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Archive for the ‘Deflation’ Category

On The Reality Of Depressions; Bernanke's Folly

 

The common claim, often repeated, is that Ben Bernanke knows what caused The Great Depression and he (has avoided / can avoid / will avoid) one here – because he’s studied it in depth.

Has anyone questioned the primary thesis behind why there was a Depression?

I don’t think so.

But I think we should.

In 1929 the stock market crashed.  But stock market crashes were not new things then.  Indeed, monstrous, violent moves in the market were the norm from 1900 when we first have Dow Jones data – onward to the start of the “Roaring 20s” – roughly in 1924.

As the below chart shows, there were serious and extremely violent market crashes in 1901-03, 1906-08, 1917 and of course 1920 – the one nobody talks about.

1920 is where I would like to focus my attention.  It came on the heels of World War I.  A huge number of returning troops came into the workforce, overwhelming labor supplies.  There were serious changes in fiscal and monetary policy on top of it.  There is much attention paid to a claim that The Fed basically caused the Depression by raising rates from 4.75% to 7%.  This is implausible as the triggering cause, although it certainly slowed bank lending.  More importantly, there was a large inflation in both asset and general price levels, with the DOW rising from 80 – 120 – a 50% increase in less than a year.

President Harding was urged by Herbert Hoover (then Commerce Secretary)  to protect private businesses, including banks, from the consequences of their bad decisions.  He refused.  The contraction was extremely sharp, with deflation of, according to some estimates of approximately 18% at retail and more than 30% at wholesale.  GDP fell by 7%. 

Unemployment also rose rapidly, reaching over 11%.

But the recovery was equally swift.  Having been purged of inefficient businesses and excessive debt, the economy came roaring back.  By 1923 full employment had once again been reached and industrial production registered an astounding 60% increase.  The stock market came roaring back at the same time, with the DOW going from 65 to 105 in about a year.

What was different after the crash of 1929?

Several things.

First, there was a concerted attempt to prevent asset price deflation – and the bankruptcy of firms that were underwater. Hoover did not in fact “leave it alone”; indeed, he rejected Treasury Secretary Mellon’s advice to do exactly that, and instead called business leaders to Washington to urge them not to lay off workers and cut wages (sound familiar?)  He did refuse to run welfare programs, but in fact did try to bail out the banks by putting together the National Credit Corporation, designed to “jawbone” loans to weaker institutions.  It failed.  Hoover also put together the Federal Home Loan Banks Act to reduce foreclosures (familiar again?) which also failed to turn the tide of construction – foreclosures dropped, but construction did not in fact rebound.

FDR did worse.  He devalued the currency – directly, since he was able.  He also directly interfered with commodity prices, literally buying up and destroying farmer’s crops and livestock.  But all that happened, in the end, was that margins got trashed, as the income of those who he took from collapsed along with everyone else, and the devaluation of the currency made anything imported more expensive.

None of the “New Deal” actually cured the Depression.  In fact, there was a Depression within the Depression, from 37-38.  In point of fact the Stock Market lost half it’s value from 37-38 and did not recover its 1937 levels until the end of 1945 – when WWII ended.

What if all the claims are wrong?

What if Depression is a manifestation of margin collapse?

That is, what if so long as housing prices remain elevated at artificially high levels, being propped up while wages remain depressed, it is impossible to find buyers for a product that is too expensive relative to the prevailing wage?

What if the cost-push price increases we’re seeing now are going to do the same thing to everything made from basic materials (which is, basically, everything.) 

What if – just what if – charts like this are the root cause of Depressions?

What if the bottom line is that margin collapse that is forced through currency devaluation, along with the destruction of purchasing power of those who are older and have either saved much through their lives and/or are retired makes margin compression inevitable – and that so long as that continues, you cannot exit the malaise?

Improbable?  I don’t think so.  Without margins business does not hire.  You don’t pay people out of the gross – you pay them from net profit.  Without net profit you don’t hire anyone. 

False profits – that is, claims of profit which are due to balance sheet games – eventually nail you.  Thy nail you because ultimately the cash flow statement always wins.  Not sometimes – always.

