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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
April 14, 2008
From a Dr. Bernanke reponse: "One of the prevailing theories at the
time of the Depression was the so-called ‘liquidationist thesis" – who
said basically "let’s let the system return to normal. Let’s liquidate
banks; let’s liquidate labor." This was Andrew Mellon, the Treasury
Secretary. It was partly on the basis of that theory that the Federal
Reserve stood by and let a third of the banks in the country fail, which
created the money supply to drop sharply, and caused prices to fall
rather sharply, and led ultimately to the severity of the financial
crisis. I think financial instability, which was not addressed by
government or anyone else, was a major contributor, both to the
Depression in the U.S. and abroad. I believe the difference today is
that we will address financial issues and try to maintain the integrity
and stability of our financial system. We will not let prices fall at
10% a year. We will act as needed to keep the economy growing and
stable. So, I think there are some very significant differences between
the thirties and today, and we learned a great deal from that episode."
April 2, 2008, before Congress’s Joint Economic Committee.
Not surprisingly, Chairman Bernanke invokes a notable policy error -
committed in the heat of an extraordinarily difficult (post-Bubble)
early-1930s period - as justification for government measures to sustain
today’s U.S. Bubble Economy. Bernanke and the "Friedmanites" just love
to pillory Andrew Mellon and the "liquidationists" (and would gladly
throw in Hayek and Mises). They avoid (like the plague), however, the
much more pertinent policy debate that transpired throughout the Roaring
Twenties.
Mr. Mellon was among a group of elder statesman that had become
increasingly concerned throughout the decade by the Wall Street
speculative boom and its inevitable consequences. The son of a banker,
his family’s wealth was nearly lost in the Panic of 1873. Actively
involved in banking and business from the age of 17, he had witnessed
first hand the consequences of the recurring booms and busts that were
the impetus behind the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913. Blaming
Mr. Mellon and the "liquidationists" for the Great Depression – as
opposed to the extraordinary financial excesses and failed policies of
the Bubble period - does disservice to history as well as to sound
analysis.
There were astute thinkers during the twenties who believed the
economy was being severely distorted from a protracted inflationary
period that had commenced during the (first) World War. Although it was
not manifesting in consumer prices (because of new technologies,
products, overheated investment, etc.), excessive money and Credit were
fueling dangerous inflationary Bubbles in asset prices – particularly in
real estate and the stock market. The astute recognized the boom as a
period of acute financial and economic instability. Certainly, the great
"Austrian" economists appreciated clearly how Credit and speculative
excess had come to grossly distort incomes, corporate profits, relative
prices and investment. The underlying structure of both the financial
and economic systems was being corrupted.
Importantly, during that fateful period a group of seasoned thinkers
(businessmen, policymakers, and economists) believed adamantly that
policies endeavoring to sustain the distorted pricing mechanisms and
structures - and the resulting inflated and maladjusted U.S. economy -
were both inadvisable and doomed for failure. As such, so-called
"liquidation" was a central facet of the unavoidable (post-inflationary
boom) adjustment period for the highly distorted financial, labor and
product markets. Profligate borrowing, spending, and leveraged
speculation would come to their eventual end, requiring reallocation of
both financial and real resources. It was only a matter of the degree of
excess and the proportional adjustment.
To further inflate an unsustainable boom with additional cheap Credit
guaranteed only more problematic financial fragility, economic
imbalances/maladjustment and resulting onerous adjustment periods. The
astute were adamantly against the (Benjamin Strong) Federal Reserve’s
efforts to actively manage the economy (and markets) in the latter years
of the twenties, fearing that to prolong the reckless Wall Street debt
and speculation orgy was to invite disaster (the "old timers" had
witnessed many!). History proved them absolutely correct, yet Historical
Revisionism to varying extents has been determined to disregard,
misrepresent, and malign their views and analytical focus. Bernanke’s
analytical framework of the causes of the Great Depression is seriously
flawed.
Regrettably, all the best efforts by the Federal Reserve and
Washington politicians to sustain the U.S. Bubble Economy are doomed to
failure. It’s not that they are necessarily the wrong policies. More to
the point, the basic premise that our economy is sound and growth
sustainable is misguided. We’ve experienced a protracted and historic
Credit inflation and it will simply be impossible to keep asset prices,
incomes, corporate cash flows, and spending levitated at current levels.
The type and scope of Credit growth required today has become
infeasible. The risk intermediation requirements are too daunting.
Sustaining housing inflation and consumption levels has become
unachievable. And the underpinnings of our currency have turned too
fragile.
