Credit Expansion, Crisis, and the Myth of the Saving Glut
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
Recently
by George Reisman: 'Change'
Under Obama: From Dumb to Dumber and From Bad to Worse
Contents
-
Introduction
-
Credit
Expansion, Standard Money, and Fiduciary Media
-
The
Stock Market and Real Estate Bubbles
-
Evasion
of Responsibility for the Bubbles
-
The
Saving Glut Argument
-
The
Non-Existence of a Saving Glut
-
Current
Account Deficits as a By-Product of the Increase in the Quantity
of Money
-
Net
Saving as a By-Product of the Increase in the Quantity of Money
-
Summary
and Conclusion
Introduction
Readers who
are already familiar with the nature of credit expansion and the
concepts of standard money and fiduciary media should skip the
first section. Readers who are also already familiar with the
role of credit expansion and fiduciary media in generating the
stock market and real estate bubbles should skip the second section
as well and proceed directly to the third section Evasion
of Responsibility for the Bubbles.
Credit
Expansion, Standard Money, and Fiduciary Media
Since the
mid-1990s, the United States has experienced two major financial
bubbles: a stock market bubble and a housing bubble. In both instances,
the bubble was inaugurated and sustained by a process of massive
credit expansion, i.e., the lending out of newly created money
by the banking system, operating with the sanction and support
of the countrys central bank, the Federal Reserve System.
The concept
of credit expansion rests on two further concepts: standard money
and fiduciary media. Standard money is money that is not a claim
to anything beyond itself. It is that which, when received, constitutes
payment. Under a gold standard, standard money is gold coin or
bullion. Under a gold standard, paper notes, which were claims
to gold, payable on demand, were not standard money. They were
merely a claim to standard money, which was physical gold. The
dollar was defined as a physical quantity of gold of a definite
fineness, i.e., approximately one-twentieth of an ounce of gold
nine-tenths fine.
Today in
the United States, standard money is the irredeemable paper currency
issued by the United States government. That money is not a claim
to anything beyond itself. Receipt of such money today constitutes
final payment.
The total
of standard money today is the sum of the outstanding quantity
of paper currency plus the checking deposit liabilities of the
Federal Reserve System. Since the Federal Reserve has the power
to print as much currency as it likes, and thus is always in a
position to redeem its outstanding checking deposits in currency,
these checking deposit liabilities can properly be viewed as a
kind of different denomination of the paper currency, much like
hundred dollar bills that are to be redeemed for notes of smaller
denomination, or one-dollar bills that are to be redeemed for
notes of larger denomination. Thus the total supply of standard
money is to be understood as the sum of the supply of paper currency
in the narrower sense plus the checking deposit liabilities of
the central bank.
These two
magnitudes, currency plus checking deposit liabilities of the
central bank, when taken together, are known as the monetary
base.
In December
of 1994, the monetary base was $427.3 billion. In December of
1999, it was $608 billion. In December of 2007, it was $836.4
billion. In all years prior to 2008, the overwhelming portion
of the monetary base consisted of currency. For example, in December
of 2007, currency was $763.8 billion, while, as just noted, the
monetary base as a whole was $836.4 billion.
A portion
of the currency outstanding and a portion of the checking deposit
liabilities of the Federal Reserve constitute the reserves of
the banking system. These reserves are the standard money that
the banks possess and can use to meet the withdrawals of depositors
requesting currency. The reserves are also used to meet the demand
of other banks seeking to redeem net balances accruing in their
favor in the process of the clearing of checks.
In December
of 1994 such reserves were $61.36 billion; in 1999, they $41.7
billion; in December of 2007, they were $42.7 billion.
Normally,
as the overall quantity of money in the economic system increases,
bank reserves increase more or less in proportion. The fact that
reserves were almost one-third lower in December of 1999 than
in December of 1994, and then barely higher in December of 2007
than they were in December of 1999, despite major increases in
the quantity of money over these years, is a major anomaly. It
reflects the long-standing, deliberate policy of the Federal Reserve
System of reducing and even altogether eliminating reserve requirements.
As a recent
scholarly paper noted,
The Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control
Act of 1980 had begun phasing out interest-rate ceilings on deposits
and modified reserve requirements in complex ways. Combined with
subsequent administrative deregulation under Greenspan through
January 1994, these changes left all the financial liabilities
that M2 adds to M1 savings deposits, small time deposits,
money market deposit accounts, and retail money market mutual
fund shares utterly free of reserve requirements and allowed
banks to reclassify many M1 checking accounts as M2 savings deposits.
M2 and the broader measures became quasi-deregulated aggregates
with no legal link to the size of the monetary base.1
The concept
of standard money underlies the concepts of fiduciary media and
credit expansion. As I wrote in Capitalism,
Fiduciary media are transferable claims to standard money,
payable by the issuer on demand, and accepted in commerce as the
equivalent of standard money, but for which no standard money actually
exists.2
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The overwhelmingly
greater part of our money supply today consists of fiduciary media
in the form of checking deposits of one kind or another. For example,
as of December 2007, the total money supply of the United States,
i.e., currency plus bank deposits of all kinds that are subject
to the writing of checks, including the making of payments by debit
card, was $6901.9 billion;3 at the
same time, the monetary base was $836.4 billion. Accordingly, the
amount of fiduciary media in the United States was equal to the
difference, which was $6065.5 billion. This was the sum of money
representing transferable claims to standard money, payable on demand
by the various banks that issued them, accepted in commerce as the
equivalent of standard money, but for which no standard money actually
existed.
The only
standard money that the banks had available with which to redeem
their checking deposits was $42.7 billion in standard money reserves.
These $42.7 billion of reserves were the standard-money backing
for a total of $6108.2 billion checking deposits, i.e., deposits
equal to the sum of $42.7 billion + $6065.5 billion. To say the
same thing in different words, there was full, 100 percent standard-money
backing for $42.7 billion of deposits, and no standard-money backing
whatever for $6065.5 billion of deposits, which latter constituted
fiduciary media.
