Friday, November 18, 2016

Is It By Fire or Ice? (Cont'd)


(continued from a piece three years ago)  The question is whether the coming economic crisis is inflationary or deflationary.  Does the economy go out in a raging fire or freeze to death?  I've been reading everything I can access on this for about 15 years, and have written on it here many times in the six + years I've been blogging.

I still don't know for sure.

Today, we get input from David Stockman, host of Contra Corner, Director of the Office of Management and Budget under President Ronald Reagan, and economic iconoclast.

David doesn't give a "take-it-to-the-bank" prediction either although he is clear in what he thinks is going to happen.  He outlines two possible paths and what he predicts in an interview with Bill Bonner.  To set the stage a little, let me give a couple of reminders for regular readers and pieces of information for newbies.

In 1971, when Nixon closed the gold window, he didn't simply make the currency in circulation not redeemable in gold (if you're old enough, you'll remember money marked "silver certificate" or "gold certificate"; the currency actually said you could redeem the bill for silver or gold as appropriate).  Nixon's move made our currency worth simply what traders agree it's worth.  If I offer you a dollar for some fruit from your tree and you agree, that's what a dollar is worth.

In the place of the precious metal backing, the dollar came to be defined as a debt obligation.  Banks loan new money into the world ex nihilo – they create it out of thin air to lend out. Without those new loans, the money supply falls as old debts are settled, so lending more becomes the only way to keep the economy appearing to grow.  It has been estimated that debt must increase by at least 2% a year or the economy will fall into recession.  For the last 35 years, the trend in interest rates has been to come down… in order to make borrowing easier.  Now, there is plenty of debt in the system – $85 trillion in the U.S. alone when we combine personal debt with government debt – but not much room left for interest rates to go down.  In some countries, interest rates have gone negative, essentially a fee for not spending money.  In the US, rates are negative in real terms (the interest rate is lower than inflation) but they haven't taken the extra step of showing a negative sign on the federal funds rate. 

The central banks have responded with massive monetary policy; quantitative easing rounds QE1 through QE4 and all sorts of other tricks (QE "to infinity and beyond!").  Now it's time to give David Stockman's observation:
“Monetary policy is exhausted,” says David. “Everybody knows that. What they don’t know is that fiscal policy is exhausted too.” 

[Note: Monetary policy attempts to stimulate the economy by setting the price of credit. Fiscal policy attempts to stimulate growth by increasing government spending.]
You may have noticed that since Trump's win that 10 year bond yields have suddenly shot up:
Since bond yields (the interest they pay) are inversely related to the price, that means bond prices are falling.  They're falling because demand is falling: buyers are putting money into equities - the stock market and not bonds.  Why?  They're betting on inflation.  Bond yields have to go up to try to tempt those buyers back. 
The “reflation trade” – betting on rising stock and commodities prices and falling bond prices – is a gamble on inflation; it is a bet that Mr. Trump will rotate from monetary stimulus to fiscal stimulus.  Long term, we think it’s a good bet.
Stockman seems to think it's going to end in deflationary death spiral.  Instead of "draining the swamp", Trump's going to get eaten by the gators in that swamp. 
Either Congress goes along with Mr. Trump and the credit bubble ends in an inflationary blow-up…

…or it holds the line – refusing further fiscal stimulus – and the result will be a deflationary disaster. 

There are, of course, more twists, turns, and nuances in this plot. But that is the basic storyline.

Stockman believes the swamp will swallow up Mr. Trump, his army, and his big budget plans.

“I’ve seen it happen. There are alligators in that swamp,” says David, showing his scars.
In more succinct terms, Stockman believes the establishment will beat Trump back and we'll fall into deflationary collapse.  Remember, he recalls, “Ronald Reagan’s program didn’t survive. Neither will Mr. Trump’s.”  I'm not as pessimistic.  Trump has routinely beaten all prognosticators in the last year or 18 months.  I'm not willing to bet everything the system will beat him.  He might just eat those alligators! 
For those who never saw one, a US $50 gold certificate from 1928, "Fifty Dollars in gold coin payable to the bearer on demand" along the bottom.  


