the
commercial paper market. GE Capital and H J Heinz Co said they
responded to inquiries by Moody's by reducing their short-term debt,
unsecured obligations used for day-to-day financing. Concerns about the
availability of such funds have grown this year after Qwest
Communications International Inc, Sprint Corp and Tyco International
Ltd were suddenly unable to sell commercial paper.
Moody's lowered a record
93 commercial paper ratings last year as the economy slowed, causing
corporate defaults to increase to their highest in a decade. One area
of concern for the analysts is the amount of bank credit available to
repay commercial paper. While many companies have credit lines
equivalent to the amount of commercial paper they sell, some of the
biggest issuers do not. GE Capital, for example, has loan commitments
backing 33 percent of its short-term debt. American Express has
commitments that cover 56 percent of its commercial paper. Coca-Cola
supports about 85 percent of its debt with bank agreements, according
to Standard & Poor's, the largest credit-rating company, which said
it is also focusing more attention on risks posed by short-term
liabilities, though it hasn't yet decided whether to issue separate
reports.
Companies have sold $107
billion of investment-grade bonds in the first half of this year, up
from $88 billion during the same period in 2001. The amount of
unsecured commercial paper outstanding has fallen by a third to $672
billion during the past 12 months. GE Capital, which has reduced its
commercial paper outstanding from $117 billion at the beginning of the
year, plans to continue to reduce short-term debt. It took one step in
that direction last week when it sold $11 billion of long-term bonds,
some of which will be used to reduce its outstanding commercial paper.
As part of the sale, GE Capital sold 30-year bonds with a coupon of
6.75 percent. The company usually swaps some or all of those fixed-rate
payments for floating-rate obligations. Last year, GE Capital paid on
average 3.23 percent for its floating-rate, long-term debt, 70 basis
points more than on its commercial paper, according to a company filing.
The bottom line of all
this is that the funding cost of GE Capital will go up, which will hit
GE Capital profit, which constitutes 60 percent of its parent's profit.
This in turn will hit GE share prices, which in turn will force rating
agencies to pressure GE further to shift from low-cost commercial
papers to bonds or bank loans, which will further reduce profit, which
will further increase rating pressure, and so on. PIMCO (Pacific
Investment Management Co), the world's largest bond fund, having dumped
$1 billion in GE commercial paper from its holdings, publicly
criticized GE for carrying too much debt and not dealing honestly with
investors. GE announced it might sell as much as $50 billion in bonds
only days after investors bought $11 billion of new bonds in the
biggest US sale in history. PIMCO director Bill Gross disputed GE's
contention that the new bond sales were designed not to capture low
rates, but because of troubles in its commercial paper market. If the
GE short-term rate rises because of a poor credit rating, the engine
that drives GE earnings will stall. Gross dismissed GE earning growth
as not being from brilliant management, former GE chairman Jack Welch's
self-aggrandizing books not withstanding, but from financial
manipulation, selling debt at cheap rates and using inflated GE stocks
for acquisition. GE had $127 billion in commercial paper as of March
11, 2002, according to Moody's. This amounts to 49 percent of its total
debt. Banks' credit line only covers one-third of the short-term
exposure.
The erosion of market
capitalization value does impact money supply. Asset valuation is the
collateral for debt. As asset value falls, credit ratings fall, which
affect interest costs, which affect profits, which affect asset value.
Moreover, a major counterparty default in structured finance will
render the Fed helpless in keeping the money supply from sudden
contraction, unless the Fed is prepared to depart from its traditional
practice of relying solely on interest-rate policy to effectuate
monetary ease, a move Greenspan apparently has served notice he is
prepared to make.
The logic of fighting
inflation by raising interest rates is mere conventional wisdom.
Furthermore, interest-rate policy is merely a single instrument that
cannot possibly be relied upon to play the complexity of a symphony
like the economy. The debate on whether a high interest rate is
inflationary or deflationary seems to be a puzzling controversy in
economics. Within the current international financial architecture,
interest rates cannot be fully understood without taking into account
their impact on exchange rates and credit markets. Nor can inflation be
understood in isolation.
In a globalized financial
market, if the exchange rate is artificially sustained by high interest
rates, there is little doubt that the impact would be deflationary on
the local economy. This logic is also supported by empirical data in
recent years. Yet many astute economists insist that a high interest
rate causes inflation, at least in the long run. Perhaps this can be
true in closed economies, but it is no longer necessarily true in open
economies in a globalized financial market.
Interest rates are the
prices for the use of money over time. These prices do not always track
the purchasing power of money, which is the monetized expression of the
market value of commodities (the transaction price) at a specific time.
The purchasing power of money fluctuates over time, expressed by the
prices of futures and options, which are functions of the uncertain
elasticity between interest rates and inflation rates.
As the price for the use
of money over time rises, the general effect will be deflationary if
money is viewed as a constant store of value. Otherwise, money will
forfeit its function as a constant store of value. On the other hand,
if money is viewed as a medium of exchange, the ultimate liquidity
agent, then rising price for its use over time is inflationary as a
cost.
