Sunday, November 30, 2008

Solving the US Banking Crisis

[Written for the Borsen-Kurier]

Most efforts proposed these days go exactly the wrong direction: back toward unsustainable economic activity like debt-funded consumer spending, home buying, and government spending, or away from the transparency that markets need to reach equilibrium (for example, the recent proposal at the G-20 meeting that accounting standards be ‘temporarily’ loosened—as if we could escape our problems through denial).

Here is an economic plan that would work immediately; it would stabilize the banking sector instantly, preventing the crisis in the stock market from reducing business investment in the real economy, thus preventing a major contraction of GDP.

The catch? It will involve some short-term economic pain.

The reason that banks are fragile is that they have only a fraction of their deposits on hand at any given time. Because banks are currently scrambling to increase their reserves, they have restricted lending by $100 bil from October 29th to November 19th. Granted, this is a small decrease when the total volume of loans is over $7,000 bil, but any decrease in lending tends to be pro-cyclical, resulting in the contraction of the money supply at precisely the wrong time. In theory, a money multiplier of 10 would imply that a $100 bil restriction in lending would lead to money destruction of $1,000 bil. Additionally, because of decreased consumption and investment spending, there is a falling velocity of money, meaning fewer transactions per week. This exacerbates the effect of a contraction in the money supply. As of November 28th, 2008, the total money supply (M2) was $7,854 bil. Bank reserves have skyrocketed from $44 bil in August to $652 bil in October, while bank deposits have stayed constant at about $7,000 bil.

Here’s the plan, in two parts.

Part 1: the total cash and coin in the US is less than $800 bil. Print an additional $7,000 bil, and give it to banks in exact proportion to their deposits. Then make sure that bank reserves always equal bank deposits, creating a 100% reserve system. This would cause no net change in the money supply, for we’d simply have printed money to back up bank deposits, money that was already in use. We’d merely replace checkbook-money with paper money. No problem so far. There would be no inflationary pressure, and the cost would be minimal - the cost of printing and distributing the money.

Part 2: Define the dollar as a portion of gold. This is where the sacrifice begins, for it involves a substantial devaluation of the dollar. The US holds 8.133 bil grams of gold, and the IMF has another 3.217 bil grams; if we divide the total money supply M2 by the total US and IMF gold reserves, we get about $700 per gram, meaning a dollar is worth 1/700th of a gram. Now the tough part: we keep this ratio in good times and bad, at all times allowing anyone to trade $700 for a gram of gold. Since the current market price of gold is about $26 per gram, this plan would entail that the dollar must fall to 3.7% of its current value. (The drop would probably be less severe, as this plan would pull gold out of private gold stocks and into service as money).

The sacrifice would begin when all imported goods immediately rise in price dramatically (an imported good that costs $1 may rise to $25). International trade flows would change as markets reach equilibrium. This would certainly cause some dislocation. But we’d skip the lasting pain of a sequel to the Great Depression because the main damage to the economy would be avoided. The money supply would not contract due to banks rational fear of collapsing during the financial crisis. Banks would be on a solid basis, and they could immediately begin lending (from savings accounts only; these would have to be set aside specifically for investment purposes, and would no longer be available on demand).

Sacrifices would continue as the US could no longer maintain a current account deficit without draining US gold reserves. The federal government would not be able to borrow billions or trillions to finance deficit spending. The depreciation of the dollar would mean foreign bond holders would immediately lose money, and large-scale selling of bonds would ensue. While it is unfortunate to break the trust of those who bought US bonds, it is simply unavoidable. The US has too much debt to pay it back. The US government will repudiate its debt, either simply and honestly, as in this plan, or covertly, through inflation.

Without access to deficit spending, cuts in government spending will add to the economic contraction, but the plan will prevent future pain, for the current strategy of massive money creation and fiscal deficits will surely devalue the dollar, without the benefit of ever leading to a sound medium of exchange.

The financial crisis is first and foremost a debt-deflation crisis, which was produced by banks’ wanton money creation during the expansion of the 1990s and early 2000s (an expansion supervised by the Federal Reserve). If we give the market a medium of exchange that can be trusted to hold its value, the extraordinary ingenuity and entrepreneurship that is America’s greatest asset will be unleashed, and we will soon be enjoying prosperous times again.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Inflation-Deflation Seesaw

[A piece for the Austrian paper Borsen-Kurier]
The big news from America is President Obama: a truly great man has been elected president, and he did it in spite of his race and unusual name. It is a great moment for America. President-elect Obama faces a global economy that is more tightly interlinked than ever before, and so trends that emerge in the US (and elsewhere) have global ramifications.
The US Producer Price Index has been falling for 3 straight months: down 2.8% in October, 0.4% in September, and 0.9% in August. The PPI doesn’t reflect the plummeting asset prices in financial markets (the Dow is down 40%) and real estate (down 20% nationwide, according to the Case Shiller index). There is considerable downward pressure on nearly every asset class worldwide, and it seems likely that commodity deflation will continue for at least several more months.
Of course, the central banks of the world are working overtime to combat deflation; the Federal Reserve and the Treasury have borrowed or created nearly $3 trillion out of thin air this year alone. As that new money is absorbed and digested by markets, it will eventually cause inflation. Certainly the announcements of the G-20 meeting, with its statement that the world should work together to re-inflate sagging markets, is also inflationary.
By the current rules of the game, no country that relies on exports to fuel its growth can afford an appreciating currency against the dollar, for the strengthening of the currency would hurt sales in the US and every other country that maintains a dollar peg, which includes some pretty big markets, as well as some high growth markets, such as China. This means that when the US creates dollars, other countries rush to weaken their currencies. With a worldwide crash in equities, countries are not exactly reluctant to create money and funnel it into financial markets, but at some point, this will catch up with commodities again, and we’ll see a resumption of global commodity inflation, which is likely to accelerate.
The US bond market is currently pricing in low inflation over the long term. Indeed, for a time the inflation protected Treasury bonds (TIPS) had a higher yield than the nominal 10-year Treasury bond, meaning that the bond market predicts deflation. But what will happen when the money creation returns to markets in the form of inflation? Bond yields will have to rise, to compensate for inflation, leading to broad-based increases in interest rates across the economy; even though the Federal funds rate is likely to be low, I bet we’ll see high interbank lending rates, with the consequence of rising rates for consumer credit, and rising rates for corporate bonds as well.
There is no easy way out of this, but President-elect Obama has already done one good thing: reminded America that there will be sacrifices ahead. I think we can make sacrifices, if there is an understanding that it’s for a good reason, and it will help to eventually restore solid economic growth.