The quantity
of fiduciary media in existence at any time represents the cumulative
total of all of the credit expansion that has taken place in the
countrys money supply up to that time. It represents the
sum of all of the loans and investments that the banking system
has made based on the foundation of the creation of money out
of thin air. The difference between the amount of outstanding
fiduciary media at two points in time represents the credit expansion
that has taken place in the interval.
The simplest
way in which to understand the process of the creation of fiduciary
media and credit expansion is to imagine a deposit of standard
money in the form of currency into a checking account. After making
the deposit, the depositor has just as much spendable money in
his possession as he did before making it. Instead of a roll of
currency, he has a checking balance of equal amount. Either way,
he can spend the same amount of money. Before making his deposit,
he would have had to peel off bills from his roll in order to
make payments. Now, instead, he writes checks and makes payment
by check. Instead of his roll of currency diminishing each time
he peels off a bill, his checking balance diminishes each time
he writes a check. In the one case, the spendable money in his
possession is his roll of currency; in the other it is his checking
balance.
Up to this
point in our imaginary scenario, there has been no creation of
fiduciary media and no credit expansion. The money supply does
not exceed the quantity of standard money. In the one case, before
making his deposit, the standard money is in the possession of
an individual. After the individual makes his deposit and holds
money in the form of a checking balance, the same quantity of
standard money is in the possession of his bank. Under such conditions,
the quantity of money in the economic system is equal to the quantity
of standard money held either by individuals as holdings of currency,
or by banks as reserves against the checking deposits of those
individuals and equal in amount to the size of those checking
deposits.
Fiduciary
media and credit expansion enter the picture insofar as the banks
in which standard money has been deposited proceed to lend out
the standard money that has been deposited with them. To the extent
they do this, borrowers from the banks now have spendable money
in their possession which is in addition to the spendable money
in the hands of the banks checking depositors. There has
been a creation of new and additional money, which new and additional
money represents fiduciary media and an equivalent expansion of
credit.
The currency
which the banks lend out can easily, and almost certainly will,
be deposited. When it is deposited, the same process of the creation
of fiduciary media and credit expansion can be repeated. Indeed,
under the conditions largely created by Greenspan, checking deposits
came to stand in a multiple of more than 160 times the standard
money reserves of the banks. In December of 2007, there were $6901.9
billion of checking deposits backed by a mere $42.7 billion of
standard money reserves.
In modern
conditions, of course, banks do not lend currency. Rather, they
simply create new and additional checking deposits for their borrowers.
When the borrowers spend those checking deposits by writing checks
of their own, the people who receive the checks in turn deposit
them in their banks. Those banks then call upon the banks that
have created the deposits, for payment. This entails a shifting
of standard money reserves from the one set of banks to the other.
To the extent
that all banks have engaged in the process of checking deposit
creation, the reserve balances due from any bank may be more or
less closely matched by the reserve balances due it from other
banks. This is because the checks written by its customers to
the customers of other banks will be more or less closely matched
by checks written by the customers of other banks to customers
of this bank. In such a case the only movement of reserves will
be the net amount due in the clearing.
From December
of 1994, prior to the start of the stock market bubble, to December
of 2005, shortly before the end of the housing bubble, the quantity
of fiduciary media increased from $1.91 trillion to $4.93 trillion.
This represented a compound annual rate of increase in excess
of 9 percent over the eleven-year period. From December of 1999,
shortly before the start of the housing bubble, to December of
2005, the amount of fiduciary media increased from $3.25 trillion
to $4.93 trillion, which represented a compound annual rate of
increase of 7.21 percent.
The increase
in the quantity of fiduciary media over the period as a whole
is significant, not just the increase that took place over the
period of the housing bubble itself. This is because fiduciary
media created in the years prior to the housing bubble played
an important role in financing that bubble. And the same was true
of the role of fiduciary media created in the years prior to the
stock market bubble in financing that bubble.
As interest
rates rose in the latter parts of these two bubbles, vast checking
balances created earlier, that had been held as though they were
savings accounts, and on which a modest rate of interest was being
earned, were drawn into the financing of stock market purchases
in the one case and housing loans in the other. The transformation
of these deposits from de facto savings accounts into de facto
checking accounts was based on the combination of their having
had the potential for check writing all along, together with a
rise in the rates of return that could be earned by switching
their use from a vehicle for savings into a vehicle for buying
investments. The rise in rates of return in the one case was in
the gains to be had from stock market investment; in the other,
in rates of interest on various vehicles for financing housing
and real estate purchases.
It might
be thought that what I have said of the transformation of deposits
on which checks could be written would largely apply also to genuine
savings deposits, on which checks could not be written. For the
rise in rates of return would provide the same incentive to move
funds from them into more lucrative investments. This is true.
But nevertheless, there is a crucial difference.
Before the
savings deposits can be spent, they must first be converted into
checking deposits. All of the checking deposits that come under
the heading of M1, most notably those held at commercial banks,
require that those banks hold significant reserves, typically
in an amount equal to 10 percent of a banks total deposits
in excess of $44 million. Savings deposits in contrast have not
required the holding of any reserves whatever for many years,
and even when they did require the holding of reserves, it was
at a far lower percentage than applied to checking deposits.
As a result,
any movement of funds from savings into checking accounts entails
an increase in required reserves. To obtain these additional reserves,
banks must sell various assets, the effect of which would be to
reduce their prices and to raise their effective yields to the
new buyers. Unless the Federal Reserve intervened to provide new
and additional reserves equal to the increase in the need for
reserves, the effect would be not only a rise in interest rates
but a general tendency toward a contraction of credit. This last
would result from the loss of reserves by banks whose reserves
were already at the bare minimum necessary to conduct operations.
In contrast,
the use of savings held in accounts with already existing check-writing
privileges to make purchases does not require any additional reserves.
