The real cause of European budget indiscipline

From today’s Open Europe news summary:

In a comment piece for FAZ, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble reiterates his call for an EU budgetary commissioner with powers to veto national budgets. He also suggests Europe should be a “multi-layered democracy: not a federal state…and yet more than a union of states with loose, weakly legitimised binding elements”.
FAZ: Schäuble Irish Times

Is Schauble serious?  Does he really think that national parliaments will agree to having the EU veto their budgets?  And why does he think that politicians at the EU are competent to draft national budgets anyway?  Furthermore, any sane person knows that, even if national parliaments did agree to allow the EU veto power over their budgets, it is highly unlikely that these same profligate parliaments will honor their promises.

Profligate national parliaments pass bloated budgets because they believe that the European Central Bank will monetize their debt.  ECB President Mario Draghi has promised as much.  So, these parliaments are behaving rationally.  They know that they can escape the consequences of their profligacy, something that was impossible with national currencies.  The real cause of Europe’s burgeoning debt is not necessarily profligate national parliaments but the promise that the EU will backstop their debt.  This is the fatal flaw in the European Monetary Union’s structure.

Patrick Barron

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Let’s make money worthless! Then we’ll all be rich!

Re: Currency wars might be starting again

From the report:

“European Central Bank President Mario Draghi called the euro’s strength a “serious concern” last week, and officials in Australia, Canada and New Zealand have been making noise about weakening their currencies for weeks, the Financial Times reports.”

Perhaps Draghi and other fanatical Keynesian central bankers should scrap their currencies and adopt the Zimbabwean dollar…or better yet the Confederate dollar of America’s Civil War.  Wait a minute…even those currencies have some residual collector value…let’s just make money completely worthless, then we’ll all be rich!

There is no greater fallacy haunting the halls of central bankers these days than that devaluing one’s currency will spur one’s economy to greater production and prosperity.  There is no way that one country can force another to subsidized its economic recovery, which is the underlying assumption in competitive currency devaluations.  Rather, the devaluing currency zone experiences a transfer of wealth within its borders, from non-exporters to exporters, and another transfer of wealth to its trading partners who get valuable goods at bargain basement prices.  Read my article on the subject.

Patrick Barron

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How to get rid of excess reserves and save the dollar at the same time

Re:  Philadelphia Fed President Plosser sees danger in excess reserves

Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser correctly understands the danger posed by the $2.5 trillion of excess reserves created as a result of the Fed’s Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) and Quantitative Easing (QE) programs.  Currently the ratio of required reserves to M1, the most narrow measure of the money supply, is around five percent.  The ratio of required reserves to M2, the broadest measure of the money supply, is around one present.  So, these excess reserves could support an addition $50 trillion of M1 or an additional $250 trillion of M2.  To put this in perspective, right now M1 stands at $2.778 trillion and M2 stands at $11.215 trillion.  Thus, Plosser’s concern.

But these excess reserves have created an opportunity, too.  Rather than try to destroy these reserves by, for example, selling its roughly $2.5 trillion in Treasury bills on the open market, the Fed could raise required reserves on M1 to 100%.  That would prevent the banks from manufacturing money via their lending operations at a twenty-to-one ratio (the inverse of the five percent effective reserve rate).  Then M1 could expand only if the Fed continued to monetize the debt by creating new reserves.  The next step would be for the Fed to cease monetizing the federal debt.  At this point reserves would be frozen at their current level as would M1, and the US would have a more sound monetary system.

Of course, this strategy depends upon weak men at the Fed standing up to powerful men at the US Treasury.  Where is Paul Volcker when we need him?

Patrick Barron

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Governments Cannot Direct Investment

From today’s Open Europe news summary:

In its staff report on Germany, the IMF recommends that the government boost investment spending by 0.5% of GDP per year, over the next few years, to help encourage private investment and boost growth in the eurozone. Meanwhile, the Bundesbank said in its monthly bulletin that it expects German economic growth to slow over the coming months.
WSJ WSJ 2

A hundred years ago Ludwig von Mises shattered the idea that government can spend money rationally when he wrote Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth.  Rational economic calculation is only possible from private property owners.  IMF bureaucrats are seldom right about anything, and this recommendation is true to form.

Patrick Barron

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Why Central Bank Stimulus Cannot Stimulate an Economic Recovery

Today every central bank on the planet is printing money by the bucket loads in an attempt to stimulate their economies to escape velocity and a sustainable recovery.  They are following Keynesian dogma that increasing aggregate demand will spur an increase in employment and production.  So far all that these central banks have managed to do is inflate their own balance sheets and saddle their governments with debt.  But make no mistake…central banks are not about to cease their confidence in the concept of insufficient aggregate demand.  In fact, European Central Bank (ECB) president Mario Draghi is considering imposing negative interest rates to force money out of savings accounts and into the spending stream.  Such an action is fully consistent with Keynesian dogma, so other central bankers will be impelled by the failure  of their previous actions to follow suit.