Propping up failed businesses – those which cannot operate competitively in the current environment – no matter what they are, whether they be auto companies, banks or others – simply exacerbates the problem.  The more government tries to provide “help” the higher the tax burden or the more devaluation of the currency must take place.  But both have the same result – devaluation of the currency causes input prices to ramp, which in turn is passed through, which again compresses margins and destroys hiring!

Bernanke never ran a business.  I have.  So have millions of others.  Business - especially small business – is not hiring, and there’s only one reason why – sales and margin prospects make it impossible to earn a fair return on the marginal cost of that next employee.

We got out of the Depression after WWII because we had destroyed the entire industrial capacity of Western Europe.  It was literally bombed to smithereens.  We were thus the only man standing with industrial capacity, and that meant pricing power – in other words, margins.  We also killed off an awful lot of competition for jobs, which meant labor had wage power.  Between those two we had a monstrous ramp in both industrial output and general prosperity; with wide margins business could (and did) hire, and with a relatively tight labor market wages were firm.  Technology also helped – The War brought many technological advances which filtered down to the common man.

If this is correct, my friends, then what Bernanke is doing will inevitably make the situation worse.  It has to, because what is doing will further damage margins

In fact we need to force those business that are non-viable out of business by withdrawing the unnatural support under them, even if it temporarily causes people to lose jobs. 

We have to support the dollar, which means normalizing interest rates and returning the saver’s ability to earn a living income off their saved wealth. 

We are in a perilous time.  Indeed, the policies of our government – to borrow and spend, larding up the interest costs down the road and protecting those who are bankrupt, simply means that cost pressures – and margin collapse – will accelerate.  This will tighten the spiral we are now in – not make it better.

Crazy? 

I don’t think so.  Not with what we’re seeing in the data.  A million people came off unemployment benefits over the last month.  This month’s personal income and spending shows that spending is continuing while income is collapsing.  This is margin compression at the personal level, and we have multiple companies and reports showing insane amounts of cost-push pressure on inputs, with Kimberly-Clark, among others reporting the highest increases in input cost pressures in the firm’s history.  Look at the GDP report.  Virtually all of it was inventory – 1.44% of the 2% headline. Without the inventory build we saw only 0.56% GDP growth, and the deflator – the implicit inflation gauge in the numbers – stands at 2.2% across all products and services.

Even high-flying companies like Apple are reporting margin pressures.  But don’t be fooled by firms like Apple and other semiconductor manufacturers.  High-tech toys are great, but you can’t eat them, they won’t heat your house, and you can’t get to work in one.  You have to look at the necessities and their derived products to see where we’re headed – and there, it does not look good at all.

Remember, Bernanke already QE’d $1.4 trillion.  But he didn’t help things by doing so – he in fact made things worse.  Nor did he decrease interest rates – the 10 year Treasury Rate actually rose during that time.  None of what he claimed would happen, in point of fact, did. 

Why not? 

Because his actions have damaged, and continue to damage, margins for both businesses and households.

I think Bernanke is wrong.  Dangerously, perhaps even critically wrong.  He is focused on getting lending moving, because we live in a credit-driven world and he’s focused on bank credit. 

Yet we’re in this mess due to too much credit. More of what poisoned the economy cannot provide help - it can only make it worse.  We must instead focus on input costs, which paradoxially means pulling the rug out from under the crooks that caused the mess – the banks – and forcing them to be resolved so the debt overhang they are carrying is removed.   At the same time we must encourage asset deflation and the increase, not decrease, in yields. 

Borrowing must become expensive, so that it is not undertaken for any purpose other than a high-probability productive venture – the very venture that the lender of that capital – the saver – can then earn a solid return on.

All of this is focused on increasing the operating margin not only of business, but more importantly of households.  Debt default clears household balance sheets at the same time it destroys the banks that made imprudent loans.  “Buy today and pay never” must end, to be replaced by save today and buy tomorrow, because again, not only must operating margins at business be supported, but also operating margins at the household level!

Yes, old businesses that had an artificially-propped-up margin structure will die.  But they will be replaced by new businesses without the millstone of debt and structure around them that led to the older firm’s demise.

New banks, unburdened with bad balance sheets, will rise to take the place of old ones.

There will be pain in the short term and nobody wants to admit to that fact – or the consequences. 

But that pain is not avoidable.  Our can-kicking game has led us to kick the can through successive iterations to the point that it is now a 55-gallon drum filled with cement.