The problem of a need for additional reserves arises only insofar
as a net movement of funds might occur, through the clearing,
from checking accounts of a kind requiring no reserves to checking
deposits of a kind that do require reserves. Checking deposits
with no legal reserve requirements are money-market deposit accounts
and retail and institutional money market funds. Checks drawn
on such accounts and then deposited in other such accounts do
not require any additional reserves. Additional reserves are required
only when and to the extent that checks drawn on such accounts
and deposited in conventional checking accounts exceed the volume
of checks coming from conventional checking accounts and deposited
in such accounts.
To the extent
that the Federal Reserve is willing to supply the necessary additional
reserves to meet the greater need for reserves arising from such
a movement of funds, all checking deposits come to stand on an
equal footing as sources of spendable money. And so too do savings
deposits that end up being convertible into checking deposits
with no net increase in the scarcity of reserves because the Fed
has enlarged the supply of reserves to the same or even greater
extent than the increase in the amount of reserves required as
the result of such conversion.
Consistent
with the fact cited earlier that total reserves were substantially
lower in December of 1999 than they had been in December of 1994
and grew only slightly from December of 1999 to December of 2007,
it must be pointed out that additional reserves can be supplied
by the Fed by means of its reducing or eliminating reserve requirements
at various points in the banking system. Thus, for example, when
the Fed eliminated the requirement that once existed that a 3
percent reserve be held against savings deposits, all of the reserves
previously held to meet that requirement became equivalent to
a supply of new and additional reserves of that same amount.
The same
was true when the Fed allowed commercial banks on weekends and
holidays to sweep substantial parts of their outstanding
checking deposits into types of accounts that did not require
reserves. This too made a substantial portion of already existing
reserves the equivalent of new and additional reserves. Indeed,
the amount of such new and additional reserves constituted such
an excess of reserves above the now diminished reserve requirements,
that the Fed was obliged to reduce the outstanding amount of reserves
by means of resorting to open-market operations in
which it sold some of its holdings of government securities in
exchange for newly excess reserves.
The Stock
Market and Real Estate Bubbles
Credit expansion
was the source of the funds that fueled both the stock market
and the real estate bubbles. In the case of the stock market bubble,
credit expansion provided funds for the purchase of stocks. The
sellers of the stocks then used the far greater part of their
proceeds to purchase other stocks, whose sellers did likewise.
In this way, the new and additional money created by credit expansion
traveled from one set of stocks to another, raising the prices
of the great majority of them. It continued to do this so long
as the credit expansion went on at a sufficient rate.
Ultimately,
a sufficient rate would have had to be an accelerating rate. This
is because rising share prices resulted in people feeling richer
and thus believing themselves able to afford more luxury goods.
It also led to a stepped up demand for physical capital goods
by firms coming into possession of the new and additional money
by virtue of sales of stock of their own. The issuance of such
stock and use of the proceeds to finance the purchase of physical
capital goods was encouraged by the fact that the rise in stock
prices made it more and more attractive in comparison with acquiring
capital goods through the purchase of stocks in other companies.
Thus, an
important later effect of the credit expansion was a tendency
for funds to be withdrawn from the stock market, for the purchase
of luxury consumers goods and also of physical capital goods.
To offset this withdrawal of funds, more rapid credit expansion
would have been necessary.
When, instead
of an acceleration of the credit expansion, there was a diminution
in its rate, the basis of the markets rise was doubly undercut.
Since the funds provided by credit expansion had come to represent
an important part of the demand for stocks, the reduction in credit
expansion constituted a reduction in that demand. Coupled with
the outflows of funds just described, the result was that share
prices began to plummet. Their fall was compounded by the unloading
of shares by people who had purchased them for no other reason
than their expectation of a continuing rise in stock prices.
The more
recent, real estate bubble originated in the Feds panic-response
to the collapse of the stock market bubble it had caused earlier.
To overcome the effects of that collapse, it progressively reduced
its target federal-funds rate, i.e., the rate of interest banks
pay one another on the lending and borrowing of funds that qualify
as reserves against commercial-bank checking deposits. In this
way, it launched a new and more momentous credit expansion.
For the three
years 20012004, the Federal Reserve created as much new and
additional money in the form of additional bank reserves as was
necessary to drive and then keep the federal-funds rate below 2
percent. And from July of 2003 to June of 2004, it drove and kept
it even further down, at approximately 1 percent.
The new and
additional money created by the banking system on the foundation
of these new and additional reserves appeared in the loan market
as a new and additional supply of loanable funds. The effect was
a reduction in interest rates across the board.
Because interest
is a major determinant of monthly mortgage payments, the fall in
interest rates made home ownership appear substantially less expensive.
As a result, a great surge in the demand for mortgage loans and
in the purchase of homes took place. Instead of pouring into the
stock market as in the previous bubble, the funds created by credit
expansion now poured into the real estate market and drove up the
prices of homes and commercial real estate rather than the prices
of common stocks.
In the stock
market bubble and even more so in the real estate bubble there
was both large scale overconsumption and malinvestment. These
are the two leading features of booms as explained by the monetary
theory of the trade cycle developed by Ludwig von Mises. In both
cases, the rise in the price of major assets most notably,
stocks and homes respectively led people to believe that
they were richer and could thus afford to consume more. In both
cases, particular branches of industry were greatly overexpanded
relative to the rest of the economic system, resulting in a subsequent
major loss of capital. In the stock market bubble, the malinvestment
was mainly in such things as the dot.com enterprises
that later went broke. In the real estate bubble, it was in housing
and commercial real estate.
Evasion
of Responsibility for the Bubbles
Credit expansion
is what was responsible for both the stock market and the real
estate bubbles. Since its establishment in 1913 and certainly
since the expansion of its powers in World War I, responsibility
for credit expansion itself has rested with the Federal Reserve
System. The Fed is the source of new and additional reserves for
the banking system and determines how much in checking deposits
the reserves can support. It has the power to inaugurate and sustain
booms and to cut them short. It launched and sustained the stock
market and real estate bubbles. It had the power to avoid both
of these bubbles and then to stop them at any time. It chose to
launch and sustain them rather than to avoid or stop them.