Now, in any economy,
money tends to play both roles, though not equally and not consistently
over time. For market participants, depending on their positions
(borrower or lender) at specific points of the economic cycle
(expanding or contracting liquidity), they will find different views of
money (exchange medium or value storer) to be to their financial
advantage. Thus borrowers generally consider a high interest rate as
leading to cost inflation (bad), and lenders consider a high interest
rate as leading to asset deflation (good up to a point). Asset
deflation offers good buying opportunities for those who have money or
have access to credit, but bad for those who hold assets but need
money, and the pain is proportional to asset illiquidity. Since most
holders of ready cash also hold assets, deflation has only a limited
and short-term advantage for them. For inflation to be advantageous,
continued expansion of credit is required to keep asset appreciation
ahead of cost inflation.
The problem is further
complicated by the fact that inflation is defined mostly by mainstream
economics only as the rising price of wages and commodities, and not by
asset appreciation. When it costs 10 percent more to buy the same share
of a company than it did yesterday, that is considered growth - good
economic news. When wages rise 5 percent a year, that is viewed as
inflation - bad economic news by the Fed, despite the fact that the
aggregate purchasing power is increased by 5 percent. Therein lies the
fundamental cause of a bubble economy - growth and profit are generated
by asset inflation rather than by increased aggregate demand
stimulating aggregate supply.
Thus the relationship of
interest rate to inflation is dependent on the definition of money,
which raises questions about the Fed preoccupation with interest-rate
policy as a tool to achieve price stability. But that is not the end of
the story. Under finance capitalism, inflation is not merely too much
money chasing too few goods, as under industrial capitalism. Under
financial capitalism, two elements - credit availability and credit
markets - have overshadowed the traditional goods and equity markets of
industrial capitalism. This makes it necessary to re-examine the
traditional relationship of interest rate and inflation.
In a bull market, the
buyer has the advantage because the buyer has the final upside. In a
bear market, the seller has the advantage because the buyer is left
holding the downside bag. Of course one must avoid buying at the peak
and selling at the bottom. And such strategies have self-fulfilling
effects, as technical analysts can readily testify. These effects are
magnified in long-run bull or bear markets, which are represented by a
rising or falling sine curve. However, the buyer's advantage in a bull
market may be neutralized by the inflation that usually accompanies
bull markets. Thus a true bull market must yield net capital gain after
inflation and real interest cost, ie, interest cost after inflation.
And in a deflationary bear market, the seller's advantage is reinforced
by deflation, for he can repurchase at a later date with only a
fraction of his realized cash from what he sold previously. Not only
would the seller avoid additional loss of holding the unsold asset in a
falling market, the cash from the sale appreciates in purchasing power
with every passing day in a bear market.
Thus money plays a
passive role as a medium of exchange and an active role as a store of
value on the movement of prices. The conventional view that inflation
is caused by, or is a result of (the two are connected but not
identical), too much money chasing too few goods then is not always
operative. This is because the availability of credit and the
operational rules of credit markets can distort the traditional
relationship. Credit markets, which have expanded way beyond
traditional credit intermediated by the banking system, operate on the
theory that money generally must earn interest, whether it is actually
put to use or not.
There are of course
abnormal times when money actually earns negative interest because of
government policy or foreign exchange constraints, as in Hong Kong in
the early 1990s and Japan since 2000. When idle money earns no
interest, credit reserve dries up, because it creates greater incentive
to put money to work, ie, investing it in productive enterprises. For
money to remain idly waiting for better opportunity, the interest rate
must equal or exceed the opportunity cost of idle cash. Interest then
acts as a penalty for idle money. When idle money earns interest, the
interest payment comes ultimately from the central bank, which alone
can create more money with no penalty to itself, though the economy it
lords over is not immune. Since late 1999, the Japanese monetary
authorities have repeatedly reaffirmed their commitment to maintaining
their zero-interest-rate policy until deflationary forces have been
dispelled. The result is a great deal of idle money in Japanese banks
with no creditworthy borrowers, for no one is interested in borrowing
money to buy one widget that needs to be paid back with appreciated
money that could buy two widgets in the future. Japanese savers are
forgoing interest income for the increasing purchasing power of their
idle money in an unending deflationary spiral.
Efficiency in the credit
markets pushes money toward the highest use and willingness to pay the
highest interest. Thus when the central bank tightens money supply, the
market will drive up interest rates and vice versa. Thus interest rate
is a credit market index. When central banks such as the Fed use
interest-rate policy to manage the money supply, they are in fact using
a narrow market index to manipulate the broader market. It is not
different from the Fed fixing the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
by buying or selling blue-chip shares to influence the broad S&P.
When prices fall, one
reason may be that consumers do not have money to buy with, as in most
recessions with high unemployment. Or it may be the result of potential
consumers withholding their money for still lower prices, as in Japan
now and in some degree in China in 1998-2000. So deflation is caused by
too many goods trying to attract too little money entering the market,
but not necessarily too little money in the economy.
But if every seller can
realize a cash surplus in a subsequent repurchase in a bear market,
where does all the surplus money go? Obviously it goes to pay interest
on the idle money waiting for a cheaper price, reducing the central
bank's need to issue more money to carry the interest cost on idle
money. The net effect is a removal of money from the market and an
increase in the amount of idle money in the economy. So deflation
actually pushes up interest rates without necessarily altering the
aggregate money supply. The effect is that until prices fall at a
lesser rate than the interest rate on idle money, there is no incentive
to buy. Thus a deflation-driven rising interest rate creates more
deflationary pressure in a bear market. High interest rates move more
wealth from borrowers to lenders and from bottom to top in the wealth
pyramid. Moreover, the impact of a high interest rate modifies economic
behavior differently in different groups and even on different
activities within the same individual. When the prime rate at leading
banks exceeded 20 percent in 1980, credit continued to expand
explosively. The opposite happened when the Bank of Japan reduced the
interest rate to zero. High rates only work to slow credit expansion if
the rates are ahead of inflation. And zero rate only works to stimulate
credit expansion if there is no deflation. So raising interest rates to
combat inflation or lowering rates to combat deflation can be
self-defeating under certain conditions.
Now if two economies are
linked by floating exchange rates, free trade and free investment
flows, the one with a high rate of inflation will see the exchange rate
of its currency fall. But a fall in its currency will increase the cost
of its imports, thus adding to its inflation rate, and the further rise
in the inflation rate will push up interest rates further. But a rise
in domestic interest rates will stop or slow the fall of its currency
and attract more fund inflows to buy its goods and assets. It also
increases its exports, which reduces the supply of goods and assets in
the domestic market, thus pushing up domestic prices, while pushing
down the price of imports. The net inflation/deflation balance will
then depend on the trade balance between exports and imports. This had
been given by the European Central Bank (ECB) as the logic of raising
euro interest rates to fight inflation. But this effect does not work
for the United States because of dollar hegemony, which enables the US
to run a recurring trade deficit with moderating inflation impacts.
That is why the policies of the ECB and the Fed are constantly out of
sync.
The availability of
financial derivatives further complicates the picture, because both
interest rates and foreign-exchange rates can be hedged, obscuring and
distorting the fundamental relations among interest rates, exchange
rates and inflation. The recurring global financial crises in the past
decade were manifestations of this distortion.
The theory of market
equilibrium asserts that a market tends to reach "natural" equilibrium
as it approaches efficiency, which is defined as the speed and ease
with which equilibrium is reached. Equilibrium is an abstract concept
like infinity. It is a self-extending conceptual end state that has no
definitive form or reality. Yet the market is complex not only because
the relationship of market elements is poorly defined or even
undefinable, but also the very instruments designed to enhance market
efficiency tend to create wide volatility and instability. Thus a
"natural" equilibrium state can in fact be defined as the actual state
of the fluctuating market at any moment in time.
With 24-hour trading, the
notion of a milestone moment of equilibrium is problematic. Further,
the very financial instruments created to enhance market efficiency
toward its "natural" equilibrium state make the equilibrium elusive.
Such instruments are mainly designed to manage risk generated by both
broad market movements and momentary disequilibrium. Structured finance
mainly involves unbundling financial risks in global markets for buyers
who will pay the highest price for specific protection. Because users
of these instruments look for special payoffs through unbundling of
risk, the cost of managing such risk is maximized. The disaggregating
renders the notion of market equilibrium not unifiable. The unbundled
risks are marketed to those with the biggest appetite for such risks,
in return for compensatory returns.
Thus market equilibrium
is not any more merely a large pool of turbulent transactions with a
level surface. It is in fact a pool of transactions with many different
levels of interconnected surfaces, each serving highly disaggregated
specialty markets. Equilibrium in this case becomes a highly complex
notion making the impact and prospect of externalities highly
uncertain. That uncertainty caused the demise of Long Term Capital
Management (LTCM), for a while the world's most successful hedge fund
based on immaculate quantitative logic. Interest swaps, for example,
are not single-purpose transactions for managing interest-rate risks.
They can be structured as inflation risk hedges, or foreign-exchange
risk hedges, or any number of other financial needs or protection. And
the impact is not limited to the two contracting counterparties, since
each party usually hedges again with a third counterparty who in turn
hedges with another counterparty. That is what makes hedging systemic.
A further irony is that the very objective of insuring against
volatility risk by covering the market broadly increases risks of
illiquidity.
Monetary-policy decision
makers in the past decade have tended to be fixated on preventing
inflation. Some questions come to mind over this fact. Is inflation the
worst of all economic evils; and specifically, is current US monetary
policy consistent with maintaining a low rate of inflation, assuming a
low inflation rate is desirable? Or, to put it another way, is there
any empirical evidence that inflation can be controlled by the central
bank at a cost less than that exacted by inflation itself? Would the
establishment of price stability as the Fed's sole objective hinder
long-run growth prospects for the US and the global economy? The
answers to these questions are critical for the assessment of monetary
policy.
