May 27, 2009
Liquidity drowns meaning of 'inflation'
By
Henry C K Liu
The conventional terms of inflation and
deflation are no longer adequate for describing the overall monetary
effect of excess liquidity recently released by the US Federal
Reserve, the nation's central bank, to deal with the year-long credit
crunch.
This is because the approach adopted by the Treasury
and the Fed to deal with a financial crisis of unsustainable debt
created by excess liquidity is to inject more
liquidity in the form of both new public debt and newly
created money into the economy and to channel it to debt-laden
institutions to reflate a burst debt-driven asset price bubble.
The
Treasury does not have any power to create new money. It has
to borrow from the credit market, thus shifting private debt into
public debt. The Fed has the authority to
create new money. Unfortunately, the
Fed's new money has not been going to consumers in the form of
full employment with rising wages to restore fallen demand, but
instead is going only to debt-infested
distressed institutions to allow them to deleverage from toxic
debt. Thus deflation in the equity market (falling share prices) has
been cushioned by newly issued money, while aggregate wage income
continues to fall to further reduce aggregate demand.
Falling
demand deflates commodity prices, but not enough to restore demand
because aggregate wages are falling faster. When financial
institutions deleverage with free money from the central bank, the
creditors receive the money while the Fed assumes the toxic liability
by expanding its balance sheet. Deleverage reduces financial costs
while increasing cash flow to allow zombie financial institutions to
return to nominal profitability with unearned income and while laying
off workers to cut operational cost. Thus we have financial profit
inflation with price deflation in a shrinking economy.
What we
will have going forward is not Weimar Republic-type price
hyperinflation, but a financial profit inflation in which zombie
financial institutions turn nominally profitable in a collapsing
economy. The danger is that this unearned nominal financial profit is
mistaken as a sign of economic recovery, inducing the public to
invest what remaining wealth they still hold, only to lose more of it
at the next market meltdown, which will come when the profit bubble
bursts.
Hyperinflation is fatal because hedging
against it causes market failures to destroy wealth. Normally,
when markets are functioning, unhedged inflation favors debtors by
reducing the value of liabilities they owe to creditors. Instead of
destroying wealth, unhedged inflation merely transfers wealth from
creditors to debtors. But with government intervention in the
financial market, both debtors and creditors are the taxpayers. In
such circumstances, even moderate inflation destroys wealth because
there are no winning parties.
Debt denominated in fiat
currency is borrowed wealth to be repaid later with wealth stored in
money protected by monetary policy. Bank deleveraging with Fed new
money cancels private debt at full face value with money that has not
been earned by anyone, that is with no stored wealth. That kind of
money is toxic in that the more valuable it is (with increased
purchasing power to buy more as prices deflate), the more it degrades
wealth because no wealth has been put into the money to be stored,
thus negating the fundamental prerequisite of
money as a storer of value.
This is not demand
destruction because decline in demand is temporarily slowed by the
new money. Rather, it is money destruction as a restorer of value
while it produces a misleading and confusing
effect on aggregate demand.
Thinking about the value
of any real asset (gold, oil, and so forth) in money (dollar) terms
is misleading. The correct way is to think about the value of the
money (dollars) in asset (gold, oil) terms, because assets (gold,
oil, and so on) are wealth. The Fed can create
money, but it cannot create wealth.
Central bankers
are savvy enough to know that while they can create money, they
cannot create wealth. To bind money to wealth, central bankers must
fight inflation as if it were a financial plague. But the first law
of growth economics states that to create wealth through growth, some
inflation needs to be tolerated.
The solution then is to make
the working poor pay for the pain of inflation by giving the rich a
bigger share of the monetized wealth created via inflation, so that
the loss of purchasing power from inflation is mostly borne by the
low-wage working poor and not by the owners of capital, the monetary
value of which is protected from inflation through low wages. Thus
the working poor loses in both boom times and bust times.
Inflation
is deemed benign by monetarism as long as wages rise at a slower pace
than asset prices. The monetarist iron law of wages worked in the
industrial age, with the resultant excess capacity absorbed by
conspicuous consumption of the moneyed class, although it eventually
heralded in the age of revolutions. But the iron law of wages no
longer works in the post-industrial age in which growth can only come
from mass demand management because overcapacity has grown beyond the
ability of conspicuous consumption of a few to absorb in an economic
democracy.
That has been the basic problem of the global
economy for the past three decades. Low wages even in boom times have
landed the world in its current sorry state of overcapacity masked by
unsustainable demand created by a debt bubble that finally imploded
in July 2007. The whole world is now producing goods and services
made by low-wage workers who cannot afford to
buy what they make except by taking on debt on which they
eventually will default because their low income cannot service it.
All the stimulus spending by all governments perpetuates this
dysfunctionality. There will be no recovery from this dysfunctional
financial system. Only reform toward full
employment with rising wages will save this severely impaired
economy.
How can that be done? Simple. Make
the cost of wage increases deductible from corporate income tax and
make the savings from layoffs taxable as corporate income.
Henry
C K Liu is chairman of a New York-based private investment
group. His website is at http://www.henryckliu.com.
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