To be responsible
for a bubble and its aftermath is to be responsible for a mass
illusion of wealth, accompanied by the misdirection of investment,
overconsumption, and loss of capital, and the poverty and suffering
of millions that follows. This is what can be traced to the doorstep
of the Federal Reserve System and those in charge of it. It is
destruction on a scale many times greater than that wrought by
Bernard Madoff, the swindler who first made his clients believe
they were growing rich, only to cause them ultimately a loss of
more than $50 billion. Madoff is one of the most justly hated
individuals in the United States.
In contrast
to the $50 billion of losses caused by Madoff, the losses caused
by the Federal Reserve System and those in charge of it amount
to trillions of dollars, probably to more than $10 trillion if
the stock and real estate bubbles are taken together. Instead
of affecting thousands of people as in the case of Madoff, tens
of millions have been made to suffer hardship. Indeed, practically
everyone has been harmed to some extent by what the Federal Reserve
has done: the owners of stocks that have plunged, pensioners,
the unemployed and their families, towns and cities suffering
the consequences of business failures and plant closings.
It is difficult
to imagine living with the knowledge that one is personally responsible
for such massive destruction. Such knowledge might easily drive
someone to suicide or at least to some means, such as drink or
drugs, of not having to allow it into consciousness.
Alan Greenspan,
who was Chairman of the Federal Reserves Board of Governors
from 1987 to 2006, the period encompassing both bubbles, is clearly
the single individual most responsible for the bubbles. The present
Chairman, Ben Bernanke, also bears substantial responsibility, though
not to the same extent as Greenspan. While Chairman only since January
of 2006, Bernanke has been a member of the Federal Reserve Board
since 2002. Thus he was present in a major policy-making position
during most of the housing bubble and crucial years leading up to
it.
Neither Greenspan
nor Bernanke have resorted to drink or drugs to conceal their
responsibility from themselves. Instead they have resorted to
specious claims about the cause of the bubbles, the housing bubble
in particular.
One can read
through their widely disseminated public statements and not find
a single explicit reference to credit expansion and fiduciary
media, nor to malinvestment and overconsumption. To avoid recognition
of any need to discuss these phenomena, Greenspan seems to have
wiped his mind clean of all knowledge of how Federal Reserve interest-rate
policy affects interest rates in the economic system.
In what appears
to be his closest reference to credit expansion, he wrote, in an
article in The Wall Street Journal of March 11, 2009:
There
are at least two broad and competing explanations of the origins
of this crisis. The first is that the "easy money"
policies of the Federal Reserve produced the U.S. housing bubble
that is at the core of today's financial mess.
The second,
and far more credible, explanation agrees that it was indeed
lower interest rates that spawned the speculative euphoria.
However, the interest rate that mattered was not the federal-funds
rate, but the rate on long-term, fixed-rate mortgages. Between
2002 and 2005, home mortgage rates led U.S. home price change
by 11 months. This correlation between home prices and mortgage
rates was highly significant, and a far better indicator of
rising home prices than the fed-funds rate.
This should
not come as a surprise.
After
all, the prices of long-lived assets have always been determined
by discounting the flow of income or imputed services by interest
rates of the same maturities as the life of the asset. No one,
to my knowledge, employs overnight interest rates such
as the fed-funds rate to determine the capitalization
rate of real estate, whether it be an office building or a single-family
residence.
In these
passages Greenspan invents a version of the opposition to Federal
Reservesponsored credit expansion that no opponent of credit
expansion or easy money has ever held. No opponent
of credit expansion has ever claimed that reductions in the federal-funds
rate need directly affect long-term interest rates. To the contrary,
the significance of reductions in the federal-funds rate is that
what is required to bring them about in the actual market for
those funds is an increase in member-bank reserves. The increase
in those reserves is then the foundation of credit expansion to
a vast multiple of the additional reserves. That credit expansion
is what then serves to lower long-term interest rates, such as
mortgage rates.
The way the
process works is as follows. To actually achieve the lower federal-funds
rate that it announces as its target, the Federal Reserve goes
into the market and buys government securities from banks or the
customers of banks. It pays for those securities by means of the
creation of new and additional standard money. When the Fed purchases
securities from banks, the banks directly and immediately have
equivalently more reserves in their possession. When it purchases
securities from the customers of banks, the banks gain equivalently
more reserves as soon as those customers deposit the checks they
have received that are drawn by the Fed on the Fed. These checks
are then forwarded to the Fed and the reserve accounts of the
banks in question are equivalently increased.
Depending
on the amount of their increase, the immediate effect of the additional
reserves is to reduce or eliminate deficiencies in the required
reserves of some, many, or all of the banks that have had such
deficiencies, to replace deficiencies of reserves with excesses
of reserves, and to increase the excess reserves of some, many,
or all of the banks that have had excess reserves. The effect
of this in turn is to reduce the demand for federal funds, i.e.,
funds that qualify as reserves, while increasing their supply.
This combination is what brings down the federal-funds rate in
the market for federal funds.
What is far
more significant is that the creation of new and additional excess
reserves by the Fed reserves beyond the amount legally
required to be held places the banking system in a position
in which it can expand the supply of checking deposits and thus
fiduciary media to a multiple of the additional reserves. And
thanks largely to Mr. Greenspan that multiple came to be enormous.
By December of 2005, it exceeded 126 times. Two years later, it
exceeded 160 times.
Thus for
each dollar of additional excess reserves created, a credit expansion
was made possible on the order of a vast multiple. The new and
additional fiduciary media corresponding to the credit expansion
were the source of the funds for stock purchases in the stock
market bubble and for housing and commercial real estate purchases
in the housing bubble. Their pouring into the home mortgage market
was what drove down mortgage interest rates. Between December
of 1999 and December of 2005, almost $1.7 trillion of new and
additional fiduciary media were created and lent out.