Bernanke is wrong.

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Cheap, (I Mean Really Cheap) Stores

 

Reader Jed writes ….

Hello Mish,
Here is a humorous image of a sign I took yesterday at the Southdale Mall in Edina.

Jed

Thanks Jed but that store has a long, long way to compete with stores in Japan that sell things for $10 Yen (about 12 cents by current calculation).

Here is a Forex Currency Conversion Link.

¥10 Shops in Japan

Mike in Tokyo Rogers reports ¥10 Yen Shops in Japan! Proof of Deflation!

The Asia Times Online shows what 20 years of Japan’s economic policies have brought us: Severe deflation.

We have ¥10 yen shops selling daily items and doing brisk business in Japan.

The ¥10 yen shops sell loss leader items to attract the customers but the other items sell for about ¥88 each, so they even beat out the ¥100 yen shops.

The store that accomplishes all of this is called the Recycle Garden.

Deflation Dilemma

The article Mike Rogers referred to is Ten-yen stores capture deflation dilemma

With many worrying that the United States economy headed towards a painful Japanese-style deflation, the concept of “Japanization” is increasingly being bandied around the world. But what is “Japanization”?

One answer is found in Kawasaki City, about 20 kilometers southwest of downtown Tokyo. There, a 10 yen-shop called Recycle Garden (equivalent to a 10 cent store in the US) is attracting large numbers of customers by word of mouth. The outlet is one of nine Recycle Garden branches operated in the Kanto region centered on Tokyo and including Yokohama, Kawasaki and Atsugi.

At Recycle Garden, 10 yen buys the customer everyday items such as chopsticks, kitchen goods, nail-scissors, hand sanitizers, or air fresheners. A colored plastic hair clasp is also 10 yen. In the Kawasaki shop alone, the product lineup consists of about 1,000 items at 10 yen, with the number of goods totaling around 30,000. It’s all there.

Surprisingly, most of those products are made in Japan, not in China, Vietnam or Cambodia, from where usually cheaper and lower-quality goods flow into Japan.

“Everything is incredibly cheap,” said Kyoko Yamada, 52, a careworker, who lives in Tsurumi Ward adjoining Kawasaki, who on a recent visit to Recycle Garden bought 10 items such bath agents.

How is such unprecedented price-slashing possible?

The mechanism is this: amid an increasingly fierce pricing war among neighborhood retail shops such as 100-yen convenience stores, Recycle Garden makes bulk purchases of those goods from bankrupt shops and firms as from deceased manufacturing and wholesale merchants. In most cases, on hearing the news about a bankruptcy, Recycle Garden workers dash to the failed firms with large dump trucks, and buy up and take away immediately to their chain store a vast amount of goods.

“We are cutting prices to the bone,” said Tadafumi Fukuda, 41, manager at Recycle Garden’s Kawasaki outlet. “Since we also sell other items at 88 yen and above, 10-yen goods serve as a crowd puller.” The number of customers visiting the shop has increased 20% from a year ago, when the shop started to sell 10-yen goods, he said.

Can this happen in the US? I think it can, no matter what Bernanke thinks.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

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Myths About "What's Economically Important"

 

Day in and day out I hear it from readers who insist that we are not in deflation and will not be in deflation because prices are rising and continue to rise.

Still others tell me it is illogical for a deflationist to like gold.

When I counter with a discussion about credit conditions I tend to get a blank stare or a comment like “I do not care about credit conditions. I own my home. What I care about are rising prices of food and energy.”

When I counter with falling asset prices and zero percent interest rates on savings accounts I am likely to get as statement like “Who cares, I rent?”, or perhaps “The poor have no assets or savings, all they care about is food prices.”

Really?

Such comments come from those who are not thinking clearly about what’s important. Here’s why:

  • In a fiat credit-based financial system, when credit is plunging businesses are not hiring. There are currently 14.9 million unemployed who want a job but do not have a job because businesses are not hiring. There are 2.4 million “marginally attached” persons who do not have a job yet want a job, but are not considered unemployed because they stopped looking. There are 8.9 million part-time workers who want a full time job but cannot get one because businesses are not hiring. There are countless millions of college graduates who are underemployed, working at WalMart, delivering pizzas, or attempting to sell trinkets on eBay, because businesses are not hiring. There a still millions more in college hoping for a job upon graduation who will not get one because businesses are not hiring. This is all related to the ongoing credit contraction.
  • When credit is plunging so do yields on treasuries and in turn yields on savings accounts. Those on fixed incomes attempting to live off interest income are screwed. Indeed, many are rapidly draining their principal because they collect no interest.
  • Those who have a job, pay for those who don’t. Food stamp usage is soaring and now costs over $60 billion dollars a year.
  • When credit is plunging, consumers are not shopping, business earnings are under pressure, and wages stagnate or in many cases outright decline. Even those with jobs and no debt have been affected by deteriorating credit conditions. Public employees had escaped this debacle so far, but that is about to change in a big way, with huge implications.
  • When business earnings are under pressure or when business owners face uncertainty over consumer spending trends, businesses cut back on benefits, especially health care. Those with health cares benefits are asked to chip in more of the costs. This too is a function of deflation.
  • When profits are weak and business uncertainty high, stock prices do not act well (at least in the long run). Those with 401Ks or personal investments are affected.
  • With credit falling and wages stagnant or falling, anyone in debt is likely to have a harder time paying back that debt. Foreclosures rise so do bankruptcies and divorces. Entire families have gone homeless.

So, What’s Really More Important?

Expanding credit (inflation) created an enormous housing bubble, a commercial real estate boom, a rising stock market, and an enormous number of jobs.

Contracting credit (deflation), burst the housing bubble, burst the commercial real estate bubble, burst the stock market bubble, resulting in millions of foreclosures and bankruptcies, millions of broken homes, millions on food stamps, 26.2 million unemployed or partially employed, and countless additional millions who are underemployed.

People notice food and energy prices because they tend to be somewhat sticky. Everyone has to eat, heat their homes, and take some form of transportation at times, but is that what’s important?

No!

In the grand scheme of things, nominal increases in food and energy prices are but a few grains of salt in the world’s largest salt-shaker compared to the massive effects of rising or falling credit conditions.

Yet, every day, someone writes to me complaining about the price of milk (or something else) going up 30 cents or whatever telling me that is “inflation” or that is what is most important.

Inflation/Deflation Definitions Once Again

  • Inflation is a net expansion of money and credit, with credit marked to market.
  • Deflation is a net contraction of money and credit, with credit marked to market.

Those are my definitions. I cannot force anyone to accept those definitions but they do explain what is happening quite nicely.

Conclusion

Those who think prices are what matters, even those who have no debt and no assets, are simply missing the boat about the importance of credit expansion and credit contraction in fiat credit-based financial system. As shown above, a credit contraction affects everyone, in many ways, and in far more important ways than simple price changes.

The stimulus and bailouts helped the financial economy (for a while), but not the real economy. Because credit dwarfs money supply, trillions of dollars of so-called stimulus vanished into thin air, with no lasting impact on the jobs market.

The inflationists and hperinflationists who ignored credit and focused on money supply alone (or consumer prices) never saw the plunge in interest rates coming or the massive pounding in global equity markets.

Those who knew a credit implosion was coming, got treasury yields correct, the equity crash correct, the rise in the dollar correct, and the strength in gold correct.

Gold does well in times of economic stress, especially in the senior currency – in this case the US dollar. It is the only commodity whose long term trendline is intact from 2000. Gold is money and as money it should do well in deflation in the country of the senior currency. It did.

In credit-based system, especially where credit dwarf money supply, credit itself (and the value of credit marked-to-market on the balance sheets of banks) is of paramount importance.

Those who insist inflation is about prices, as well as those who view inflation as an increase in money supply alone (ignoring credit), are going to continue to get the economic picture wrong.

If you are focused on prices or money supply alone, you are focused on the wrong thing.

In a fiat credit-based economy, where credit dwarfs money supply, changes in credit is what’s important, not changes in money supply, not nominal changes in prices.

It’s as simple as that.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com  

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Inflation Lies – From The Consumer End

 

This is how you get “zero inflation” reported by the government lie office:

Your ass will never know the difference if the toilet paper is 3/4″ narrower, right?

Pull the other one guys.

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Jobless Claims, Inflation And More

 

And here we go!

