The art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate hut at the longer effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups—Henry Hazlitt
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
The Philippine Government’s New Method of Controlling Inflation: Censorship of Inflation Reports! Another Sy Led Historic PUMP!
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Parallel Universe: Record US Stock Markets and Falling Estimates of Corporate Earnings
This also reminds me of the stock markets of two Latin American nations, Argentina (Merval-left) and Venezuela (IBVC-right), where both economies have been experiencing hyperinflation but in different degrees.
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Bernanke’s Devaluation Is About Debt Deflation, Tenuous Link Between Weak Currency And Strong Exports
A devaluation, however, is always couched in terms designed to make people believe that the government has performed some sort of fiscal miracle. What, in fact, it has done is announced that it is reneging on its debts.-Robert Ringer, The True Cause of Inflation...
Rising financial markets amidst a world where the US dollar flounders seem to have set loose growing cacophonous voices in support of such politically induced environment. The general theme is: A falling US dollar (via devaluation) translates to surging exports and bigger profits from multinationals, hence are seen as a good development for the markets and economy.
Essentially rationalizing devaluation as the best alternative path for economic recovery is clearly a manifestation of the reflexivity theory-a reinforcing feedback loop mechanism where people interpret prices as signifying real events, and where real events reinforce these price signals. The positive temporal effects from a weak dollar have been construed as blessings. Hence the appearance of asset price and economic recovery seem to have drawn in a growing number of weak dollar fans.
Yet oblivious of the present dynamics, the mainstream fails to take into the account that asset pricing today hardly reflects actual demand and supply balances but importantly signifies as the various degrees of government interventions in the marketplace aimed at “patching” the system.
In short, growing misinterpretations from rising asset prices by a system surviving on straps of band-aids leads to false confidence.
Inflation Is Not A One Size Fits All Formula
The mainstream seems baffled by the genuine reasons behind why US policy appears to be directed towards a lower US dollar. Programs such as the nationalization of the US mortgage market by the immensely expansionary roles of GSEs as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and FHA, an extended period of zero interest rate regime, equity stakes at key financial institutions, centralization of Fed powers, large fiscal deficits, a broad alphabet soup of makeshift programs aimed at providing marketmaker, lender, buyer or investor of last resort and importantly “money printing” Quantitative Easing programs, have all contributed to the falling US dollar or the “devaluation”.
Many have erroneously moored their views on the alleged necessity to restore “imbalances” of the US economy (e.g. wage differentials, nominal GDP, unemployment) allegedly targeted to enhance competitiveness relative to the world via devaluation. However, such perspective camouflages on the authentic but implied reason: To forestall systemic deflation from unwieldy debt aggregated within the system.
We have repeatedly been saying that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has made this campaign against deflation as the foremost incentive for today’s policy action, as noted his famous November 2002 Helicopter Speech Deflation: Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here.
Yet Mr. Bernanke’s sweeping examination of the Great Depression as model for today’s policy guidance, from which his panoply of antidotes has been devised from, emanates from mostly the monetarists’ dimension. However, this framework diminishes the weight of influence from wage and price controls instituted during the New Deal era.
The US recovered from the Great Depression not from inflationary policies, as Mr. Bernanke perceives, but from the massive attendant price and wage adjustments. Importantly ``a partial dismantling of the regulatory infrastructure that had grown up during the Depression and the war; in effect, it was a rediscovery of the market and a new birth of freedom for entrepreneurs and workers” notes Professor Art Carden, post World War II.
This means that throughout history, devaluation, as Henry Hazlitt rightly exposes, is the modern euphemism for debasement of the coinage. It always means repudiation. It means that the promise to pay a certain definite weight of gold has been broken, and that the devaluing government, for its bonds or currency notes, will pay a smaller weight of gold.”
In other words, policies dealing with tacit debt repudiation should be seen in a different light compared with that from the adjustments from economic imbalances.
Theoretically, in order to solve unemployment government can hire everyone (communist model). But this would be different from preventing systemic deflation from outsized debt by concentrating taxpayer resources on the banking system as seen today. Because the objectives and policy recourse actions are different, hence the repercussions from current policy actions will be different. So it would be a folly to lump debt repudiation and economic imbalances as a “one size fits all elixir”.
Presently, the global governments’ collective approach has been to substitute constricting private sector debt fueled consumption (from economies blighted by the recent bubble) with its own.
As Morgan Stanley’s Spyros Andreopoulos rightly observed, ``This time around, however, eroding the debt through faster growth may not be an option. Instead, growth in many developed countries is likely to slow significantly going forward as labour forces shrink due to the demographic transition. Worse, population ageing will impose added pressure on public expenditure through higher pensions and healthcare costs. If outgrowing the debt is unlikely, and if governments lack the resolve to cut spending and/or raise taxes sufficiently, the remaining options are default and inflation. No policymaker in the developed world - and, by now, few in the developing world - would want to countenance default as an option. This leaves inflation.” (bold emphasis mine)
So while mainstream engages in data mining of facts in order to fit in to their preferred bias/s with its accompanying outcome, the reality is that policy actions have been concentrated on managing the intractable debt burdens.