As market
interest rates started rising in the second half of 2004 and then
through 2005, increasing amounts of deposits earning a modest
rate of interest and on which checks could be written, came to
be used more and more as checking accounts rather than savings
accounts. They were drawn into the spending stream in response
to the higher comparative rates of return that could be earned
through investment in securities. This allowed the life of the
housing bubble to be extended until 2006.
The Saving
Glut Argument
Along with
denying the causal role of Federal Reserve expansionary monetary
policy in the housing bubble, Greenspan advances the claim, greatly
elaborated by Bernanke, that what was actually responsible for
the bubble was an excess of global saving. He argues in his Wall
Street Journal article that
[T]he presumptive
cause of the world-wide decline in long-term rates was the tectonic
shift in the early 1990s by much of the developing world from
heavy emphasis on central planning to increasingly dynamic, export-led
market competition. The result was a surge in growth in China
and a large number of other emerging market economies that led
to an excess of global intended savings relative to intended capital
investment. That ex ante excess of savings propelled global long-term
interest rates progressively lower between early 2000 and 2005.
In a series
of lectures beginning in March of 2005 and continuing into the
current year, Bernanke elaborates on this claim. At a lecture
given at the Bundesbank in Berlin, Germany, on September 11, 2007,
titled Global Imbalances: Recent Developments and Prospects,
he argued that stepped up saving in developing countries was largely
responsible for the substantial expansion of the current
account deficit in the United States, the equally impressive rise
in the current account surpluses of many emerging-market economies,
and a worldwide decline in long-term real interest rates.
(For the benefit of non-technical readers, the current account
balance encompasses the difference between exports and imports
both of goods and services, the difference between incomes earned
abroad and incomes paid to abroad, plus the difference between
remittances from and to abroad.)
These developments,
he held, could be explained, in part, by the emergence of
a global saving glut, driven by the transformation of many
emerging-market economies notably, rapidly growing East
Asian economies and oil-producing countries from net borrowers
to large net lenders on international capital markets.4
In a speech
delivered on April 9 of this year at Morehouse College in Atlanta,
Bernanke stressed that the net inflow of foreign saving
to the United States, which was about 1-1/2 percent of our national
output in 1995, reached about 6 percent of national output in
2006 an amount equal to about $825 billion in today's dollars.
He then proceeded to blame the housing boom on this inflow of
foreign savings. Financial institutions, he declared,
reacted to the surplus of available funds by competing aggressively
for borrowers, and, in the years leading up to the crisis, credit
to both households and businesses became relatively cheap and
easy to obtain. One important consequence was a housing boom in
the United States, a boom that was fueled in large part by a rapid
expansion of mortgage lending.
Thus, according
to Bernanke, it was not credit expansion or anything that he and
the Federal Reserve System and Mr. Greenspan were responsible
for, but the inflow of foreign savings. That inflow, representing
a global saving glut, was responsible for the bubble
and its aftermath.
Bernanke
uses the expression saving glut repeatedly: 9 times
in his lecture at the Bundesbank in September of 2007, 11 times
in his lecture at the Virginia Association of Economics in March
of 2005, and 10 times in his Homer Jones Lecture in St.
Louis in April of 2005. Despite his constant repetition of the
claim, it turns out to have absolutely no substance. Nowhere is
the existence of anything remotely approaching a saving glut in
any way substantiated.
The Non-Existence
of a Saving Glut
The very
notion of a saving glut is absurd, practically on its face. As
I wrote in Capitalism:
Before the scarcity of capital
could be overcome, capital
would have to be accumulated sufficient to enable the 85 percent
of the world that is not presently industrialized to come up to
the degree of capital intensiveness of the 15 percent of the world
that is industrialized. Within the industrialized countries, capital
would have to be accumulated sufficient to enable every factory,
farm, mine, and store to increase its degree of capital intensiveness
to the point presently enjoyed only by the most capital-intensive
establishments, and, at the same time, to enable all establishments
to raise the standard of capital intensiveness still further,
to the point where no further reduction in costs of production
or improvement in the quality of products could be achieved by
any greater availability of capital
. 5
Long before
such a point could ever be reached, time preference would put
an end to further increases in the degree of capital intensiveness.
It is doubly
absurd to believe that the source of a saving glut would be precisely
countries possessing very little capital compared to the United
States and other industrialized countries. But that is what Bernanke
claims. He claims that countries such as Thailand, China, Russia,
Nigeria, and Venezuela are the source of the alleged saving glut.6
There are
further theoretical considerations that argue specifically against
any form of saving glut being responsible for the
housing bubble.
First, if
saving had been responsible, and not credit expansion and the
increase in the quantity of money, then the additional saving
taking place in the countries providing it, would have been accompanied
by a reduction in consumer spending in those countries. People
would have had to spend less for consumption in those countries,
in part, in order to make available funds for additional spending
on capital goods that were exported to the United States. Such
export of capital goods to the US would not have fueled a boom
here. To the contrary, it would have resulted in lower prices
of capital goods in the US. Only the portion of funds saved that
was used to finance purchases within the US could have contributed
to any higher prices of capital goods and land in the US. And,
of course, whatever rise in the prices of capital goods and land
that might have taken place in the US would have tended to be
matched by a fall in the prices of consumers goods in the
countries that had stepped up their saving. The only way that
the demand for capital goods and land could rise without the demand
for consumers goods falling would be on the strength of
an increase in the quantity of money and the total, overall volume
of spending in the economic system.7
Indeed, the
fact that in the absence of an increase in the quantity of money
and volume of spending in the economic system, shifts in spending
serve to reduce prices as much as increase them has a parallel
in the further fact that increases in the relative size of some
of the countries in the worlds economy imply equivalent
decreases in the relative size of other countries in the worlds
economy. In the absence of an increase in the quantity of money
and volume of spending, growth in the relative size of the economies
of many Asian countries would not by itself be sufficient for
greater saving in those countries serving to increase global spending
for capital goods. For that greater spending would be accompanied
by reduced spending for capital goods in other countries, i.e.,
countries that were already in the category of developed economies
and now had to yield some portion of their previous relative size.