In the week ending Sept. 11, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 450,000, a decrease of 3,000 from the previous week’s revised figure of 453,000. The 4-week moving average was 464,750, a decrease of 13,500 from the previous week’s revised average of 478,250.

No movement of materiality in the futures on this one.  Blipped up, blipped down, settled back pretty much where it was.  (But, the ~4 handle drop before leads one to wonder if certain “favored people” got it early…. cough-Goldman-cough)

The market’s knee-jerk “if it’s not a disaster rally 10 handle” reaction seems to have faded off.  Perhaps some people have started to think about what I’ve talked about for months – you need a number around 350,000 before we see anything that represents actual job growth in the economy.  450k on a weekly basis won’t do it.

Neither will people rolling off the government cheese, as continues to happen – 400,000+ of them during the last week of August.  That’s 400,000 newly-impoverished who thought Obama would save their ass, now waking up to the reality that even 99 weeks of unemployment eventually runs out.

CNBS had the usual parade of people on this morning saying “the recovery is proceeding.”  Oh really?  Where are the jobs?  400,000 new potential rioters seems to be going the wrong way, don’t you think?

Everyone seems to understand (even if they don’t talk about it) that it’s the “government cheese” that has kept the “rabble” (that is all the Americans that have been consciously and intentionally screwed by all the offshoring, all the financial fraud and the scams) from rising up and saying “ok, jackass, this time you lose!”  That’s one of those “let them eat cake!” moments that nobody wants to see but everyone realizes in the back of their mind can happen – a man who has lost everything has nothing left to lose.  That, a gallon of gasoline and a pack of matches are a bad combination.

Today we also got the PPI report which showed an 0.4% increase in August, with most of it in energy – or so they say.  If you believe the government there was a decrease in food prices – something that I find amusing, seeing as I can’t find it in the grocery store (quite to the contrary; all I see there are gains!)  More ominously we have a 12-month run rate that is now well over The Fed’s claimed inflation target of 1-2% for every month since November of last year, with a lot of that being in the energy complex – the part that, of course, they all want to ignore but which every person in America has to consume if they want to keep warm in the winter and make it to work!

Larry Summers is flapping his gums on CNBS as I write this, with a claim that a “massive failure of regulation” led to the crisis.  Oh really Mr. Jackass?  Shall we talk about your record in that regard with Haaaarrrrrvvvvaaarrrrdddd?  Funny how that question is never asked by the so-called “mainstream media” – how Mr. “it was all someone else’s fault” doesn’t want to talk about his personal experience with derivatives abuse.

If we’re going to create an economic environment in which there is “confidence” the first step in doing it is to punish the people who did, and still are, intentionally lying about asset valuations and running various scams on the American people!

Now there’s something you won’t hear on the Tee Vee.

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Debating the Flat Earth Society about Hyperinflation

 

Over the past few weeks, many people have asked me to comment on John Hussman’s August 23, 2010 post Why Quantitative Easing is Likely to Trigger a Collapse of the U.S. Dollar.

Most wanted to know how that article changed my view regarding deflation. It didn’t.

Several others went so far as to tell me that Hussman was calling for hyperinflation. They were point blank wrong.

Here is the pertinent section from Hussman’s September 6, 2010 post The Recognition Window.

A note on quantitative easing

One of the things I’m increasingly dismayed to learn is that no matter how much detail, data, and qualification I might include in these commentaries, my conclusions will often be summed up by writers or bloggers in a single sentence that often bears no relation to my point. For instance, my view that quantitative easing will trigger a “jump depreciation” in the dollar has evidently placed me among analysts warning of hyperinflation and Treasury default (a club whose card is nowhere in my wallet).

To clarify once again – I emphatically do not anticipate inflationary pressures until the second half of this decade. As I’ve repeatedly emphasized, the primary driver of inflation – historically and across countries – has been growth in government spending for purposes that do not expand the productive capacity of the economy.

Quantitative easing does not pressure the dollar by fueling inflation. It has a much more subtle effect (but one that can be expected to be amplified if fiscal policy is long-run inflationary as it is at present). Normally, equilibrium in capital flows between countries is achieved through changes in interest rates. As a result, countries with greater capital needs or higher long-run inflation tendencies also have higher interest rates. If interest rates can adjust, exchange rates don’t have to. But notice what quantitative easing does: by sitting on long-term bond yields (and creating a negative real interest rate differential versus other countries), quantitative easing prevents bond prices from acting as an adjustment factor, and forces the burden of adjustment on the exchange rate.