11 comments:

  1. I would agree with you. Trump is not Reagan in the sense that he is a businessman and is smart economic-wise. Reagan had common sense to a point but not the experience. As for the bet, "it is a bet that Mr. Trump will rotate from monetary stimulus to fiscal stimulus. Long term, we think it’s a good bet.", I think that is exactly what Trump has said all along and is moving towards already.

    And with the precedents set by Obozo with Executive Actions and "Pen & Phone" he can do a lot without dealing with the objections of the party out of power./sarc

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  2. Why does the price of a bond drop, as it's return increases?

    if a chicken lays three eggs a day, is it not more valuable than one that lays two eggs a day?

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    1. Supply and demand. If demand goes down, yield rates go up and prices go down to attract buyers back. Bond buyers are loaning money to the issuer (in this case the US Treasury), so the treasury has to pay them more yield to be worth the trouble.

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  3. or it holds the line -- refusing further fiscal stimulus -- and the result will be a deflationary disaster.

    Inflation means official counterfeiting to increase total number of dollars. Deflation means burning official fiat currency notes to decrease total number of dollars. Not inflating, refusing further fiscal stimulus, is not deflating, it is stable currency. Why is the middle being excluded? Why pretend it doesn't exist?

    Historically states always issue more fiat currency in a runaway chase to issue currency faster than the purchasing power of that currency declines. However, as Denninger says, the currency inflation occurs (but is not necessarily recognized by the public) at the moment the currency is issued. During hyperinflation the currency inflation news travels fast enough there is little time window for the government to spend it before it devalues.

    I don't know where the conclusion deflation might happen comes from, historically it doesn't.

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    1. I can't tell if that's a question or just a criticism of the ideas, so pardon if I answer as if it's a question. The idea that we could be headed to a deflationary collapse is not unusual and certainly not mine, but it does involve asking the one question politicians never ask: "... and then what?" It requires thinking more than one move ahead, to use the chess analogy.

      There are a few things worth reading in the very first link in this piece, to my 2013 article with the same title. By all means read more economic commentators, and you'll encounter explanations.

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    2. In most of these links, including the Gonzalo Lira piece on businessinsider.com, I believe there's confusion from switching the definitions of "inflation" and "currency" mid-argument. I define currency inflation as creating more currency, period. Doesn't matter for currency inflation how the productive output of the economy, measured in goods and services, went up or down. However, when the mortgages went bust in the mortgage crisis, that was currency deflation. The currency in those loans was inflated by fractional reserve, then it vanished.

      taylor: The sudden loss of faith in the currency has a hyper-deflationary effect as the market tries to find a new medium of exchange and barter markets emerge

      Sudden loss of faith in the currency doesn't deflate, unless people destroy currency by burning it in the home furnace for heat like the Germans did.

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  4. No matter what happens it will be "Trump's fault"....because he is hated by ALL the Dems and most of the GOP. These people would rather see the US collapse then allow him to be a success. Even Reagan who was well liked by most couldn't solve the problems of the economy. Because these problems were created and exist to make powerful people more wealthy and powerful. NO politician or legislative body has the power to contact her these people who actually run what is important. It's been this way since Jekyll Island
    And the creation of the Federal Reserve.

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  5. Are there historical deflationary collapse events to reference?

    All I have heard of are inflationary.

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    1. You mean besides the Great Depression and other depressions?

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    2. https://mises.org/library/rothbard-revises-history-great-depression

      This link excerpts the introduction to Rothbard's _America's Great Depression_. Search down for "In the meantime, Rothbard had produced, in 1963",

      Rothbard describes the US Great Depression as inflationary. Lots of currency was created by Hoover, and when that didn't produce the desired economic effect even more was created. The economy shrunk while the total currency issued grew.

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  6. There is a youtube series "The Hidden Secrets of Money" that is worth watching. Next up in the cycle is big deflation and just in time for the Donald to release huge infrastructure projects to go with an inflationary cycle.

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