In the present
instance, what this means is that greater spending for capital
goods and land in the US, financed by saving in parts of Asia,
would be accompanied by less spending for capital goods in the
US (and possibly elsewhere) financed by saving in the US or financed
by saving elsewhere in the world. If spending for capital goods
financed by saving in Asia is not accompanied by reduced spending
for capital goods financed by saving elsewhere, the only ultimate
explanation is an increase in the quantity of money and volume
of spending in the worlds economy. Of course the source
of such an increase in todays conditions is none other than
the Federal Reserve System.
Second, contrary
to popular understanding, when saving is divorced from the increase
in the quantity of money and volume of spending, and takes place
without such increase, it does not tend to grow larger from year
to year. Nor does consumer spending tend to decrease from year
to year. And thus more saving would not serve to raise the prices
of capital goods or land from one year to the next. Its effect
would essentially be limited to a discrete, one-time only increase.8
Yet for the prices of capital goods and land to rise from one
year to the next on the strength of an increase in the demand
for capital goods and land based on an increase in saving, the
increase in saving would have to become progressively larger from
year to year. And this would mean that the demand for consumers
goods would have to become progressively smaller from year to
year.
For example, imagine that at the expense of an equal fall in the
demand for consumers goods, the demand for capital goods
rose by some given amount, say, 100. This 100 can represent however
many billions or hundreds of billions of dollars as may be required
to make it realistic in terms of present spending levels. In such
circumstances, there would be nothing present that would make
the prices of capital goods or land any higher in the second and
later years of 100 of additional such spending than in the first
year.
Indeed, as
the years wore on, the increases in production achieved by a greater
supply of capital goods would start reducing prices, including
the prices of capital goods themselves, as the supply of capital
goods itself was increased on the foundation of a general increase
in production. Even land prices would fall to the extent that
improvements in the supply of capital goods permitted the adoption
of methods of production that allowed the economical use of previously
submarginal land or so increased the output per unit of land as
to make part of its supply redundant.
In circumstances
of an unchanged supply of money and demand for money for holding,
each act of greater saving and accompanying greater expenditure
on capital goods operates in a manner analogous to the relationship
between force and acceleration in the physical world. In the physical
world, in the conditions of a friction-free environment, a single
application of force to an object imparts continuous motion at
a constant velocity. Similarly, in the economic world, in the
conditions of an unchanged quantity of money and volume of spending,
each act of reduced expenditure for consumers goods and
increased expenditure for capital goods, causes the economic system
to adopt a greater relative concentration on the production of
capital goods and a reduced relative concentration on the production
of consumers goods. This produces an inertial effect on
capital accumulation.
The first
result of the greater relative concentration on the production
of capital goods is a greater production of capital goods, alongside
a smaller production of consumers goods. These additional
capital goods, however, obtained on the foundation of additional
saving, are the basis of an increase in the ability to produce
both consumers goods and further capital goods. That is
to say, the additional capital goods make possible a general increase
in production, an increase in the production of consumers
goods and a further increase in the production and supply of capital
goods as well. The process of an increasing supply both of consumers
goods and capital goods, based on the foundation of a single fall
in consumption and increase in saving, can go on indefinitely
if it is accompanied by further scientific and technological progress.
In these circumstances, a further fall in the demand for consumers
goods and rise in the demand for capital goods would be analogous
to a further application of force to an object and would result
in an acceleration of the increase in production.
A further
point must be mentioned here. And that pertains to the durability
of capital goods and its implications for capital accumulation,
saving, and spending. Thus, if the average life of the capital
goods in our example of 100 of additional spending for capital
goods were, say, 10 years, then a diminishing process of saving
would go on for 10 years with no further fall in the demand for
consumers goods nor rise in the demand for capital goods.
Net saving and equivalent net investment in the economic system
would take place in a pattern 100, 90, 80,
10, as the 100
of additional spending for such capital goods was accompanied
by successive increases in annual depreciation charges. The additional
depreciation charges would be 10 in the year following the first
years expenditure of an additional 100 for such capital
goods. In the next year, when there were two such batches of capital
goods, depreciation would be 20. At the end of the tenth year,
the depreciation charges on ten such batches of capital goods
would be 100, and net saving and net investment would disappear,
unless, of course, there were a further decline in consumption
expenditure and increase in demand for capital goods.
What is particularly
important to realize here is that the net saving of years 2 through
10 would not serve at all to raise the demand for capital goods
and land nor their prices, but would contribute to the supply
of capital goods being larger, production in general consequently
being greater, and prices in general, including the prices of
capital goods, being lower as a result. Such results, and those
of the process of saving and capital accumulation in general that
were described a moment ago, cannot be reconciled with the conditions
of a bubble. They should not be cited as the basis of explaining
a bubble.
Third, if
somehow saving were responsible for the housing bubble, why did
it suddenly collapse? Why did people suddenly stop saving and
stop making funds available for the purchase of homes? Obviously,
the explanation was that the bubble did not depend on saving but
on credit creation and its acceleration and that when the ability
to create sufficiently more credit came to an end, the props supporting
the bubble were removed and it collapsed.
Fourth, if
saving were responsible for the bubble, why have banks and countless
other firms found themselves confronting an acute lack of capital?
Saving provides new and additional capital. How can it be that
an alleged process of saving has resulted in widespread major
capital deficiencies? This situation of insufficient capital is
the result of malinvestment and overconsumption, which are the
consequences of credit expansion, not saving.
Fifth, if
saving had been responsible for the increase in spending on capital
goods and land, the rate of profit would have modestly fallen
from the very beginning, and continued its fall until net saving
came to an end. It would not have risen, let alone risen dramatically,
as it did during the bubble.9
This is the
implication of the discussion, above in this section, of the second
reason why saving was not responsible for the bubble. In particular
it is the implication of the example of 100 more of spending for
capital goods financed by 100 of saving derived from 100 less
of spending for consumers goods. In that example, in which
there is no increase in the quantity of money or total volume
of spending, the global economic system would have had the same
total aggregate business sales revenues, with the sales revenues
coming from the sale of consumers goods diminished by the
amount of saving, and those coming from the sale of capital goods
equivalently increased. At the same time, however, it would have
had a tendency toward a rise in the aggregate costs of production
deducted from those sales revenues.
