Showing posts with label government spending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government spending. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Does Government Spending Boost the GDP? PSA’s GDP Data Says No!


Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience—C. S. Lewis

Does Government Spending Boost the GDP? PSA’s GDP Data Says No!

The PSA revised the base period of the GDP from 2000 to 2018. This change led to increases in the real GDP numbers in three of the four quarters in 2019 and the annual GDP from 5.9% to 6%. (Figure 1)

Boosting the GDP is so simple, just change the assumptions or the methodology, or tinker with deflator, or manage the inputs, to show what is intended.  As Professor Ronald Coase once wrote, “If you torture the data long enough, it will confess.”

According to media and the establishment, please blame the COVID-19; the Philippine GDP posted a -.2% change in the 1Q, its first contraction since Q4 of 1998!  
Figure 1

Yet, the total infected as of May 12th has only been 11,350 compared to an estimated population of 109 million with a median age of 25.7.

Simply put, total infections account for an infinitesimal .01042% of the population! Importantly, the young demographic should translate to reduced deaths from Covid19! Data from the Department of HealthJohn Hopkins, and Worldometer exhibit almost similar distribution of mortality concentrated on the elderly. 

So instead of protecting such groups, a one-size-fit-all policy was forced upon the nation, which effectively relegated the economy into suspended animation!

And with the Luzon Enhanced Community Quarantine (ECQ) of the National Capital Region extended until May 15th, albeit (relabeled as Modified) this extrapolates to 77-days since its inception, a day more than the duration of the Wuhan, Hubei lockdown, which commenced on January 23 and lifted on April 8, or a 76-day quarantine! NCR has a 38% share of the GDP (2018).

As a side note, because of the sudden spike in COVID-19 cases, the Wuhan government announced that it would implement universal testing.

That said, won’t a decrease in the standards of living or an increase in poverty make the population more vulnerable not only to COVID-19, but to other health risks?

Back to the GDP.

And here’s a quirk on the data.

If the GDP grew by 6% each in January, February, and in the first half of March, this entails only a 30% drop in the second half that led to 12.05% contraction in March that expunged the two and a half months of GDP growth.  

Yet, the Luzon Enhanced Community Quarantine, which, again, started in mid-March, involved also many provinces and cities outside the region.

With Luzon accounting for nearly 70% of the overall GDP (2018 Regional GDP) as the baseline, the economic shutdown meant that the national economy must have suffered more than the published national accounts statistics.

Regardless of the accuracy of the GDP statistics, that government spending is the elixir to economic development has been the mantra embraced by the consensus even before the COVID-19 induced crisis.

Now, public spending will rescue the economy from the crisis, so they say.

Yet even from the Philippine government’s Philippine Statistics Authority national account data, this would seem like a hollow claim.  
Figure 2

Even before this shutdown, the household consumption data has been under pressure.

The annual GDP elaborates on this diminishing role of household consumption. In contrast, public spending has been revving up. Though both have been intact since 2001, these trends, signifying a shift towards public spending, has accelerated since 2016.

Reinforcing this view is the ratio of the share of household consumption to GDP relative to the share of the government spending to GDP. The reduced role played by household consumption, effectively, dragged the GDP since 2012, but again intensified from 2017 onwards.

Figure 3

The per capita data exhibits a much better angle.

The household consumption topped in Q2 of 2016, then, traded at the lower bound of the range since it hit bottom in Q3 2017.  The GDP per capita data resonated with this entropic motion. But then, the economic shutdown broke that floor in the 1Q. Not so with government spending.

It followed Ernest Hemingway’s two modes to bankruptcy: gradually, then suddenly! 

The household-GDP correlation tells us that the larger the government spends, the lesser disposable income is made available to private-sector households.  

As the great Austrian economist, Ludwig von Mises warned,

The fashionable panacea suggested, lavish public spending, is no less futile. If the government provides the funds required by taxing the citizens or by borrowing from the public, it abolishes on the one hand as many jobs as it creates on the other. If government spending is financed by borrowing from commercial banks, it means credit expansion and inflation. Then the prices of all commodities and services must rise, whatever the government does to prevent this outcome.

Or, through the crowding out, household consumption represents the opportunity costs of increased public spending.

From the mainstream viewpoint, the fiscal multiplier is less than one.
 
And there’s more.  
Figure 4

Despite the spending downtrend, households appear to have been escalating the use of credit to bolster their consumption.

Credit usage rocketed by 40.14% and 37.6% in January and February, just before this crisis, but dropped to 22.93% in March, when the ECQ was implemented.

The boom in Consumer credit (ex-real estate) has primarily been from credit card borrowings, which zoomed 57.04%, 50.93%, and 18.98% over the same period.