Two Nobel laureates from
the Chicago School, Milton Friedman and Robert Lucas, have influenced
mainstream economics on these issues. Friedman, the 1976 Nobel
economist, emphasized the role of monetary policy as a factor in
shaping the course of inflation and business cycles. In the popular
press, he also was known for his advocacy of deregulated markets and
free trade as the best option for economic development. Lucas, the 1995
Nobel economist, also made fundamental contributions to the study of
money, inflation, and business cycles, through the application of
modern mathematics. Lucas formed what came to be called a theory of
"rational expectations". In essence, the "rational expectations" theory
shows how expectations about the future influence the economic
decisions made by individuals, households and companies. Using complex
mathematical models, Lucas showed statistically that the average
individual would anticipate - and thus could easily undermine - the
impact of a government's economic policy. Rational expectation theory
was embraced by the Reagan White House during its first term, but the
doctrine worked against the Reagan voodoo economic plan instead of with
it.
In 1976, the long-run
relationship between inflation and unemployment was still under debate
in mainstream economics. During the 1960s, mainstream economics leaned
toward the belief that a lower average unemployment rate could be
sustained at the cost of a permanently higher (but stable) rate of
inflation.
Friedman used his Nobel
lecture to make two arguments about this inflation-unemployment
tradeoff. First, he advanced the logic of why short-run tradeoff would
dissolve in the long run. Expanding nominal demand to lower
unemployment would lead to increases in money wages as firms attempted
to attract additional workers. Firms would be willing to pay higher
money wages if they expected prices for output to be higher in the
future due to expansion and inflation. Workers would initially perceive
the rise in money wages to be a rise in real wages because their
"perception of prices in general" adjusts only with a time lag, so
nominal wages would be perceived to be rising faster than prices. In
response, the supply of labor would increase, and employment and output
would expand. Eventually, workers would recognize that the general
level of prices had risen and that their real wages had not actually
increased, leading to adjustments that would return the economy to its
natural rate of unemployment.
Yet Friedman only
described a partial picture of the employment/inflation interaction.
Events since 1976 have shown the relationship to be much more complex.
Friedman neglected the possibility of increased productivity and
quantum technological innovation resulting from more research and
development (R&D) in an expanding economy in containing price
increases. Higher wages do not necessarily cause inflation in an
economy with expanding production or overcapacity. He also did not
foresee the effects of globalization, ie, the shift of production to
low-wage regions, on holding down domestic inflation in the core
economies.
Friedman's second
argument was that the Phillips Curve slope might actually be positive -
higher inflation would be associated with higher average unemployment.
He argued that only low inflation would lead to a natural rate of
unemployment. This for policy makers was the equivalent of "when
unemployment is unavoidable, relax and enjoy it".
At the core of modern
macroeconomics is some version of the famous Phillips Curve
relationship between inflation and unemployment. The curve serves two
purposes for economists and policy makers: 1) In theoretical models of
inflation, it provides the "missing equation" to explain how changes in
nominal income divide into price and quantity components; and 2) on the
policy front, it specifies conditions contributing to the effectiveness
of expansionary/disinflationary policies.
The idea of an
inflation/unemployment tradeoff is not new. It was a key component of
the monetary doctrines of David Hume (1752) and Henry Thornton (1802),
and identified in 1926 by Irving Fisher, who saw causation as running
from inflation to unemployment (but not low unemployment causing
inflation, as most modern central bankers do). It was stated in the
form of an econometric equation by Jan Tinbergen in 1936 and again by
Lawrence Klein and Arthur Goldberger in 1955. It was not until 1958
that modern Phillips Curve analysis began when A W Phillips published
his famous article in which he fitted a statistical equation w = f(U)
to annual data on percentage rates of change of money wages (w) and the
unemployment rate (U) in the United Kingdom during 1861-1913, showing
the response of wages to the excess demand for labor as proxied by the
inverse of the unemployment rate. Zero wage inflation occurred at 4.5
percent of unemployment historically.
In the pre-globalized
1970s, many economies were experiencing rising inflation and
unemployment simultaneously. Friedman attempted to provide a tentative
hypothesis for this phenomenon. In his view, higher inflation tends to
be associated with more inflation volatility and greater inflation
uncertainty. This uncertainty reduces economic efficiency as
contracting arrangements must adjust, imperfections in indexation
systems become more prominent, and price movements provide confused
signals about the types of relative price changes that indicate the
need for resources to shift.