The rise
in costs would have been the result of such things as additional
depreciation charges on the new and additional capital goods purchased,
or additional cost of goods sold following additional purchases
of materials and labor on account of inventory. In the example
of 100 more being spent for capital goods each year with an average
life of 10 years and accompanying depreciation charges in the
respective amounts of 10, 20,
, 100 in the 10 years following
the rise in demand for capital goods, aggregate profit in the
economic system would have been falling year by year by an amount
equal to the increase in depreciation.
A falling
aggregate amount of profit together with the increasing amount
of capital invested in the economic system, would have progressively
reduced the economy-wide average rate of profit. It would have
been a case of a falling amount-of-profit numerator divided by
a rising-amount-of-capital denominator.
Totally contrary
to what one would expect from these effects of a rise in saving,
the reality, of course, was a sharply higher average rate of profit
in the economic system so long as the bubble lasted. This can
be explained only on the foundation of credit expansion and an
expanding quantity of money and volume of spending, not on the
basis of saving.
If none of
these five reasons are sufficient to dispel the notion that a
saving glut was responsible for the bubble, then hopefully it
will be sufficient to point out that there simply was no saving
glut, but rather only a very modest rate of saving, a mere
trickle of saving. For it turns out that over the 13 year period
19942006, the rate of saving in the US, together with all
foreign saving entering the country in connection with deficits
in the current account, never exceeded 7 percent, and in 8 of
those 13 years was 3 percent or less. In 5 of those years it was
a mere, 1 or 2 percent. And what is of special significance is
that in the years of the housing bubble, 20022006, it was
especially low: 2 percent in 2002, 1 percent in both 2003 and
2004, 3 percent in 2005, and 4 percent in 2006.
To see this
result, it is necessary to begin by removing all fictional elements
in the reported amounts of domestic net saving and GDP. These
fictional amounts consist of various imputations.
The leading imputations that are relevant here are those that
arbitrarily convert what is in fact consumption expenditure into
investment expenditure. These have the effect of reducing reported
consumption and equivalently increasing reported saving.10,
11
The two most
important such imputations are these: 1) the treatment of the
purchase of single family homes that the buyer intends to occupy
and that thus will not be a source of any money revenue of income
to him, as though they were nonetheless income producing assets
and therefore represented an investment; 2) the treatment of government
expenditure for fixed assets such as buildings, as though it were
an investment expenditure rather than a consumption expenditure.
When such
imputations are removed from the calculation of net saving and
from GDP, the very modest extent of saving that has been going
on over the last decade or more is clearly shown. Indeed, since
2002, domestic net saving has been negative to the extent of several
hundred billion dollars each year.
The following
table describes the situation:

The table
has 6 columns. Column 1 lists the years 1994 through 2006, the
period encompassing both the stock market and the real estate
bubbles. Column 2 shows the current account deficit in those years.
This deficit is taken as representing the foreign savings coming
into the United States. (For this reason it is shown as a positive
number.) Column 3 shows net saving in the United States in those
years when such savings are calculated free of imputations. Column
4 is the sum of Columns 2 and 3. It shows total saving in the
United States as the sum of foreign saving entering the country
together with domestic saving. Column 5 is GDP year by year, with
all imputations removed. Column 6 is the sum of imputation-free
foreign and domestic saving divided by such GDP, presented in
decimal format.
The notion
that there was a saving glut behind the housing bubble is simply
a fiction. Its proponents could manufacture as much of a glut
as they like simply by reclassifying such things as expenditure
for automobiles, major appliances, furniture, and clothing as
investment expenditures, on the grounds that these goods too are
durable, like houses. That would equivalently reduce consumption
expenditure and increase reported saving in the economic system.
Current
Account Deficits as a By-Product of the Increase in the Quantity
of Money
Bernanke
and Greenspan et al. focus on deficits in the current account
as representing the counterpart of foreign saving and investment,
which they believe must be present to finance the deficits. There
is certainly a very close relationship between foreign saving
and investment on the one side and the financing of deficits in
the current account on the other. The following example may help
to highlight this relationship.
Thus imagine
Saudi Arabia back in the days when geologists had determined that
the country possessed vast oil reserves but before it had any
oil wells, pipelines, refineries, or facilities for the handling
of supertankers. Those things had yet to be built.
Now how could
those facilities be built? The only way was by means of the arrival
of shiploads of equipment and construction materials from Europe
and the United States. In addition, large quantities of various
consumers goods were required for the foreign engineers
and other workers who were required to carry out the construction.
All these goods coming into Saudi Arabia were imports of foreign
goods. But Saudi Arabia had hardly anything to export before its
ability to produce oil was developed. Thus, in the interval, there
was a massive excess of imports over exports. That excess represented
foreign investment in Saudi Arabia. Its physical form was all
of the facilities under construction and then, ultimately, the
completed facilities for producing oil.
Foreign investment
very often, perhaps most of the time, has this kind of close connection
to the existence of an excess of imports over exports and, more
broadly, an excess of outlays of all kinds on current account
over receipts of all kinds on current account. (As previously
explained, the balance on current account includes not only the
difference between the imports and exports of goods, but also
of services. In addition, it includes the difference between incomes
paid to abroad and incomes paid from abroad, and finally, the
difference between remittances to and from abroad.)
Nevertheless,
it should be realized that the essential, core concept of the
current account, namely, the so-called balance of trade, which
is the difference simply between the import and export of goods,
was developed long before the emergence of any significant international
investment. It was developed and employed by a school of writers
known as the mercantilists, who were current from the 16th to
the third quarter of the 18th Century, when the school was laid
to rest by Adam Smith.