And ironically, booming consumer credit came in the face of stagnating retail credit, which has been in decline since 2H 2018. Though March’s retail borrowings spiked 6.8%, this looks likely in response to building up cash reserves in expectation of the economic freeze than from the greasing of commercial activities.

Yet, what happens to the consumer’s capacity to spend when credit becomes scarce in the face of shrinking economic opportunities or when money tightens?

This brings us back to the original premise: public spending.

So would the avalanche of public spending to rescue the economy improve the weal of the many? Or will these signify a redistribution in favor of the politically connected elites? And will it create conditions worse or opposite than the intended?

Monday, August 05, 2013

Phisix: The Impact of Slowing Banking Loans

BSP Official on Property Bubbles: Move Along Nothing to See Here

Pressed to comment by the media on the ‘formation’ of a property bubble based on the recent rise of Non-performing loans (NPL) of the thrift banking industry, a BSP official brushed aside such statistical data as a “blip” and readily dismissed concerns over bubbles as non-problematic[1]

NPLs increased to 5.34% as of the end of 2012 compared to 4.97% period in June of last year.

The same BSP official cited that “real demand” and not speculation has been the main force driving the property sector and that current boom has not compromised the banking system’s underwriting standards for “the sake of growth”.
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Here is the latest year-on-year bank lending growth for the each month during the first semester of 2013.

The BSP says that 80% of the banking system’s loan portfolio has been extended to production activities, where for the month June, overall banking lending growth slightly receded to 12.2% from 13.5% in May (revised data). 

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Meanwhile loan growth to the domestic consumers eased slightly to 12.1% from 12.2% over the same period[2].

Since we understand that only 21.5 of every 100 households[3] have access to the banking system, growth in consumer loans can be seen as less of a systemic threat.

In addition, in contrast to the popular wisdom which sees the Philippines as being driven by consumer or household spending, the reality is that current exemplary performance by the statistical economy has mainly been powered by supply side and government spending bubble dynamics[4].

Yet if household demand have been growing at the range of 4-6%, while the rate of growth of supply side expenditures (particularly real estate and real estate related sectors) have been more than double the household rate, then to suggest that the current boom represents final demand or where there has hardly been any yield chasing going on, signifies as a bizarre or contradictory claim which practically ignores reality or substitutes reality with statistical data mining.

Yet how sustainable is the economic framework where supply side growth continually outpaces the demand side?

The mainstream often confuses statistical analysis as economic reasoning. Statistics without causal theory underpinning them tends to mislead. As the French classical liberal economist[5] Jean Baptiste Say wrote in A Treatise on Political Economy[6],
Hence, there is not an absurd theory, or an extravagant opinion that has not been supported by an appeal to facts; and it is by facts also that public authorities have been so often misled. But a knowledge of facts, without a knowledge of their mutual relations, without being able to show why the one is a cause, and the other a consequence, is really no better than the crude information of an office-clerk, of whom the most intelligent seldom becomes acquainted with more than one particular series, which only enables him to examine a question in a single point of view.
Of course, we understand that officials need to “toe the line” or be a part of the political PR campaign to promote the administration’s agenda.

Despite the declining year on year rate of bank lending growth by the supply side (production activities) and the steady growth of demand side (household), the current pace credit growth expansion remains largely above the previous years. 

Nevertheless the declining trend looks portentous.

For June, real estate renting and business services grew by 22.35% which has significantly been down from the peak at 28.53% in January.

The construction industry continues to sizzle with 48.7% growth in June albeit at the low side of the year’s growth. The massive rebound in the construction industry has been a belated effect since construction growth during the past few years has been negligible. For the year, construction growth has been at the 48-56% levels.

Meanwhile, offsetting the decline in the real estate loans has been the sterling growth of the wholesale and retail trade (which have been part of the shopping mall bubble) has been reaccelerating from a low of 10.02% in April to June’s 15.74% (or a 50% jump).

Also lending to Hotel and restaurant (casino bubble) remains brisk at a 19.55% y-o-y which is slightly off the mean growth of 20.385% for the year.

Despite the apparent slowdown, bank lending in support of supply side ‘interest rate-sensitive’ bubble blowing industries continues to overwhelm demand side growth. If such trend will be sustained then the outcome will be anything but pleasant.

Is the Financial Intermediation Sector the Canary in the Coal Mine?

A good example has been the ballooning shopping mall bubble in China. The race to expand shopping malls has led to a massive oversupply, where many developers and landlords resort not only to foregoing rents to attract tenants, but likewise to paying popular mass market based retail firms to have a presence in their malls[7].

In China’s second tier cities, mall vacancy rates are expected to surge to over 30% by next year! If these malls have been mainly financed by debt or leverage, then rising vacancies will extrapolate to mass insolvencies that will pressure China’s formal and informal (shadow) banking system which similarly will have a contractionary spillover effect on the economy.

China’s impending shopping mall bubble bust should serve as a crucial lesson to the Philippines[8].

And interestingly, one critical industry that has significantly contributed to the marginally declining trend of overall loan growth to production activities in the Philippines has been financial intermediation sector.

Coincidental to the bear market strike on the Phisix last May-June, the rate of growth on loans to the financial intermediation sector dramatically shrunk to a still positive but a measly 1.45% in June. In January, this sector grew by a stunning 39.25% y-o-y. In the onset of the financial market stress last May, the rate of growth has slumped by more than half the highs of January to 12.99%.

If a significant segment of the previous loan growth from this sector has been channeled to the domestic financial assets, such as the stock and bond markets, and if pressures on financial markets persist and or if domestic interest rates should rise in response to the ongoing bond market turmoil, then a call on these loans and or margin calls will likely be the response by the lending institutions or creditors.

The implication is that these will compound on the existing strains on the financial markets via the feedback loop between asset prices and collateral values. 

Debtors will be required to add collateral or creditors will require liquidation of soured loans. If the liquidations route dominates, then this would put additional downside pressure on financial asset prices. Lower asset prices would extrapolate to diminishing value of collateral which should prompt lending institutions to demand more collateral or for more liquidations.

In addition, what has been seen as a ‘blip’ and uncompromised underwriting standards will eventually extrapolate to a series of tightening of credit standards as asset quality deteriorates and as NPLs rise.

Such debt deflation dynamics ultimately will depend on the scale of exposure of financial intermediation loans on the domestic financial markets, which is something unspecified in BSP data. What is publicly known is that financial intermediation loans account for 9.4% of the overall loans to production activities in June. 

While this may seem small, it would be foolhardy to ignore the potential contagion effects on the highly leveraged real estate and allied industries which falling asset markets may spur or trigger.

Bubbles Operate as a Process

Bubbles don’t just appear from nowhere. Bubbles represent a process where people’s incentives are shaped by distortive social policies, which leads to a clustering of errors via discoordination or misallocation of resources. The eventual unwinding of such imbalances also undergoes a reversal process.

For instance the survival of shopping malls ultimately depends on mostly retail based tenants, whom are predominantly small and medium scale enterprises (SME).

The domestic shopping mall industry has been growing rapidly via the industry’s misperception or overestimation of the rate of growth of domestic consumers. They have been misled by the price signals brought about by zero bound rates or easy money policies and from the disinformation disseminated by mainstream media.

Popular wisdom holds that easy money represents a perpetual phenomenon. The reemergence of the bond vigilantes has placed the spotlight on viability of mainstream’s premises.

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And like China, there has been a blitz of shopping mall expansion, mostly financed by debt, designed to capture profits from what seems as unlimited pockets by the consumer.

The Philippine consumers, if based on inflation adjusted GDP per capita growth, has been expanding by a top of the line 3.16% in 2006-2010[9]. If we estimate per capita growth for 2011-2013 at 7% (economic growth rate) per annum then per capita levels today would only be at about 3.87%. This would hardly be enough to finance all the double digit supply side spending boom. This is unless the informal economy has been far larger than estimated.

Yet if the profitability of the SME retail sector should come under pressure from a combination of factors: cut throat competition, oversupply, higher cost of capital via rising interest rates, and rising cost of business from non-regulation directly influenced factors such as rising input prices via rents, wages or producers goods and etc.., then loans from ensuing operational losses will most likely reflect on the lenders via impaired loans.

So any sustained amplification of the deterioration of NPLs from clients of thrift banks could signify as one of the possible symptoms of the periphery-to-core process of a bursting bubble.

To disregard them by comparing with the past when credit growth has not reached current levels would signify as imprudent anchoring bias or even apples to oranges comparison.

A Peak in Domestic M3?

The BSP also recently noted of a significant boost in domestic liquidity in June, where on a year on year basis growth ramped up by 20.3% to Php 5.7 trillion, which has risen faster than the 16.4% in May.

The surge in M3 has mostly been due to Net Domestic Assets (NDA) which jumped by 30.5% in June from 28.7% in May. Soaring NDAs, according to the BSP, reflected the sustained growth in bank lending to help finance economic activity[10].

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Since 2004, M3[11] has been growing by a Compounded Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 11.05%. But this hasn’t been reflecting on the current state of affairs. One would note that M3 zoomed only during the end of 2012. Based on 2011, Philippine M3 CAGR soared by 13.815% from 2011, and from January 2012 until June 2013 CAGR catapulted by 14.53%. So we have a 2-3+% increase in money supply from the current administration.

Where has all these 13-14% money growth been flowing? The most probable answer: property, stock and bond market bubbles. Yes, the 13-14% money growth from sharp increases in bank loans been responsible for, or represents as the trade secret of the current administration’s ‘good governance’ ‘rising tiger’ statistical economy.