While some observers have noted that the value of the Japanese yen did not deteriorate dramatically over the full course of quantitative easing by the Bank of Japan – from its beginning until it was finally wound down – this argument misses the point. The exchange rate depreciation occurs as a jump adjustment in order to set up a subsequent appreciation over time. That gradual appreciation is needed to offset the lost interest difference caused by the policy of zero interest rates.

In the Octagon

Some of the arguments that people have recently presented for hyperinflation are so silly they are not worth discussing.

Yet, I have been drawn into discussing such arguments because of an unfortunate off-the-cuff statement I made on a recent podcast, and because of a misrepresentation of another statement I made in the same podcast.

Zero Hedge writes The Deflation vs Hyperinflation Debate On Steroids, Or Mish vs Gonzalo Lira In The Octagon

A recent guest post by Gonzalo Lira on Zero Hedge, providing a theoretical framework for the arrival of hyperinflation, went viral, generating over 75k views and over 1,000 comments, further confirming that the biggest and most confounding debate in all of finance is what will the final outcome of the Fed’s market manipulative actions be: deflation, inflation or, and not really comparable, hyperinflation (which is a distinctly different phenomenon from either of the above). The post infuriated some hard core deflationists who continue to refuse to acknowledge the possibility that in its attempt to inspire inflation at all costs, the Fed may just push beyond the tipping point of monetary imprudence away from mere target 2-3% inflation, and create an outright debasement of the world’s reserve currency.

One among these was none other than Mish himself, who a week ago recorded a podcast on Global Edge with Eric Townsend and Michael Hampton (link here), in which his conclusion was that Hyperinflation is the endgame, “so it is unlikely.”

Hyperinflation Ends The Game

Actually what I said is “Hyperinflation Ends The Game” NOT as Zero Hedge stated “Hyperinflation is the endgame”. The difference between those phrases is enormous.

In the podcast I was asked about a guest post by Gonzalo Lira on Zero Hedge. I had seen the article and I made an off-the-cuff statement that the post was so silly it was not worth commenting not.

How Hyperinflation Starts According to Lira

Please consider the following snip as to how hyperinflation starts according to Gonzalo Lira.

So this is how hyperinflation will happen:

One day—when nothing much is going on in the markets, but general nervousness is running like a low-grade fever (as has been the case for a while now)—there will be a commodities burp: A slight but sudden rise in the price of a necessary commodity, such as oil.

This will jiggle Treasury yields, as asset managers will reduce their Treasury allocations, and go into the pressured commodity, in order to catch a profit. (Actually it won’t even be the asset managers—it will be their programmed trades.) These asset managers will sell Treasuries because, effectively, it’s become the principal asset they have to sell.

It won’t be the volume of the sell-off that will pique Bernanke and the drones at the Fed—it will be the timing. It’ll happen right before a largish Treasury auction. So Bernanke and the Fed will buy Treasuries, in an effort to counteract the sell-off and maintain low yields—they want to maintain low yields in order to discourage deflation. But they’ll also want to keep the Treasury cheaply funded. QE-lite has already set the stage for direct Fed buys of Treasuries. The world didn’t end. So the Fed will feel confident as it moves forward and nips this Treasury yield jiggle in the bud.

Debating the Flat Earth Society

Supposedly … A slight rise in oil will cause a “jiggle” in treasury yields.

As a result of that jiggle “asset managers will sell Treasuries because, effectively, it’s become the principal asset they have to sell.”

Really?

Since when are much despised treasuries the “principal asset” of asset managers? And pray tell, why would the asset managers “have to sell”?

Oil at $140 did not start a chain reaction before. Why would a “slight but sudden rise” in commodity prices start such a chain reaction, now?

I do not know how anyone could keep reading after those statements, but it goes on and on, getting sillier and sillier about who has to sell what and why, and in turn what the Fed’s response will be.

One interesting aspect of Lira’s post is that I agree with his definition of hyperinflation: a complete loss of faith in currency. Yet, Lira never even discusses how a selloff in treasuries causes a loss of faith in the dollar.