Dismissing The Benefits Of Devaluation From Empirical Evidence
The post hoc fallacy assumption that a falling currency is a boon to international competitiveness, as represented by export growth, can easily be disputed from the reference point of today’s roster of biggest exporters.
Simplistically this suggests that top exporters have weak currencies.
Seen from the perspective of the Euro (blue line-top window; currency of Germany, Netherlands, France, Italy and Belguim) and the British Pound (red line top window), aside from the Japanese Yen (blue line, lower window), except for the 2008 meltdown, these currencies have been on a long term appreciation, in spite of their roles as the world’s largest exporters.
The South Korean won (red line lower window) which devalued by half as a result of the Asian crisis in 1997, has seen a recovery of its currency yet its exports exploded over the same period. One should note that the Bank of Korea used the Asian crisis as an opportunity to liberalize its capital account in two phases to offset the impact of the crisis.
Alternatively, if the weak currencies equate to strong exports: Zimbabwe, the Philippines or the previous hyperinflations episodes of Argentina or Brazil should have made them export giants of today. None of this is true.
Incidentally, Argentina used to be one of the world’s most prosperous countries in the world during the first quarter of the 20th century or the “golden age of growth” (Library of Parliament). Its political and economic regression had been largely due to the protectionist and isolationist policies (wikipedia.org) post 1930 or the Great Depression.
Hence given the Argentine experience, devaluation and closed door policies make a lethal combination to lower the standards of living of a society.
Today, Argentina is classified as an emerging market.
Although one may point to Argentina’s export recovery following the 1999-2002 crisis, which saw the Peso massively fall anew, the fact is that Argentina’s exports has mainly been in commodities, agricultural (54%) and energy (12.2%). In other words, Argentina’s export recovery can be construed from less of the international competitiveness from a weak currency, but mainly levered from global demand for commodities which appears to be in a supply ‘shock’ following years of underinvestment.
So based on empirical evidences as shown above, the notion that weak currency equals greater international competitiveness is utterly unfounded and represents sloppy and an oversimplistic thought process meant only to justify government interventions.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Drug Decriminalization Caravan Gets Rollin'
Resources uneconomically spent for prohibition and detention should instead be diverted into education, treatment and the protection of private property.
As New York Times' Nicolas Kristof in a recent highly articulate commentary, (bold highlight mine)
``Look, there’s no doubt that many people in prison are cold-blooded monsters who deserve to be there. But over all, in a time of limited resources, we’re overinvesting in prisons and underinvesting in schools.
``Indeed, education spending may reduce the need for incarceration. The evidence on this isn’t conclusive, but it’s noteworthy that graduates of the Perry Preschool program in Michigan, an intensive effort for disadvantaged children in the 1960s, were some 40 percent less likely to be arrested than those in a control group.
``Above all, it’s time for a rethink of our drug policy. The point is not to surrender to narcotics, but to learn from our approach to both tobacco and alcohol. Over time, we have developed public health strategies that have been quite successful in reducing the harm from smoking and drinking.
``If we want to try a public health approach to drugs, we could learn from Portugal. In 2001, it decriminalized the possession of all drugs for personal use. Ordinary drug users can still be required to participate in a treatment program, but they are no longer dispatched to jail.
``“Decriminalization has had no adverse effect on drug usage rates in Portugal,” notes a report this year from the Cato Institute. It notes that drug use appears to be lower in Portugal than in most other European countries, and that Portuguese public opinion is strongly behind this approach.
Now, it appears that indeed several Latin American Countries have begun to assimilate the Portugal Experience; Mexico and Argentina has opened their doors for the less antagonistic option by decriminalizing drugs.
According to Juan Carlos Hidalgo of Cato, (bold highlights mine)
``Following in Mexico’s footsteps last week, the Supreme Court of Argentina has unanimously ruled today on decriminalizing the possession of drugs for personal consumption.
``For those who might be concerned with the idea of an “activist judiciary,” the Court’s decision was based on a case brought by a 19 year-old who was arrested in the street for possession of two grams of marijuana. He was convicted and sentenced to a month and a half in prison, but challenged the constitutionality of the drug law based on Article 19 of the Argentine Constitution:
``The private actions of men which in no way offend public order or morality, nor injure a third party, are only reserved to God and are exempted from the authority of judges. No inhabitant of the Nation shall be obliged to perform what the law does not demand nor deprived of what it does not prohibit.
``Today, the Supreme Court ruled that personal drug consumption is covered by that privacy clause stipulated in Article 19 of the Constitution since it doesn’t affect third parties. Questions still remain, though, on the extent of the ruling. However, the government of President Cristina Fernández has fully endorsed the Court’s decision and has vowed to promptly submit a bill to Congress that would define the details of the decriminalization policies.
``According to some reports, Brazil and Ecuador are considering similar steps. They would be wise to follow suit."
We, Filipinos, should learn from their experiences.