Violating Say’s Law

Keynes’ dogma, as stated in his magnum opus, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, attempts to refute Say’s Law, also known as the Law of Markets.  J.B. Say explained that money is a conduit or agent for facilitating the exchange of goods and services of real value.  Thus, the farmer does not necessarily buy his car with dollars but with corn, wheat, soybeans, hogs, and beef.  Likewise, the baker buys shoes with his bread.  Notice that the farmer and the baker could purchase a car and shoes respectively only after producing something that others valued.  The value placed on the farmer’s agricultural products and the baker’s bread is determined by the market.  If the farmer’s crops failed or the baker’s bread failed to rise, they would not be able to consume because they had nothing that others valued with which to obtain money first.  But Keynes tried to prove that production followed demand and not the other way around. He famously stated that governments should pay people to dig holes and then fill them back up in order to put money into the hands of the unemployed, who then would spend it and stimulate production.  But notice that the hole diggers did not produce a good or service that was demanded by the market.  Keynesian aggregate demand theory is nothing more than a justification for counterfeiting.  It is a theory of capital consumption and ignores the irrefutable fact that production is required prior to consumption.

Central bank credit expansion is the best example of the Keynesian disregard for the inevitable consequences of violating Say’s Law.  Money certificates are cheap to produce.  Book entry credit is manufactured at the click of a computer mouse and is, therefore, essentially costless.  So, receivers of new money get something for nothing.  The consequence of this violation of Say’s Law is capital malinvestment, the opposite of the central bank’s goal of economic stimulus.  Central bank economists make the crucial error of confusing GDP spending frenzy with sustainable economic activity.  They are measuring capital consumption, not production.

Two Paths of Capital Destruction

The credit expansion causes capital consumption in two ways.  Some of the increased credit made available to banks will be lent to businesses that could never turn a profit regardless of the level of interest rates.  This is old-fashioned entrepreneurial error on the part of both bankers and borrowers. There is always a modicum of such losses, due to market uncertainty and the impossibility to foresee with precision the future condition of the market.  But the bubble frenzy fools both bankers and overly optimistic entrepreneurs into believing that a new economic paradigm has arrived.  They are fooled by the phony market conditions, so bold entrepreneurs and go-go bankers replace their more cautious predecessors.  The longer the bubble lasts, the more of these unwise projects we get.

Another chunk of increased credit goes to businesses that could make a profit if there really were sufficient resources available for the completion of what now appears to be profitable long term projects.  These are projects for which the cost of borrowing is a major factor in the entrepreneur’s forecasts.  Driving down the interest rate encourages even the most cautious entrepreneurs and bankers to re-evaluate these shelved projects.  Many years will transpire before these projects are completed, so an accurate forecast of future costs is critical.  These cost estimates assume that enough real capital is available and that sufficient resources exist to prevent costs from rising over the years.  But such is not the case.  Austrian business cycle theory explains that absent an increase in real savings that frees resources for their long term projects, costs will rise and reveal these projects to be unprofitable.  Austrian economists explain that a declining interest rate caused by fiat money credit expansion does not reflect a change in societal time preference–that is, society’s desire for current goods over future goods.  Society is not saving enough to prevent a rise in the cost of resources that long term projects require.  Despite central bank interest rate intervention, societal time preference will reassert itself and suck these resources back to the production of current goods, where a profit can be made, and away from the production of future goods.

No Escape from Say’s Law

No array of bank regulation can prevent the destruction of capital that becomes apparent to the public through an increase in bank loan losses, which may reach levels by which major banks become insolvent.  Bank regulators believe that their empirical research into the dynamics of previous bank crises reveals lessons that can be used to avoid another banking crisis.  They believe that banker stupidity or even criminal culpability were the underlying causes of previous crises.  But this is a contradiction in logic.  We must remember that the very purpose of central bank credit expansion is to trigger an increase in lending in order to stimulate the economy to a self-sustaining recovery.  But this is impossible.  At any one time there is only so much real capital available in society, and real capital cannot be produced by the click of a central bank computer mouse.  As my friend Robert Blumen says, a central bank can print money but it cannot print software engineers or even cups of Starbucks coffee to keep them awake and working.  Furthermore, requiring banks to hold more capital–which is the goal of the latest round of negotiations in Basel, Switzerland–is nothing more than requiring stronger locks on the barn door, while leaving the door wide open.  Closing the door tightly after the horse is gone still means the loss of the horse.  Why would an investor purchase new bank stock offerings just to see his money evaporate in another round of loan losses?