Unfortunately the recent declining trend on bank loans spearheaded by the financial intermediation sector will reduce the speed of rate of change of M3 overtime. Such decline may have already been signalled by the domestic stock market.

Similarly, should the rate of growth of bank loans continue to shrivel, then this would also be reflected on the rate of growth of the statistical economy.

The populist glorification of the so-called politically driven economic boom will face reality.

Philippine 10 year Bond: The Odd Man Out?

And speaking of asset bubbles, last week’s actions in ASEAN’s bond markets brought upon a huge surprise.

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Yields of the Philippines 10 year bonds[12] has fallen nearly to the pre-Taper market seizure levels (upper left window) even as yields of our bigger and far richer ASEAN neighbors climbed. As of the actions of last week, the Philippines has decoupled from the region!

This implies the following:

One the Philippines doesn’t need a Moody’s upgrade or that the bond markets has been front running or pre-empting a Moody’s upgrade.

Two, current yields demonstrates the prevailing low interest rate environment.

Three, Philippine yields is just about 103 basis points away from the US counterpart as of Friday’s close, which if I am not mistaken accounts for as the narrowest spread between 10 year Philippine Peso and 10 US treasury note ever.

However this also means that the vastly narrowing yield spread will likely work as a disincentive for US based investors who will likely look for bigger spreads as margin of safety.

Four, such record low spread or near record low yield means that the Philippines is seen as having lesser interest rate and credit risks relative to her bigger and wealthier neighbor. Said differently, the Philippines despite having a US dollar GDP nominal per capita of only US$ 2,617 (IMF 2012)[13] compared with Indonesia’s US$ 3,910 (IMF 2012), Thailand’s US$5,678 (IMF 2012) and Malaysia’s $10,304 (IMF 2012) has been valued by the markets as having been far more credit worthy or has higher credit standings.

The Philippines at $2,617 per capita seems now at par with Australia US $67,723 (IMF 2012).

Wow this time is different! Or has it?

As of July 25th 5 year senior Credit Default Swaps (CDS)[14] of the Philippine has marginally been higher or exhibits the higher risk profile compared with Malaysia and Thailand (upper right window). It is unclear if the CDS markets have replicated the bond markets over the last few trading days.

But one thing is certain, during the last market seizure emanating from the return of the bond vigilantes in response to Bernanke’s Taper Talk, CDS prices of the four ASEAN majors surged concomitantly (lower window). While CDS prices have fallen from their peaks in June, they have been creeping higher during the last few days ending July 25th. My guess is that they are above the July 25th levels considering the recent actions in the bond-stock and currency markets.

And speaking of currency markets, the Philippine Peso continues to drop along with her regional peers. This reveals of the sharp divergences between actions of the 10 year bond yields and the Peso. 

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Importantly, stock markets of the three of ASEAN majors appear to be substantially faltering. The decline in the Phisix along with the Peso appears to be departing from the signals emitted by the domestic bond market.

Such huge divergences and the record (US-Phil) spread exhibits of the enormous misperception, misappraisal, maladjusted and deeply mispriced markets.

Given what seem as the odd man out, Philippine 10-year bonds look like a great short opportunity.

The Philippine Government Spending Bubble

Apart from titles to capital goods (stocks and property), another aspect of the risk of bubbles, which the public can’t or refuses to see, has been the government’s spending budget.

The Philippine President has recently submitted to the Congress for approval a proposed Php 2.268 trillion (US $52 billion) budget for 2014 which is reportedly 13.1% higher than this year[15].

While the general public has been debating over who gets what, they hardly realize that the current trend of growth of the Philippine government’s spending is unsustainable and will lead to a debt or currency crisis.

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According to the data from National Statistical Coordination Board or NSC[16], over the past 17 years CAGR for revenues has been at 8.07% (green) whereas the CAGR for expenditures has been at 9.1% (red). The Philippine budget has turned into deficit in 1998 and never looked backed. 

The CAGR for the budget deficit has been 11.1% over the past 17 years.

If the economy grows at 5-6% while growth trend of deficits remains at the current pace then we will see huge increases in taxes or higher inflation or exploding debt overtime.

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The budget gap was almost closed or the elusive balancing of the budget was nearly a reality in 2007-2008. But a crisis exploded, whose epicenter was in the US, which rippled through the globe, and nearly caused a recession in the Philippines.

The effect of the near recession was felt a year later or in 2009, where the deficit swelled as revenues slumped amidst sustained increases in government expenditures.

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Interestingly, the pattern where government revenues plummet in the aftermath of every banking crisis[17] affected the Philippines even in the absence of a domestic banking crisis.

Such transmission mechanism has apparently been an offshoot from today’s financial globalization.

Admittedly the incumbent administration has accomplished marginal improvements.

Revenues (CAGR 8.31%) grew more than expenditures (5.305%) in 2010-2012, but such has not been enough to push back deficits to the 1998-2007 levels.

But to consider, we supposedly are in the salad ‘economic boom’ days where budget gaps should narrow. Obviously this hasn’t been the case.

And yet if the current budget will be approved and spent accordingly, then this will signify as a big jump on the expenditure side. Of course, the hope is that these expenditures will transform into future revenues. This seems as wishful thinking. Aside from arguing that public works are unproductive, the public has obviously discounted risks even when the Philippines look vulnerable from both directions or from external (capital flows, remittances, merchandise trade, external debt) and internal (level of domestic debt).

Yes I know, the popular approach has been to use the above as ratio to GDP. But again, I don’t think that the conventional accounting GDP identity represents a useful indicator since I have been pointing out these have been puffed up and manifest on a credit driven asset bubble and unproductive government expenditures which may unravel and easily cause a swift deterioration on what seems solid ratios today.

My understanding of the theory of business ‘boom-bust’ cycles, backed by the history of banking, sovereign and currency crises tells me where and what aspects to monitor. I wouldn’t like to be subjected to a Black Swan event when the latter can be predicted.

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Deficits will have to be financed by debt, taxes or inflation.

In terms of debt, the rate of increases in Philippine debt outstanding[18] both from domestic and from foreign lenders over the past 17 years have been at CAGR 9.49% and 9.62% respectively. Total debt has grown 9.59%. The growth rate during the past 17 years, if sustained, enhances sovereign credit risks.

But boom days have cosmetically improved debt levels.

It is true that the current administration has reduced the rate of growth in total debt levels by almost half or 4.84% from 2010-2012, aside from changing the mix of the debt exposure in favor of domestic debt, where domestic debt grew by 8.46% while foreign debt contracted by .523%. Domestic debt now commands nearly 64% share of the total outstanding debt. The shift to tilt the balance of debt outstanding towards domestic debt from foreign debt deftly avoids external debt risks and at the same maximizes the Philippine government’s financial repression policies, through not only the stealth transfer of people’s savings in favor of the government (debtor) but importantly by keeping interest artificially rates low, such reduces the government’s interest expenditures which effectively operates as a covert deficit reduction mechanism.

But these again are boom days which can easily be reversed by a dramatic collapse of revenues and from potential bailout policies—should a crisis emerge from anywhere from the world.

And all it takes is a snap of a finger, from Professors Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff[19];
Perhaps more than anything else, failure to recognize the precariousness and fickleness of confidence—especially in cases in which large short term debts need to be rolled over continuously—is the key factor that gives rise to the this-time is different syndrome. Highly indebted governments, banks, or corporations can seem to be merrily rolling along for an extended period, when bang!—confidence collapses, lenders, disappear and a crisis hits.
The bang! actually represents a state of unpredictable time, where accumulated imbalances have reached a tipping point that radically overturns the positive perception of the critical mass of creditors against debtors.



[1] Inquirer.net Property ‘bubble’ a remote possibility August 3, 2013

[2] BSP.gov.ph Bank Lending Sustains Growth in June, July 31, 2013



[5] Wikipedia.org Jean-Baptiste Say

[6] Jean Baptiste Say A Treatise on Political Economy, Library of Economics and Liberty





[11] Tradingeconomics.com PHILIPPINES MONEY SUPPLY M3



[14] AsianBondsOnline.org Credit Risk Watch

[15] ABS-CBNNews.com PNoy to submit P2.3T budget for 2014 July 23, 2013

[16] National Statistical Coordination Board, Statistics, Public Finance

[17] Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff BANKING CRISES: AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY MENACE December 2008 NBER Working Papers

[18] National Statistical Coordination Board Lubog na ba tayo sa Utang? May 9, 2012; Bureau of Treasury National Government Outstanding Debt

[19] Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, Preamble: Some Initial Intuitions… This Time is Different Princeton University

Monday, July 29, 2013

Phisix: BSP’s Tetangco Catches Taper Talk Fever

The BSP’s Version of Taper Talk

JUST a little over two weeks back, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) Governor Amando Tetangco said that the low inflation environment, “gives us room to maintain interest rates and our current policy stance”[1].

In short, the easy money environment will prevail.

This week in an interview on Bloomberg TV, the gentle BSP governor signaled a forthcoming change in the BSP’s policy stance noting that since the Philippine economy is “strong”, “we don’t see any real need for stimulus at this point[2].

Oh boy, the BSP chief echoes on the ongoing predicament of US Federal Reserve of testing the “tapering” waters.

The BSP was cited by the same Bloomberg article as raising its price inflation forecasts by putting the burden of inflation risks on the weakening peso.

So the BSP essentially has begun to signal a backpedalling from easy money stance.

As I’ve noted in the past, similar to the Fed’s “taper talk”, the BSP’s subtle change in communication stance represents “tactical communications signaling maneuver to maintain or preserve the central bank’s “credibility” by realigning policy stance with actions in the bond markets.”[3]

While the BSP’s preferred culprit has been the weakening peso, the reality has been that higher yields in the global bond markets including emerging Asia and the Philippines has forced upon this discreet volte-face.

The attempt to substitute the influence of bond yields on domestic monetary policies with the weakening peso, the latter having been premised on alleged expectations of higher price inflation represents, as the stereotyped political maneuver of shifting of the blame on extraneous forces—the self-attribution bias.

The peso as culprit for general price inflation has been premised on the fallacious doctrine of balance of payments. The weak peso, according to the popular view, will prompt for an increase in price inflation via higher import prices. But in reality, rising import prices will lead to reduced demand for imports or on consumption of other goods, thereby offsetting any increase in general prices.

This means that the depreciation of the Peso represents a symptom rather than a cause where the principal cause has been due to domestic inflationary policies.

As the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises explained[4]
Prices rise not only because imports have become more expensive in terms of domestic money; they rise because the quantity of money was increased and because the citizens display a greater demand for domestic goods.
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Since 2001, the asset segment of the BSP’s balance sheet have ballooned by a Compounded Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 11% where International Reserves comprises 86% of the asset pie as of December 2012 based on the BSP’s dataset[5].

On the other hand, the gist of BSP’s liabilities or 73% has been on deposits. Special Deposit Accounts (SDA) constitutes 57% of total deposits with Reserve deposits from other deposit accounts signifying a 19% share and deposits from the Philippine treasury at 9%.

Meanwhile, currency issued, which had a 17.7% share of BSP’s liabilities, grew by 9.05% CAGR over the same period.

The rate of growth in the BSP’s balance sheet increased in 2006, but has been in acceleration in 2009 through today.

This also implies that the bulk of the credit expansion in the banking sector have ended up as deposits in the BSP.

The CAGR of BSP’s balance sheet at 11% has nearly been double the 5.97% CAGR of Philippine GDP at constant prices[6] over the same period.

Thus inflation pressures hardly emanates from imports but from the rising quantity of money and assets with moneyness functionality or money-substitutes[7].

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Of course, when the BSP governor referred to a “strong” economy as basis for the subtle change in his policy signaling of a reduced need for stimulus, he has actually been resorting to the anchoring bias (behavioral finance) and to the time inconsistent dilemma. That’s because “strong” conditions had all been predicated on the easy money environment.

And with the projection of higher interest rates in a system whose leverage has been rapidly building up over the recent years, as shown by the double digit growth of overall banking debt (left) and the surging rate of loans on what I suspect as the epicenter of the Philippine bubble (right), this means higher cost of servicing debt and higher cost of capital. This also means interest rate and credit risk will mount.

And for the financial world who are dependent on computing for Discounted Cash Flows[8] (DCF) analysis based mostly from Net Present Value[9] (NPV), changes in discount rates will impact heavily on the feasibility of projects and investments. New projects or investments built upon discount rates at current levels will likely be exposed to losses from miscalculations or errors brought about by the expectations of the perpetuity of the low interest rate regime when the BSP officially begins its tightening.

All these means that if the path of interest rates is headed higher, as the BSP chief implies, then conditions will materially change and such will likewise be reflected on risks premiums.

As I previously wrote[10], (bold original)
“Fundamentals” tend to flow along with the market, which is evidence of the reflexive actions of price signals and people’s actions. Boom today can easily be a recession tomorrow.
The Unwarranted Fixation on Credit Rating Upgrades

The continuing optimism by the BSP has been based on the fundamental assumption that changes in interest rates are likely to be gradual and stable.
This seems uncertain as the recent actions in the bond markets have been anything but gradual and stable.

Of course the BSP’s view has been consonant with the Philippine President’s Benigno Aquino III. Such concerted efforts are likely representative of a PR campaign to generate high approval ratings.

In his State of the Nation Address (SONA), the Philippine president blustered over the same 7.8% statistical GDP and of the recent “improvements” on trade competitiveness as key accomplishments of his administration. He also mentioned that current conditions should merit another credit rating upgrade.

Mr. Aquino declared[11] “For the first time in history, the Philippines was upgraded to investment-grade status by two out of the three most respected credit ratings agencies in the world, and we are confident that the third may follow”

Well the public just loves the visible which politicians gladly feed them with.

Yet people hardly realize that credit rating upgrades can even signify as the proverbial “kiss of death”.

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A historical overview of some sovereign ratings changes from Fitch Ratings[12] serves as great examples. The above table reveals to us that credit rating agencies hardly sees risks even when these have been staring at them on their faces.