However, Lira does go on to say “….That’s why I think there’ll be hyperinflation in America—that bubble’s soon to pop. I’m guessing if it doesn’t happen this fall, it’ll happen next fall, without question before the end of 2011. ”

Commenting on the above is tantamount to debating the flat earth society. The premise is so silly it’s not worth discussing, yet here I am trapped into discussion by a mischaracterization of my statement “Hyperinflation Ends The Game”.

How Does Hyperinflation Occur?

“FOFOA” hops into the hyperinflation debate with Just Another Hyperinflation Post – Part 1

First of all I would like to clear up probably the most common misconception about hyperinflation. What most people believe is that massive printing of base money (new cash) leads to hyperinflation. No, it’s the other way around. Hyperinflation leads to the massive printing of base money (new cash).

Hyperinflation, in most people minds, conjures images of trillion dollar Zimbabwe notes. But this image is simply the government’s reflexive response to the onset of hyperinflation, which is actually the loss of confidence in the currency. First comes the loss of confidence (hyperinflation), then, and only then, comes the massive printing to keep the government and its obligations afloat.

Zimbabwe vs. Weimar

In the case of Zimbabwe, a loss of faith in currency occurred before the printing occurred. The Weimar Republic is a different story.

In Zimbabwe, the Mugabe government initiated a “land reform” program intended to correct the inequitable land distribution created by colonial rule. Ultimately, Mugabe’s attempt to to bail out the poor at the expense of the wealthy is what triggered capital flight and loss of faith of the currency.

His reforms not only caused a flight of capital and human capital (the wealthy), they also led to sanctions by the US and Europe. In response, Mugabe turned on the printing presses but the loss of faith in the currency had already occurred.

In Weimar Germany, printing for war reparations kicked off hyperinflation. Wikipedia provides a good accounting in Inflation in the Weimar Republic.

It is sometimes argued that Germany had to inflate its currency to pay the war reparations required under the Treaty of Versailles, but this is misleading, because the treaty did not allow payment in German currency. The German currency was relatively stable at about 60 Marks per US Dollar during the first half of 1921.[1]

But the “London ultimatum” in May 1921 demanded reparations in gold or foreign currency to be paid in annual installments of 2,000,000,000 (2 billion) goldmarks plus 26 percent of the value of Germany’s exports. The first payment was paid when due in August 1921.[2] That was the beginning of an increasingly rapid devaluation of the Mark which fell to less than one third of a cent by November 1921 (approx. 330 Marks per US Dollar).

The total reparations demanded was 132,000,000,000 (132 billion) goldmarks which was far more than the total German gold or foreign exchange. An attempt was made by Germany to buy foreign exchange with Marks backed by treasury bills and commercial debts, but that only increased the speed of devaluation. The monetary policy at this time was highly influenced by the Chartalism, and was notably criticized at the time from economists ranging from John Maynard Keynes to Ludwig von Mises.[3]

Hyperinflation is a Political Event

The commonality between Zimbabwe and Weimar is they are both political events. In Zimbabwe a political event triggered capital flight, in Weimar a political event started massive printing, triggering hyperinflation.

Interestingly, FOFOA’s commentary seriously weakens the hyperinflation case once one dives into the politics of the cause.

Can The Fed Cause Hyperinflation?

I do not think the Fed can cause hyperinflation and more importantly I am sure they would not if they could. The reason is “Hyperinflation Would End The Game”

  • Hyperinflation by definition would destroy the currency and thus the banks
  • Hyperinflation would destroy the wealthy and all their corporate bond holding
  • Hyperinflation would destroy the Fed
  • Hyperinflation would destroy the wealthy political class

That is what I meant by it would “end the game” and that is why the banks, the Fed, the politicians, and the wealthy would not let “the game” progress that far.

Fiat World Mathematical Model

The above addresses the question of “Would the Fed Cause Hyperinflation?”

“Could the Fed cause hyperinflation?” is a different question. I have my doubts.

To understand how powerless the Fed is, one needs to understand the difference between credit and money, how much the former dwarfs the latter, and what the Fed’s role is in getting banks to lend. I discussed those ideas in Fiat World Mathematical Model.

Unlike Congress, the Fed has no power to give money away. Nor would they do so if they could.

By the way, I did see Quantitative Easing, ZIRP, and various Keynesian silliness in advance and stated they would not work.