Three reasons contributed
to the wide acceptance of Phillips' curve, despite critics' attack that
it was a mere empirical correlation masquerading as a tradeoff. First,
the curve shows remarkably temporal stability of the relationship,
fitting both the pre-World War I period of 1861-1913 and the post-World
War II period of 1948-57. Second, the curve can accommodate a wide
variety of inflation theories. While the curve explains inflation as
resulting from excess demand that bids up wages and prices, it remains
neutral about the cause of that phenomenon. Both demand-pull and
cost-push theorists can accept the curve as offering insights into the
nature of the inflationary process while disagreeing on the causes of
and therefore the appropriate remedies for inflation. Finally, policy
makers like it because it provides a convenient and convincing
rationale for the failure to achieve full employment with price
stability, twin goals that were thought to be compatible before the
advent of Phillips Curve analysis. Also, the curve, by offering a menu
of alternative inflation/unemployment combination from which the
authorities could choose, provided a ready-made justification for
discretionary central bank intervention and activist fine-tuning, not
to mention the self-interest of the economic advisors who supply the
cost-benefit analysis underlying the central bank's choices.
Yet the Phillips Curve is
now widely viewed as offering no tradeoff, thus it supports the notion
of policy futility. Unemployment then is considered a natural
phenomenon with no long-term cure. It is an amazing posture for the
economic profession given that even as conservative a profession as
medicine has not accepted the existence of any incurable diseases. All
the "scientific" pronouncements on the natural rate and inevitability
of unemployment fall into the same category of insight as that by US
president Calvin Coolidge: "When large numbers of people are unable to
find work, unemployment will result."
The parallel correlation
between inflation and unemployment that Friedman noted was subsequently
replaced by an opposite correlation as the early 1980s saw
disinflations accompanied by recessions. After that, many economists
would view inflation and unemployment movements as reflecting both
aggregate supply and aggregate demand disturbances as well as the
dynamic adjustments the economy follows in response to these
disturbances. When demand disturbances dominate, inflation and
unemployment will tend to be opposingly correlated initially as, for
example, an expansion lowers unemployment and raises inflation. As the
economy adjusts, prices continue to increase as unemployment begins to
rise again and return to its natural rate. When supply disturbances
dominate (as in the 1970s), inflation and unemployment will tend to
move initially in the same direction.
In the 1990s, a new
phenomenon known as the wealth effect came into play in extending the
business cycle. As credit became liberalized and risk socialized, asset
prices began to outstrip both earnings and wages. Consumption became
driven by capital gain rather than rising income from wages. Inflation,
which mainstream economics never defined as including capital gain,
remained unrealistically low as wages fell behind asset appreciation.
Yet the Fed was unable to prevent the bubble expansion by a monetary
tightening because inflation was mysteriously low while both share and
real-estate prices doubled yearly. When the Fed finally launched in
1999 its preemptive fight against potential inflation, the result was a
drastic deflation of the equity markets and a hard landing for the
bubble economy.
A sizable number of
economists have followed Friedman in accepting that there is no
long-run tradeoff that would allow permanently lower unemployment to be
traded for higher inflation. And a part of the reason for this
acceptance is the contributions of Lucas.
In his Nobel lecture,
Lucas noted that some evidence exists that average inflation rates and
average money growth rates are tightly linked: "The observation that
money changes induce output changes in the same direction receives
confirmation in some data sets but is hard to see in others.
Large-scale reductions in money growth can be associated with
large-scale depressions or, if carried out in the form of a credible
reform, with no depression at all." Lucas drew this conclusion largely
from work on episodes of hyper-inflations in which major institutional
reforms had been associated with large changes in inflation; when major
reforms are not involved, the evidence shows a more consistent effect
of monetary policy expansions and contractions on real activity. Recent
International Monetary Fund (IMF) insistence on punitive
"conditionalities" for financial bailouts of distressed sovereign debt
is strongly influenced by Lucas's "credible reform" notion. Pain is
extracted as proof of commitment.
While Friedman also
stressed that the real effects of changes in monetary policy would
depend on whether they were anticipated or not, Lucas demonstrated the
striking implications of assuming that individuals form their
expectations rationally. Lucas abandoned Friedman's notion of a gradual
adjustment of expectations based on past developments and instead
stressed the forward-looking nature of expectations. Expectations of
future monetary easing or tightening will affect the economy now. And
this means that the real effects of an increase in money growth could,
in principle, be expansionary or contractionary, depending on the
public's expectations. Nowadays this phenomenon is visible every day in
the equity markets. The Fed's interest-rate moves have become a
cat-and-mouse game with market participants and are one of the prime
factors behind market volatility.
One consequence of this
insight has been a new recognition of the importance of credibility in
policy; that is, a credible policy - one that is explicit and for which
the central bank is held responsible - can influence the way people
form their expectations. Thus, the effects of policy actions by a
central bank with credibility may be quite different from those of a
central bank that lacks credibility. Even though the empirical evidence
for credibility effects was weak in the past, the emphasis on
credibility has been one factor motivating central banks to design
policy frameworks that embody credible commitments to low inflation. In
this respect, it is a puzzlement why the Fed insists on keeping its
interest-rate policy a suspenseful surprise for market participants,
leading to increased market volatility and uncertainty. Moreover, if a
credible long-term price-stability policy produces no tradeoff in
unemployment, it follows that the reverse may be true: that a credible
policy goal of full employment may not even lead to long-term inflation.