From 1995-2008, Greece (upper pane) had a series of upgrades and positive watches (blue box) in both the long and short term of foreign and local currency ratings. The Fitch began a string of downgrades on Greece only when the country’s debt crisis imploded in 2009[13]. Today Greece has been rated junk “substantial credit risk[14]”, four years after the unresolved crisis.

The successions of credit upgrades basically helped motivate the Greek government to indulge in a borrowing spree which eventually unraveled.

Venezuela has a different story (lower pane). But again we the same credit rating upgrades on the socialist country in 2005, who today suffers from a hyperinflationary episode or a real time destruction of the country’s currency the bolivar[15].

The Fitch eventually regretted their decision, they downgraded Venezuela. Ironically hyperinflating Venezuela has a higher rating than deflating Greece where both defaults on their debts but coursed through different means.

The above examples reveal of how credit rating agencies align their assessment with unfolding market conditions. Rating agencies hardly anticipate them accurately.

So a manipulated asset boom may easily draw credit rating agencies to upgrade sovereign debt.

It is important to draw some very vital lessons from history where banking crises, sovereign debt defaults, currency crises, and serial debt defaults, as chronicled by Harvard’s Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, which spanned “more than 70 cases of overt default (compared to 250 defaults on external debt) since 1800”[16] the common denominator has been overconfidence and denigration of history[17] (will not happen to us) [bold mine]
The essence of the this-time-is-different syndrome is simple. It is rooted in the firmly held belief that financial crises are things that happen to other people in other countries at other times; crises do not happen to us, here and now. We are doing things better, we are smarter, we have learned from past mistakes. The old rules of valuation no longer apply. The current boom, unlike the many booms that preceded catastrophic collapses in the past (even in our country), is built on sound fundamentals, structural reforms, technological innovation, and good policy. Or so the story goes.
I would add my conspiracy theory. Credit rating upgrades have been tied with the US bases. The American government has been endeared with the incumbent administration because the President pursues the path of his mother, the former President the late Cory Aquino, who fought to retain US military bases here[18]

Today, using territorial disputes as an excuse or a bogeyman, the Aquino government has allowed and defended the so-called non-permanent access of “allies” on former US bases[19].

The Illusions of the Benefits from Government Spending

Another mainstream obsession today has been the devotion towards statistical economic figures which has been presumed as an accurate measurement of economic growth.

As explained last week[20], the statistical 7.8% growth has been mainly rooted on growth by the construction, real estate and financial sectors, as well as, government spending.

And much of the ballyhooed statistical growth in the private sector has been financed by an unsustainable credit bubble.

Yet the public has been mesmerized by the $17 billion of proposed investments by the incumbent government. 

If the government spending is the elixir, then why stop at $17 billion? Why not make it $1 trillion or even $ 10 trillion?

And if such assumption is true, then why has the communist models like China’s Mao and the USSR evaporated? 

Why has China’s recent economic growth been substantially slowing amidst a splurge of government spending in 2008-2009? The newly installed Chinese has announced another $85 billion of railway stimulus to allegedly stem the growth slowdown[21].

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With enormous money thrown as fiscal stimulus from the late 90s to the new millennium, why has Japan’s lost decade been extended to two decades+ three years?

Apparently this seemingly perpetual economic stagnation has prompted the new administration to launch the boldest monetary modern day experiment by a central bank which will be complimented by even more fiscal spending stimulus and on the minor side trade liberalization.

Yet growing internal dissension[22] on the risks of Abenomics even from within the ranks of the Bank of Japan has been hounding on the popular expectations of the success of such derring-do political program aside from the risks of a fallout from an economic hard landing in China.

No matter the glorification of mainstream media’s on the alleged success of such policies, Japan’s financial markets are saying otherwise. Has the denial rally in Japan’s major equity benchmark Nikkei fizzled? Japan futures suggest that Monday’s opening will likely break below the 14,000 threshold.

Obviously what government spends will have to be financed by debt, taxes or inflation. Or simply said, whatever government spends has to be taken from someone else’s savings and or productive output. Government spending represents thus a disequilibrating force, because the recourse to institutional compulsion to attain political objectives means a shift of resources from higher value (market determined) uses to lower value (politically determined) uses.

Importantly, since most of government services are institutionalized or mandated monopolies, the absence of market prices means that there hardly have been accurate measures to calculate on the cost-benefit utility of the services provided. And since there are no market price utilized, returns are non-existent. Government spending, hence, represents consumption and not investments.

So the contribution of government spending has mostly been negative rather than positive to real economic growth.

But this is a different story from the mainstream’s statistical aggregate demand management based point of view.

