Economic
Growth Doesn’t Cause Inflation
(The Fed Does)
by
Bob Murphy
by Bob Murphy
DIGG THIS
On
Wednesday Wall Street eagerly awaited the latest pronouncement from
the nation’s central planners of the monetary and banking system.
And although the official Fed statement itself was more nuanced,
the press coverage
of it repeated one of the crudest inheritances from the Keynesian
revolution: the fallacy that economic growth causes price inflation.
The
crazy idea is encapsulated in the subtitle of the article I’ve hyperlinked
above: "Despite slowdown in economic growth, risks of inflation
remain." Then the first paragraph informs us:
The Federal
Reserve left a key interest rate unchanged on Wednesday as the
economy signaled that it was on track for a soft landing in which
growth slows enough to restrain inflation.
MORE
GOODS = A LOWER DOLLAR PRICE PER GOOD
As
with most faulty economic doctrines, the claim that economic growth
causes price inflation isn’t just wrong, it’s exactly backwards.
Let’s go back to basics. The price of something (quoted in dollars)
is just the exchange ratio between dollar bills and the good in
question.
Now
what happens when the quantity for sale of a particular good or
service increases? For example, why are American laborers worried
about Mexican immigrants coming into the country? Why, they’re worried
that with a larger supply of labor, the wage rate (measured in dollars)
will go down. Nobody in his right mind would say, "Because
of huge increases in the pool of laborers, economists are worried
that wages might spike out of control, making it difficult for employers
to maintain their profit margins."
It’s
the same thing when it comes to other goods and services. If the
economy cranks out five percent more stuff this year than last year,
those items will be more affordable to consumers, not less!
If you’re haggling with a merchant at a fruit stand over some bananas,
and then another merchant pulls his banana cart up
next to the first guy, is that going to help you or hurt you in
your negotiations?
Now
granted, there are all sorts of caveats. The dollar price of a good
isn’t due to a simple mechanical formula, whereby one divides the
"total amount of output" (whatever the heck that phrase
even means) by the total quantity of money to come up with
the "price level" (again, whatever the heck that phrase
even means). Even if the amount of money and amount of production
remain constant, if all of a sudden people decide they detest holding
pictures of U.S. presidents, then dollar prices will rise as people
try to unload their dollars in exchange for other goods. So I don’t
want my above musings to detract from the subtleties of the analysis;
supply and demand matter, even when it comes to the "price"
of money.
Even
so, the point remains: Other things equal, the larger the growth
in real output, the lower dollar prices will be. Economic growth
reduces inflation. The financial press has it exactly backwards.
PRINTING
MONEY = RISING PRICES
What
then does cause price inflation? Is it Arab tycoons, stock
speculators, or perhaps thuggish labor unions?
Nope.
Private individuals can influence the prices of particular goods
and services, but they can’t raise prices in general. If OPEC succeeds
in driving up the price of oil (and hence gasoline), Americans will
spend more at the pump. But that means Americans will have less
money to spend at the movie theater and fancy restaurant, so prices
in general won’t rise.
The
one institution that does have the power to generate price
inflation is the central bank. When the Federal Reserve decides
the time is ripe for an "open market operation," it buys
U.S. bonds from member banks and credits their accounts with the
Fed itself.
Now
where does this "credit" come from? Is there an account
of "Fed money" (backed up by the gold at Fort Knox perhaps)
that gets debited by $10 million, and then member bank XYZ’s account
is credited by $10 million?
No,
that’s not it. The Fed simply adds numbers to bank XYZ’s balance.
Poof! New base money created out of thin air. And then, due to the
magic of the fractional reserve banking system, those new reserves
get pyramided into an even larger addition to the overall quantity
of money in the economy.
Other
things equal, when you add to the stock of money, its price in terms
of other goods and services will fall. When the "price"
of money falls, that means dollar prices of goods and services go
up, because the money is worth less than it was before.
In
other words, if the Fed really wants to control price inflation,
all it needs to do is stop inflating the money supply.
May 15, 2007
Bob
Murphy [send him mail]
has a PhD in economics from New York University, and is the author
of Minerva.
See his personal website at BobMurphy.net.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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