October 30, 2008: ZIRP Coming To Fed?

ZIRP did not help Japan and it will not help US banks either. In fact, the rate cuts appear to be counterproductive. However, one cannot rule out the Fed cutting rates to 0% anyway. Bernanke is in academic wonderland and appears to be hell bent on sticking with his models regardless of how poorly those models perform in actual practice.

March 06, 2009: Groping In The Dark’ With Quantitative Easing

Excuse me but has anyone looked at the success rate of Bernanke’s quick slash of interest rates from 5.25 to 0 and the fast $trillions Congress, Paulson, Geithner and Obama have thrown down various black holes?

Of course the Keynesian clowns will always come back with “It would have worked if only we threw money away faster”. They do every time. Krugman Still Wrong After All These Years is the perfect example.

January 02, 2009: How “Something For Nothing” Ideas Become Policy

Bernanke Correctly Judged Nothing

Bernanke considers himself an expert on the great depression and on the Japanese deflation as well. Trying to act quickly, Bernanke has come out blazing with 8 new policy tools, including the TALF, TARP, PDCF, ABCPMMMF, CPFF, TAF, and MMIFF to go on top of Open Market Operations, Discount Rate setting, and setting reserve requirements.

The result so far is deflation. The result in Japan was deflation.

There is only one way to defeat deflation and that is to not let the conditions that foster it to build up in the first place. What caused this deflationary bust is the credit boom that preceded it. What caused the great depression was the credit boom that preceded it. Hoover’s policies and FDR’s policies made the great depression worse.

Bernanke’s policies are going to make this depression worse. Yes, I used the word depression. It may not be as big as the great depression, but the word “recession” does not do justice to what we are in and what is coming down the pike.

Contained Depression

I agree with Hussman that Quantitative Easing will not cause hyperinflation. Nor will “jiggling” of treasury yields, nor would a “slight but sudden blip” in commodity prices, nor would another $1 trillion stimulus effort.

Kevin Feltes and Jerome Levy, economists for the Jerome Levy Forecasting Center, have come to the same conclusion.

For an discussion of ideas from the Levy institute, please see “Contained Depression”

For Now, It’s Deflation

For a full discussion of where we are today please see Are we “Trending Towards Deflation” or in It?

Unlike hyperinflation, deflation does not “end the game” (destroy the currency). The Great Depression and Japan both provide proof enough.

Given that hyperinflation is a complete loss of faith in currency, tangible goods, any tangible goods must by definition rise exponentially in such a situation. Yet amazingly many hyperinflationists are bearish on housing.

Hyperinflation accompanied by a housing collapse is simply impossible – by definition.

What Could Cause Hyperinflation?

As noted above, the Quantitative Easing will not cause hyperinflation. Moreover, it is doubtful the Fed can cause it at all. The Fed cannot give money away nor can the Fed force banks to lend or consumers to borrow. Those who disagree must still address the difference between theory and practice.

Unlike the Fed, Congress could give money away.

I do not know if giving everyone in the US $60,000 would do it or not, but announcing a plan to give everyone $60,000 a month indefinitely would sure do it.

How likely is that?

The answer is 0%. Congress struggles right now extending unemployment insurance. There is little political will for more stimulus. The next Congress is a guaranteed bet to be more conservative.

To be sure, more stimulus and more Quantitative Easing are coming but the latter does not matter and the former will be in insufficient quantity.

Theory vs. Practice

Please note that banks do not want hyperinflation or even massive inflation. The reason is simple: Banks will not want to be paid back with cheaper dollars, especially worthless dollars, and Congress is beholden to itself and the banks.

Hyperinflation could theoretically come from massive sustained political will to bail out the little guy at the expense of the banks, the wealthy, and the political class. However, unlike Mugabe and Zimbabwe, neither the banks nor the Fed nor the political class wants to bail out the poor at the expense of the wealthy.

Indeed, Bernanke’s, Paulson’s, and Geithner’s actions to date have done the exact opposite!

We have bailed out the banks at the expense of the ordinary taxpayer (keeping the little guy in debt).

This is what it comes down to: In theory, Congress can easily cause hyperinflation. In practice, they won’t, and neither will the Fed. As Yogi Berra once quipped “In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.”

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

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