I’m all for long-overdue legislative reform. Who isn’t? But I’ll say
I heard nothing this week that came close to addressing the key
underlying issues. We have longstanding societal biases that place too
much emphasis on housing and the stock market, while we operate with
ingrained policymaking biases advocating unregulated finance underpinned
by aggressive activist central banking and government market
intervention. In a 20-year period of momentous financial innovation, our
combination of "biases" proved an overly potent mix. And it is worth
noting that Wall Street security/dealer balance sheets expanded
three-fold in the eight years since the repeal of the (Depression-era)
Glass-Steagall Act.
The focus at the Fed and in Washington is to sustain housing, the
stock market, and inflated asset prices generally – to bankroll the
consumption- and services-based Bubble Economy. Bernanke believes that
if financial company failures can be averted - and with the
recapitalization of the U.S. financial sector as necessary - sufficient
"money" creation will preclude deflationary forces from gaining a
foothold. He assures us the Fed will not allow double digit price
declines, despite the reality that such price moves have already
engulfed real estate markets. To be sure, prolonging current financial
instability increases the likelihood of significant price level
instability going forward. And while the federal government "printing
presses" will be working overtime going forward, it is also apparent
that a key facet of Washington’s strategy is to "subcontract" the task
of "printing" to Fannie, Freddie, the FHLB, the banking system, and
"money funds" – sectors that today still retain the capacity to issue
"money"-like debt instruments with the explicit or implied stamp of
federal government (taxpayer) backing.
Basically, the strategy is to substitute government-backed debt for
the now discredited Wall Street-backed finance. I’m the first one to
admit that this desperate undertaking stopped financial implosion in its
tracks. However, the problem with this whole approach – because of our
"societal," financial, and policymaking biases – is that our Credit
system will just be throwing greater amounts of (government-supported)
debt on top of already fragile Credit Structures underpinned largely by
home mortgages. Wall Street-backed finance buckled specifically because
this ("Ponzi Finance") debt structure was untenable the day increasing
amounts of speculative Credit were no longer forthcoming. The underlying
inventory of houses doesn’t have the capacity to generate debt service –
only the mortgagees taking on greater amounts of debt.
The underlying Economic Structure is now THE serious issue. The last
thing our system needs right now is trillions more mortgage debt,
although it would work somewhat to sustain consumption and our
"services-based" Bubble Economy. The inherent problem with a finance,
housing, consumption, and "services"-dictated Economic Structure is that
it inherently generates excessive debt backed by little of real tangible
value or economic wealth-creating capacity. System fragility is
unavoidable. It may appear an "economic miracle," but for only as long
as increasing amounts of new finance are forthcoming. At the end of the
day, one is left with an extremely fragile Structure both financially
and economically.
Yet as long as Wall Street "alchemy" was capable of creating
sufficient "money" to fuel the boom - and the world was content in
accumulating (increasingly suspect) dollar claims - our Bubble Economy
Structure remained viable. It is, these days, increasingly not viable.
The wholesale and open-ended government backing of U.S. mortgage debt -
and financial sector liabilities more generally - will prove a decisive
blow to already shaken dollar confidence. And it is today’s reality that
the massive scope of Credit growth necessary to sustain the current
Bubble Structure will correspond to Current Account Deficits and dollar
outflows that will prove (as we’re already witnessing) only more
destabilizing in markets and real economies around the world.
Government backing of our debt does not substitute for a sound
Economic Structure. And it is the current Structure that is incapable of
the necessary economic output to satisfy domestic needs and to generate
sufficient exports to exchange for our huge appetite for imported goods
and energy resources. Today’s "services"-based economy will no longer
suffice. Examining today’s job data, one sees that 93,000 "goods
producing" jobs were lost in March after dropping 92,000 in February and
69,000 in January. At the same time, Education, Health, Leisure and
Hospitality jobs increased 178,000 during the first quarter. Yet it is
more obvious than ever that we need to consume less and produce much
more.
Back to the "liquidationists." It is my view that our economy will
require a massive reallocation of resources. We will be forced to create
much less non-productive (especially mortgage and asset-based) Credit in
the Financial Sphere, while producing huge additional quantities of
tradable goods in the Economic Sphere. In our expansive "services"
sector, there will no choice but to "liquidate" labor and redirect its
efforts. Throughout finance, there will be no alternative than to
"liquidate" bad debt, labor and insolvent institutions – again in the
name of a necessary redirecting of resources. After an unnecessarily
protracted boom, there will be scores of enterprises that will prove
uneconomic in the new financial and economic backdrop. "Liquidation"
will be unavoidable, policymaker hopes and dreams notwithstanding.
From this evening's vantage point, recent extraordinary government
measures to "back" U.S. finance appear likely to delay the adjustment
process – what I will be referring to as a "depression." This reprieve,
however, comes with a cost. It will ensure significantly greater damage
to the core of our monetary system, as well as requiring a more onerous
real economy "liquidation" with the inevitable onset of the more serious
phase of the unfolding crisis.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |