The
Threat of Hyper-Depression
by
Bob Murphy
by Bob Murphy
In the Keynesian heydays of the 1950s and 1960s, most economists
and policy makers believed in the Phillips Curve, which
was the (alleged) tradeoff between unemployment and price inflation.
The idea was that the Federal Reserve could cure a recession by
printing money, or that the Fed could cure runaway inflation by
jacking up interest rates. Each of these moves had its downside,
of course, but the point was that the Fed could choose one poison
or the other.
This Keynesian orthodoxy was shattered in the 1970s when the United
States suffered through stagflation, which was high
unemployment and high inflation. This outcome was not supposed to
be possible, according to the popular macroeconomics models, and
it left policy makers with no clear choice. If the Fed raised rates
to stem the inflation, it would hurt the economy even more, but
if the Fed cut rates (through printing more money) the inflation
problem would worsen. The vacuum created by this crisis in both
theory and policy was filled by the Reagan Revolution and supply-side
economics.
At this stage nothing is certain, but the country is currently
headed straight into a period of very rapid price hikes and a very
bad recession. It would not surprise me at all if the national unemployment
rate and the annualized rate of consumer price inflation both broke
through into double digits by the end of 2009. Moreover, regardless
of when it actually starts, I predict that things will get much
worse before they get better, and that the United States will be
mired in a malfunctioning economy for at least a decade, with price
inflation in the double-digits (possibly higher) the entire time.
We can call this condition hyper-depression.
As with stagflation during the 1970s, hyper-depression will blow
up the prevailing cutting edge models of the macroeconomy.
Back when he was an academic, Fed Chair Ben Bernanke was actually
an expert on the Great Depression. Bernanke adheres to the (alleged)
lesson taught by Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz in their classic
A Monetary History of the United States. F&S argued
that Fed officials bore a large share of the blame for the Great
Depression, because they did not pump in enough liquidity. The quantity
of money actually declined by about a third from 19291933,
as panicked customers withdrew cash from the banks. (In a fractional
reserve banking system, when people withdraw deposits, the banks
have to shrink their outstanding checking balances because of reserve
requirements.)
As the following chart illustrates, Bernanke has taken Friedmans
warning to heart: The Fed has more than doubled its balance sheet
since the financial crisis began, leading to an unprecedented jump
in the monetary base:

Thus far, this enormous injection of new reserves into the banking
system hasnt caused the CPI to explode, but that is because
(a) the banks are mostly sitting on the new reserves because they
are all terrified, and (b) the publics demand for cash balances
has risen sharply. But using very back-of-the-envelope calculations,
there is now enough slack in the system so that if banks calmed
down and lent out the maximum amount of reserves, the publics
total money stock could increase by a factor of 10. There is no
way that the public will simply add that new money to its checking
accounts or home safes without increasing their spending. Eventually,
prices quoted in U.S. dollars will start shooting upward.
All of the financial analysts are aware of this threat, but they
foolishly reassure us, Bernanke will unwind the Feds
holdings once the economy improves. But this commits the same
mistake as the Keynesians during the 1970s: What happens when the
CPI begins rising several percentage points per month, and unemployment
is still in the double digits? What would Bernanke do at that point?
Expecting the Fed chief to relinquish his new role of buying hundreds
of billions in assets at whim, in the midst of a severe recession,
would be akin to hoping that a dictator would end his declaration
of emergency martial law in the middle of a civil war.
There are even many free market economists who are predicting that
the Feds massive money-pumping will fix the economy,
at least for a while, but at the cost of high price inflation. Yet
these analysts dont realize that they are buying into
what we all thought was the discredited Phillips Curve. The
1970s proved that the Fed cannot fix structural problems with the
economy by showering it with new money. Hyper-depression is simply
stagflation squared.
People need to stop wondering, When will the market find
its bottom? This month? Next? The federal government has already
done an incalculable amount of damage to the American financial
sector, and the insults keep growing. Think of it: Besides the unpredictable
sometimes we seize you, sometimes we take billions of bad
assets off your books, sometimes we let you fail strategy
with respect to major financial institutions, the government has
also done childish things such as ban short-selling of financial
stocks. No one knows what the rules will be next week in these markets.
Only a fool would expose new capital to the American financial sector
at this point and the politicians have the gall to wonder,
Why are the laissez-faire credit markets frozen?
Market interest rates are prices and as such they communicate important
information about real, underlying scarcity. When the central banks
of the world decided to drive interest rates down to practically
zero, they crippled the ability of the world economy to heal itself
after the overconsumption of the housing boom. People all over the
world need to be saving right now, and yet governments are doing
everything they can to squander whats left of the capital
stock.
I
had resisted predicting that we are now living through the early
period of the Great Depression II. After all, the conventional statistics
today are nowhere near as bad as they were in the 1930s. However,
the recent tussle over AIG bonus payments convinced me that we are
in this one for the long haul. In particular, Senator Charles Schumers
comments and the proposed legislation to back them up
show that we no longer have property rights in this country:
My colleagues and I are sending a letter to [AIG CEO] Mr.
Liddy informing him that he can go right ahead and tell these
employees that are scheduled to get bonuses that they should voluntarily
return them, because if they dont, we plan to virtually
tax all of it. He should tell these employees if they dont
give the money back, well put in place a new law, that will
allow us to [tax] these bonuses at a very high rate, so that its
returned to its rightful owners, the taxpayers. So for those of
you who are getting these bonuses, be forewarned: You will not
be getting to keep them.
This
is an extremely dangerous precedent. Its true as many
outraged callers to the AM talk shows explain AIG received
billions in government handouts, and so there is a plausible case
to be made that those contractual arrangements with its executives
should have been amended. But if thats the case, then the
government should have made that a condition of the original loan,
or at the very least the government should now exercise its power
as the de facto owner of AIG. Liddy was handpicked by the government
to run the company, so if the politicians dont like his decisions,
they should fire him.
In
contrast, look what Schumer & Co. have done. They are establishing
the precedent that if a particular group of rich people does something
that angers the government, and if this group happens to be wildly
unpopular with the general public, then it is noble for the government
to implement ex post facto changes to the tax code, singling these
people out and basically robbing them. Schumers speech against
AIG executives is not much different from him declaring, So
I say to Rush Limbaugh and other talk show hosts: Go ahead and continue
preaching your hatred and pessimism about the U.S. economy; this
is a free country and you have the right to do that. But be forewarned
that we are crafting new legislation that will tax 90 percent of
your ad revenues from doing so.
What people need to realize is that the government is going to
keep making this worse. In other words, it is not enough to step
back and say, Well, the feds have already partially nationalized
the entire banking system, and brought politics into all major business
decisions including how executives choose to travel to business
meetings. What are the effects? On the contrary, we need to
realize that as things continue to deteriorate and they will
the Obama Administration will keep upping the ante. What?
The first stimulus didnt work? OK lets borrow and spend
another $1 trillion; maybe that will take.
The American people need to prepare themselves for hyper-depression.
The future is still uncertain, and if the folks in Washington suddenly
found free market religion, that terrible outcome could be avoided.
But Im not holding my breath.
March 27, 2009
Bob
Murphy [send him mail]
adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute,
is the author of The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Capitalism,
The
Human Action Study Guide,
and The
Man, Economy, and State Study Guide.
Bob
Murphy Archives
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