Some economists have
begun to question the natural unemployment rate result that Lucas's
work helped to promote. They argue that even credible low-inflation
policies are likely to carry a cost in terms of permanently higher
unemployment and that a stable Phillips Curve tradeoff exists at low
rates of inflation. They argue that employee resistance to money wage
cuts will limit the ability of real wages to adjust when the price
level is stable. But the influence of Friedman and Lucas has clearly
shifted the debate since the early 1970s. Now it is the proponents of a
tradeoff who represent the minority view.
There are some who uses
the TINA (there is no alternative) argument against efforts to reform
the Fed's approach to monetary policy. Yet it is clear that the very
structure of the Fed leans toward a particular political theory of
inflation that seems out of phase with reality.
The Fed, while
independent within government, has seen its legislative mandate for
monetary policy change several times since its founding in 1913. The
most recent revisions were in 1977 and 1978 (Humphrey-Hawkins), which
require the Fed to promote both price stability and full employment.
The past changes in the Fed's mandate appear to reflect both economic
events in the United States and advances in understanding of how the
economy functions. In the two decades since the Fed's mandate was last
changed, there have been further important economic and financial
developments made possible by shifts in economic thought that have been
ideologically influenced, and these raise the issue of whether the
goals for US monetary policy need to be modified once again in view of
current data. Indeed, a number of other countries - notably those that
adopted the euro as a common currency - having accepted price stability
as the original primary goal of their unified monetary policy, are
raising similar questions. Japan, having suffered a decade-long
recession that begins to look perpetual, has been pushing its central
bank to undertake drastic stimulative policies.
The Federal Reserve Act
of 1913 did not incorporate any macroeconomic goals for monetary
policy, but instead required the Fed to "provide an elastic currency".
This meant that the Fed should help the economy avoid the financial
panics and bank runs that plagued the 19th century by serving as a
"lender of last resort", which involved making loans directly to
depository institutions through the discount windows of the Reserve
Banks. During this early period, most of the actions of monetary policy
that affected the macro-economy were determined by the US government's
adherence to the gold standard.
The trauma of the Great
Depression, coupled with the insights of John Maynard Keynes, led to an
acknowledgment of the obligation of the US government to prevent
recessions. The Employment Act of 1946 was the first legislative
statement of these macroeconomic policy goals. Although it did not
specifically mention the Fed, it required the federal government in
general to foster "conditions under which there will be afforded useful
employment opportunities ... for those able, willing, and seeking to
work, and to promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing
power". Therein lies the fundamental flaw in the wisdom of the
political independence of the Federal Reserves. Congress has never
legislated unemployment as a legitimate tool to fight inflation,
economic theory notwithstanding. There is a whole list of antisocial
programs that, if made legal, could lead to economic efficiency, such
as terminating unproductive life, genetic engineering to raise
intelligence-quotient (IQ) scores or to eliminate costly genetic
diseases, selective education opportunities based on potential economic
performance, etc. Yet societal value condemns such programs. Why is
unemployment an exception?
The Great Inflation of the 1970s was a major US economic dislocation.
This problem was addressed in a 1977 amendment to the Federal Reserve
Act, which provided the first explicit recognition of price stability
as a national policy goal. The amended act states that the Fed "shall
maintain long-run growth of the monetary and credit aggregates
commensurate with the economy's long-run potential to increase
production, so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum
employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates". The
goals of "stable prices" and "moderate long-term interest rates" are
related because nominal interest rates are boosted by a premium over
real rates equal to expected future inflation. Thus, "stable prices"
will typically produce long-term interest rates that are "moderate".
The objective of
"maximum" employment remained intact from the 1946 Employment Act;
however, the interpretation of this term may have changed during the
intervening 30 years. Immediately after World War II, when conscription
and price controls had produced a high-pressure economy with very low
unemployment in the United States, some perhaps believed that the goal
of "maximum" employment could be taken in its mathematical sense to
mean the highest possible level of employment. However, by the second
half of the 1970s, it was well understood that some "frictional"
unemployment, which involves the search for new jobs and the transition
between occupations, is a necessary accompaniment to the proper
functioning of the economy in the long run.
This understanding went
hand in hand in the latter half of the 1970s with a general acceptance
of the natural rate hypothesis, which implies that if policy were to
try to keep employment above its long-run trend permanently or,
equivalently, the unemployment rate below its natural rate, then
inflation would be pushed higher and higher. Policy can temporarily
reduce the unemployment rate below its natural rate or, equivalently,
boost employment above its long-run trend. However, persistently
attempting to maintain "maximum" employment that is above its long-run
level would not be consistent with the goal of stable prices.
Thus, in order for
maximum employment and stable prices to be mutually consistent goals,
maximum employment should be interpreted as meaning maximum sustainable
employment, referred to also as "full employment". Moreover, although
the Fed has little if any influence on the long-run level of
employment, it can attempt to smooth out short-run fluctuations.
Accordingly, promoting full employment can be interpreted as a
countercyclical monetary policy in which the Fed aims to smooth out the
amplitude of the business cycle.
This interpretation of
the Fed's mandate was later confirmed in the Humphrey-Hawkins
legislation. As its official title - the Full Employment and Balanced
Growth Act of 1978 - clearly implies, this legislation mandates the
federal government generally to "... promote full employment and
production, increased real income, balanced growth, a balanced federal
budget, adequate productivity growth, proper attention to national
priorities, achievement of an improved trade balance ... and reasonable
price stability ...". Besides clarifying the general goal of full
employment, the Humphrey-Hawkins Act also specified numerical
definitions or targets. The act specified two initial goals: an
unemployment rate of 4 percent for full employment and a CPI inflation
rate of 3 percent for price stability. These were only "interim" goals
to be achieved by 1983 and followed by a further reduction in inflation
to 0 percent by 1988; however, the disinflation policies during this
period were not to impede the achievement of the full-employment goal.
Thereafter, the timetable to achieve or maintain price stability and
full employment was to be defined by each year's Economic Report of the
President.
The Fed, then, has two
main legislated goals for monetary policy: promoting full employment
and promoting stable prices. The transparency of goals refers to the
extent to which the objectives of monetary policy are clearly defined
and can be easily and obviously understood by the public. The goal of
full employment will never be very transparent because it is not
directly observed but only estimated by economists with limited
precision. For example, the 1997 Economic Report of the President
(which has authority in this matter from the Humphrey-Hawkins Act)
gives a range of 5-6 percent for the unemployment rate consistent with
full employment, with a midpoint of 5.5 percent. Research suggests that
there is a very wide range of uncertainty around any estimate of the
natural rate. Price stability as a goal is also subject to some
ambiguity. Recent economic analysis has uncovered systematic biases,
say, on the order of 1 percentage point, in the CPI's measurement of
inflation.
In fact, it would not be
far wrong to conclude that the Fed has a policy to keep unemployment
from falling below 4 percent, as evident in Greenspan's raising the Fed
Funds Rate in the late 1990s in response to falling unemployment. The
Wall Street Journal on October 3, 2000, reported that the Fed had come
under the influence of Johan G K Wicksell (1851-1926) on the
relationship among interest rates, growth and inflation. The Fed had
pushed inflation-adjusted real rates historically high. Monetarists,
who have dominated the Fed throughout its history, subscribe to the
theory that inflation can only be prevented either by high rates to
contain growth or by high unemployment to depress wages, which are two
faces of the same coin. Wicksell argued that monetary policy works best
at containing inflation by pegging interest rates to investment returns
rather than money supply. That theory provides a needed cover for
Greenspan's high-interest-rate policy at the height of the debt bubble.
Of course, the Treasury, with the patriotic support of the Fed, has
repeatedly declared that a strong dollar is in the US national
interest. And a strong dollar requires high US interest rates in the
international finance architecture. But now, in addition to
national-interest justifications, a scientific theory has been
resurrected to support Greenspan's policy. Field data have demolished
the claim that low unemployment (below 6 percent) causes inflation.
Greenspan calls his high rates "equilibrium interest rates".
The Fed, notwithstanding
its intellectual pretense, has always been a political institution. The
politics of economics repeatedly resurrects from the intellectual
wasteland, the theoretical Siberia as it were, new gurus to support its
latest ideology. Nobel winners are proponents of theories that explain
"scientifically" last year's political expediency. The list includes
Friedrich von Hayek (free market), Friedman (monetary theory), Robert
Mundell (global capital), Schumpeter (creative destruction) etc.
Wicksell makes it respectable for Greenspan to abdicated his
responsibility as Fed Chairman, by pretending to follow the market, to
treat interest rates as prices of money set by market forces, and not
as a tool to promote employment or growth, an if necessary only as a
tool to bail out banks in distress.
The embarrassing question
of why then the United States needs a Federal Reserve is never asked.
The fact is that the monetarists at the Fed are fervently intervening
in the market - the only difference between monetarists and Keynesians
is that monetarists intervene to safeguard the value of capital while
Keynesians intervene to protect labor from unemployment and low wages.
As post-Keynesians economist Paul Davidson said, everyone has an income
policy; they just don't like the other fellow's income policy but claim
their own as "free" market determined.
This creates rethinks on
Wall Street. Traders and investors may have to reverse their knee-jerk
reaction to sell when the Fed raises rates. Unless, of course,
corporate profit falls amid rising rates, as they are beginning to.