Conclusion

The governments and central banks of the world are engaged in a futile effort to stimulate economic recovery through an expansion of fiat money credit.  They will fail due to their ignorance or purposeful blindness to Say’s Law, that tells us that money is the agent for exchanging goods that must already exist.  New fiat money cannot conjure goods out of thin air, the way central banks conjure money out of thin air.  This violation of Say’s Law is reflected in loan losses, which cannot be prevented by any array of regulation or higher capital requirements.  In fact rather than stimulate the economy to greater output, bank credit expansion causes capital destruction and a lower standard of living in the future than would have been the case otherwise.  Governments and central bankers should concentrate on restoring economic freedom and sound money respectively.  This means abandoning market interventions of all kinds, declaring unilateral free trade, cutting wasteful spending, and subjecting money to normal commercial law, which would recognize that fiat money expansion by either the central bank or commercial banks is nothing more than outright fraud.  The role of government would revert to its primary, liberal purpose of protecting life, liberty, and property and little more.

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My letter to the NY Times re: Perhaps…

Re: Once More, Economy Exhibits Weakness

Dear Sirs:
Perhaps “the economy turned in another disappointing quarterly performance” because it never has recovered.  Perhaps “the electorate remains skeptical that things are getting better” because they live in the real world and know that things are NOT getting better.  Perhaps the so-called economic recovery is nothing more than the Fed measuring its own increase in the money supply.  How long will the Fed stick to its discredited Keynesian prescription of increasing aggregate demand through monetary intervention?  The recession began six years ago.  Surely even the most dyed-in-the-wool Keynesian must begin to question his view of how an economy operates.

Patrick Barron

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The Poisoned Kool-Aid of Keynesian Economics

From today’s Open Europe news summary:

Annual inflation in Germany picked up in April but by less than economists had expected, fanning concerns that inflation in the eurozone has fallen dangerously low and putting pressure on the European Central Bank to respond with interest-rate cuts or asset purchases.
WSJ

We economists of a certain age remember when low inflation, preferably zero inflation or even falling prices, would be celebrated, as it should be.  Lower prices benefit all citizens, improving their standard of living without the need for a rise in wages.  Inflation benefits only desperate debtors, mainly governments, who desire to pay off debts with debased money.  The public is being bombarded by a sycophantic media that has drunk the poisoned Kool-Aid of Keynesian economics.  Patrick Barron

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Achieving the betterment of labor without government coercion

In Florida Tomato Fields, a Penny Buys Progress

Florida tomato field workers toil under harsh conditions for low pay.  It seemed that the tomato growers could dictate whatever labor terms they chose, yet such was not the case.  It took many years, but these workers managed to convince the large purchasers of tomatoes, such as Walmart and McDonalds, to buy tomatoes only from growers who treated their workers better.  Nowhere in the article is government intervention mentioned.  The agreements between the workers, the growers, and the purchasers were completely voluntary.  If tomato field workers, who probably have less political power than any group of workers, can better their lot without government help, one wonders why government intervention in labor markets is needed at all.  Patrick Barron

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My letter to the Wall Street Journal re: The US should adopt unilateral free trade

Re: US, Japan Fail to Clinch Trade Deal

Dear Sirs:
One of the great economic fallacies of our time is that free trade is beneficial to a country only if its trading partner also adopts free trade.  Thus we witness the spectacle and bear the expense of watching pompous bureaucrats failing to negotiate a free trade agreement with Japan.  Such negotiations are completely unnecessary.  The US will benefit from freely importing Japanese goods even if Japan fails to freely import ours.  US consumers will have access to the full range of Japanese products at lower prices, increasing our standard of living.  And what will Japan do with the dollars that it accepts in exchange for its products?  Either it must spend them in the US, buy from another country that is willing to accept dollars for its goods, or buy US securities.  In the short run the US has exchanged pieces of paper for valuable goods. In the long run the US must hand over valuable goods to holders of dollars, whoever they may be.  There is nothing here that is disadvantageous to the US; on the contrary, the US consumer’s standard of living increases while that of the Japanese consumer suffers.  Therefore, the US should set an example to the world by firing its trade negotiating teams and adopting unilateral free trade.  The example of the benefit to the US consumer and the irrefutable fact that holding massive quantities of dollars indefinitely does not benefit foreigners will result in other countries gradually abandoning their own trade restrictions, making the world more prosperous and more peaceful.  Patrick Barron

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More illegality by the European Central Bank

From today’s Open Europe news summary:

Welt: ECB “trick” to help Portugal return to the markets
Die Welt reports that the ECB will use a “trick” to help Portugal to return to the markets, by once again adjusting its collateral rules. The change to the rules, released last month, will mean the ECB will continue to accept bonds with a lower rating from the agency DBRS as collateral for its lending operations. Previously, once Portugal had exited its bailout programme, its bonds would no longer have been eligible as collateral as they have low ratings from all four rating agencies. This would have reduced demand and made a return to the markets more difficult, the article argues.
Welt

The ECB will always find some rationale to justify giving more money to bankrupt members.  We common folk call this committing a crime, but no EU bureaucrat will ever go to jail for misappropriating billions of euros.

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