And relative to the statistical 7.8% growth, this only means two things, one—economic boom has largely been concentrated on a few sectors which has been benefiting from the zero bound rates induced credit fueled manic speculation on the asset markets, and two—beneficiaries from government spending have always been the political class, their politically connected affiliates and welfare beneficiaries

And regardless of the egging of the Philippine president, in the latest State of the Nation’s Address (SONA), on the Congress to revamp Presidential Decrees 1113 and 1894 which according to news has been a Marcos era legacy that favors “businessmen close to the dictatorial administration”[23], the politicization of economic opportunities, where the government “picks on the winner” means that cronyism and regulatory capture have been the natural consequences or outcome from such anti-competitive politically distributed economic arrangements.

Thus actions meant to purportedly sanitize projected “immorality” are good as photo opportunities or for Public Relations purposes.

The reactionary rant against officials[24] and personnel of the Bureau of Customs, Bureau of Immigration and Deportation and the National Irrigation Administration (NIA) whom the President severely criticized for an unabated smuggling in the SONA should be a great example. That’s because one of the tarnishes of the incumbent approval rating obsessed regime has been in smuggling, where critics have labeled the Philippines as “Asia’s smuggling capital”[25].

In the world of politics, moral order has mostly been a function of either populism or legalities.

Yet what is popular or legal have not always or frequently been moral. Venezuela’s late Hugo Chavez died a popular leader due to massive wealth redistribution even if he ran the Venezuelan economy aground. Adolf Hitler was also a popular leader until he was defeated in World War II.

In the eyes of populist politics, immorality has hardly been thought about as legal or institutional blemishes. It has always focused on personal virtues: the personality cult mentality.

As the 30th President of the US Calvin Coolidge aptly warned[26]:
It is difficult for men in high office to avoid the malady of self-delusion. They are always surrounded by worshipers. They are constantly and for the most part sincerely assured of their greatness. They live in an artificial atmosphere of adulation and exaltation which sooner or later impairs their judgment. They are in grave danger of becoming careless and arrogant.
So when politicians or political leaders impose some edict or restrictions, they mostly expect people to behave like sheep. Such arrogant leaders forget that social policies affect people’s real lives, not limited to commerce. 

And in response to such laws, thinking and acting man intuitively find ways to sustain their preferred way of living, and in many times, acting in defiance of arbitrary legislations or regulations or the “rule of men”.

So, for instance, when the Philippine government via the BSP raised sales taxes significantly on gold sales, over 90% of gold output has been smuggled out in reaction[27]: the law of unintended consequences.

The same political agenda goes for India, where gold has a deep cultural attachment. The profligate Indian government wants to ‘balance’ fiscal conditions by reining on gold sales. First they apply import tariffs then restrictions spread to banks, bullion banks, and finally to the retail sector[28]. Remember the Indian government essentially has been attacking India’s culture in the name of fiscal balance.

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The consequence: an explosion of gold smuggling. Cases of smuggling has shot up to 205 from 21 a year earlier, value of gold seized by officials has soared by 10 times or 270 million rupees compared to 25 million rupees over the same period, according to the Wall Street Journal[29]

So at the end of the day, the formal sector ends up in the informal ‘illegal’ sector. The government forced the average Indians to migrate underground to maintain tradition. Practicing tradition have now been rendered as illegitimate and a crime. Many will suffer from political oppression out of the insensitive and inhumane whims of the political leaders.

It is still nice to see that the average Indians still have practiced civil disobedience via smuggling. But if the political repressive dragnet intensifies, then perhaps it will not be farfetched to expect civil disobedience to transform into violent public protests, ala Turkey, Brazil, or Egypt.

The bottom line is politicization of the economy have been key sources of social strains. What the largely economically ignorant or politically blind public initially sees as a boon from interventionism and inflationism will mostly regret of their advocacies.

And another thing, in today’s euphoric phase, I even read a commentary proclaiming today’s boom as “unstoppable”.

Well Mr. Tetangco has just fired the warning shot across the proverbial bow. Yet if bond markets continue to unsettle, what has been bruited as “unstoppable”…will not only become stoppable, but they will likely stop soon.
Despite the recent advances, current environment remains risky.

Trade cautiously.



[1] Malaya.com Tetangco: We will stay the course July 10, 2013



[4] Ludwig von Mises 1. Inflation III. INFLATION AND CREDIT EXPANSION Interventionism An

[5] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Economic and Financial Statistics

[6] Tradingeconomics.com PHILIPPINES GDP CONSTANT PRICES

[7] Ludwig von Mises 11. The Money-Substitutes XVII. INDIRECT EXCHANGE Mises.org

[8] Wikipedia.org Discounted cash flow

[9] Wikipedia.org Net present value


[11] Inquirer.net Aquino: No stopping change July 23, 2013





[16] Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, This Time is Different Princeton University Press p. 111

[17] Ibid p. 15












[29] Wall Street Journal Gold Smuggling Takes Off in India July 26, 2013