Wicksell was born in
Stockholm. His book Value, Capital and Rent (1893) was not
translated into English until 1954. His Lectures on Political
Economy (two volumes, 1901-06) and Selected Papers on Economic
Theory (1958) were read only by professionals. Wicksell did
rigorous work on the marginalist theory of price and distribution and
on monetary theory. Lectures on Political Economy has been
aptly called a "textbook for professors". In an unusually checkered
career (including a brief spell of imprisonment for exercising his
right of free speech) he wrote and lectured tirelessly of radical
issues, which did not figure among the qualities that Greenspan
admired. He was an advocate of social and economic reforms of various
kinds, most notably neo-Malthusian population controls. In his later
years he was revered by the new generation of economists, who became
known as the Stockholm School. They developed his ideas on the
cumulative process into a dynamic theory of monetary macroeconomics
simultaneously with but independently of the Keynesian revolution.
Greenspan's selective use
of other people's idea is notorious. His fondness of Schumpeterean
"creative destruction", which he cites in every speech, always leaves
out the second half of Schumpeter's conclusion: that creative
destruction tends to encourage monopolies (a la Microsoft) and
accelerates the coming of socialism.
Paul Volcker's monetary
policy was identical to that of Benjamin Strong, who was president of
the all-powerful New York Fed, and whose stewardship of which was
hailed by Friedman as the era of "high tide" for the Fed. The policy
was: save the banking system at all cost, including the health of the
economy. Depressions will eventually recover, but a banking system is
like Humpty Dumpty, all the king's men cannot put it together again
once it collapses. The stable value of money is a defining ingredient
of economic order, a sine qua non. Both times, the Fed not only
forced deflation on parts of the economy to maintain overall low
inflation, it managed monetary policy to ensure perpetual surplus
capacity to suppress prices and wages. In the 1980s, one of the
high-growth areas of the service sector was bankruptcy law and distress
debt restructuring. Vulture funds such as Apollo, corporate raiders
such as Carl Icahn and LBO (leveraged buyout) firms such as KKR
prospered. Post-bankruptcy DIP (debtor in possession) financing was
highly profitable and the bank that pioneered it, Chemical of New York,
became such a powerhouse from its dominance in this lucrative activity
that it was eventually able it to take over Manufactures Hannover and
Chase and J P Morgan to become JP Morgan/Chase.
Yet stable money is ultimately an illusion, a statistical artifact. In
the quest for monetary order, stable money in reality creates economic
disorder in the real economy. Within the conservative political context
of capitalism, stable money produces a complacency of moral
satisfaction. The winners are credited with financial genius and
rewarded with the right to practice conspicuous consumption, taking on
celebrity status. The losers are condemned for their mistakes. It fits
neatly into Spencerian Social Darwinism of survival of the fittest,
notwithstanding that the criteria for fitness have been defined by
policy. The tilted market is hailed as the indiscriminate crucible of
perpetual economic revitalization, while in fact a handful of men in
the paneled boardroom of the Fed play God to decide who lives and who
dies.
Deflationary pressure does force management to downsize and cut costs,
cutting out the weak and the marginal. But the central effect is the
consolidation of ownership through mergers and acquisition. M&A,
the legal process of wealth concentration, has been the driving force
of the growth of capitalism since the late Middle Ages. With
globalization, we are heading toward an economic order in which every
sector can accommodate only five megafirms, two real players, market
leaders as they are called, in a carefully choreographed condominium
that appears to be managed competition to stay on the good side of
antitrust laws, with three minor players permitted to survive for
appearance' sake.
The essence of monetary policy, like all policies, despite technical
complexities, is ultimately reduced to social values that determine
goals and priorities. It comes down to welfare economics and power
politics. Yet the Fed operates on ideology exclusively. As Preston
Martin, Fed vice chairman, declared more than once in the '80s: a
growth recession is a real threat.<>
Global capital will stay in the United States for the same reason that
people stay in jobs they don't like: there are no better alternatives.
The euro reinforced that sentiment. The last joyride with the yen ended
with much pain in 1998. One cannot predict when capital flight will hit
the United States, because US hegemony deprives any incentive to move
capital elsewhere and global prosperity cannot revive without US
prosperity. There is the catch 22.
Yet despite the abundance
of capital funds, the system can implode. The only uncertainty is when,
not if. Global capital now treats local markets as parking lots only
and increasingly unlike physical parking lots, for financial virtual
parking, the one nearest to your office is not necessarily the most
convenient. If the United States will lower interest rates, regulate
credit allocation, permit a higher rate of inflation, and raise wages
substantially to keep up purchasing power, both domestically and
globally, the boom may last another decade. But US policy makers are
not yet on this track. The disparity of income will doom this debt
economy.
Note 1 The three customary
monetary aggregates are: M1 = currency in circulation, commercial bank
demand deposits, NOW (negotiable order of withdrawal) and ATS (auto
transfer from savings), credit-union share drafts, mutual-savings-bank
demand deposits, non-bank traveler's checks; M2 = M1 plus overnight
repurchase agreements issued by commercial banks, overnight
eurodollars, savings accounts, time deposits under $100,000, money
market mutual shares; M3 = M2 plus time deposits over $100,000, term
repo agreements.
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