The main
concern of the mercantilists was the accumulation of gold and
silver within the borders of their country and the prevention
of any loss of gold or silver by their country. Gold and silver
were the money of the day everywhere and, it was believed, needed
to be accumulated within the country in order to be available
if and when the government might need them, in order to finance
military operations outside the country or any other activities
in which circumstances might operate to draw precious metals away
from the country.
Inasmuch
as already by that time, most of the European countries had no
gold or silver mines within their territory, the only way they
could gain gold or silver was by means of the export of goods.
The import of goods was seen as constituting a loss of gold or
silver by the country. Accordingly, the goal of mercantilist policy
was to maximize exports while minimizing imports. That would allegedly
ensure the greatest possible accumulation of the precious metals
within the country.
Centuries
later, in the chapter On Foreign Trade in his Principles
of Political Economy and Taxation, Ricardo developed the principle
that the supply of the precious metals tends to be distributed
among the different countries essentially in proportion to the
relative size of their respective economies. He wrote: "Gold
and silver having been chosen for the general medium of circulation,
they are, by the competition of commerce, distributed in such
proportions amongst the different countries of the world as to
accommodate themselves to the natural traffic which would take
place if no such metals existed, and the trade between countries
were purely a trade of barter."
The operation
of this principle can, of course, be modified by the operation
of other principles working alongside it. Thus a country with
a relatively small economy, but with an exceptional reputation
for the security of property and the enforcement of contracts,
might well have a quantity of money within its borders far in
excess of what corresponded to the relative size of its economy.
By the same token, countries with larger economies but in which
property rights and the enforcement of contracts were in retreat,
could possess a proportion of the worlds money supply substantially
less than what corresponded to the relative size of its economy.
It follows
from Ricardos principle that countries with gold and silver
mines will experience a chronic excess of imports over exports.
The gold and silver that they mine cannot all be retained within
their borders. If they were retained, the country would have a
disproportionately large supply of the precious metals. This would
serve to raise prices in that country relative to prices abroad.
The effect would be an outflow of the precious metals until their
buying power at home did not fall short of their buying power
abroad by more than the costs of shipping them abroad.
Today, the
US dollar is in a position similar to that of gold under an international
gold standard. The dollar is a virtual world money not
completely, but substantially. The United States is the country
with the dollar mines. When dollars are created in
the US, a substantial portion of them will flow abroad. And this
applies not just to currency, but also to checking deposits and
all other short-term financial instruments easily convertible
to currency.
Most of the
dollars that flow abroad need not actually circulate
abroad but to a large extent serve as mere precautionary holdings
of money, and, to an important extent, as reserves for financial
institutions that create various moneys other than dollars. These
other moneys that are created on the foundation of additional
dollars circulate abroad.
Now the fact
that the United States compared to almost all other countries
in the world still has the most reliable protection of property
rights and enforcement of contracts, is responsible for the fact
that much or most of the money that flows abroad does
not in fact leave the country. Rather it passes into the ownership
of foreign individuals, firms, and governments who continue to
hold it within the United States.
The increase
in such foreign owned assets within the United States has the
appearance of foreign investment. Actually, it is nothing more
than the by-product of credit expansion and the increase in the
quantity of money within the United States.
There is
no genuine surge in foreign saving. There is domestic credit expansion
and money supply increase that serves to increase imports and
shift ownership of a substantial portion of the additional money
supply, and short-term claims to money, to foreigners.
Ironically,
Bernanke himself helps to confirm this interpretation of the increase
in the current account deficit. He says: First, the financial
crises that hit many Asian economies in the 1990s led to significant
declines in investment in those countries in part because of reduced
confidence in domestic financial institutions and to changes in
policies including a resistance to currency appreciation,
the determined accumulation of foreign exchange reserves, and
fiscal consolidation that had the effect of promoting current
account surpluses. (Bundesbank Lecture, Berlin, Germany,
September 11, 2007.)
What Bernanke
describes here is not any sudden increase in foreign saving but
rather decisions to change the way in which a portion of previously
accumulated savings are held, i.e., to hold them to a greater
extent in the form of US dollars and short-term claims to dollars.
In the same
passage, Bernanke presents a second reason for the alleged growth
in foreign savings, namely the sharp increase in the price of
oil that had taken place. He says, sharp increases in crude
oil prices boosted oil exporters' incomes by more than those countries
were able or willing to increase spending, thereby leading to
higher saving and current account surpluses.
Here, Bernanke
overlooks the role of credit expansion and the increase in the
quantity of money in bringing about the higher price of oil. He
also overlooks the effect of the higher price of oil on the real
incomes and ability to save of everyone who had to pay that higher
price.
The role
of credit expansion and the increase in the quantity of money
in causing the rise in oil prices was confirmed by the subsequent
plunge in oil prices once credit expansion was brought to an end
and appeared to be about to turn into massive credit contraction.
It has since been further confirmed by the recent rise in oil
prices following the growing belief that the governments
program of renewed credit expansion will be sufficient to eliminate
the danger of a financial collapse and will serve to maintain
and increase the demand for oil.
Net Saving
as a By-Product of the Increase in the Quantity of Money
My discussion
of the fallacy of a saving glut as being responsible for the housing
bubble and its aftermath would not be complete if I did not point
out that the continued existence of net saving is itself a by-product
of the increase in the quantity of money and volume of spending
in the economic system. In the absence of increases in the quantity
of money and volume of spending, economy-wide, aggregate net saving
would tend to disappear. It would cease when total accumulated
savings came to stand in a ratio to current incomes and consumption
that people judged to be sufficiently high that they had no further
need to make still greater relative provision for the future.
What keeps
net saving in existence is that the increase in the quantity of
money and volume of spending tends continually to raise incomes
and consumption in terms of money. In order to maintain any given
ratio of accumulated savings to a rising level of income and consumption,
it is necessary to increase the magnitude of accumulated savings.
At the same time, the increasing quantity of money provides the
financial means of spending more and more each year for capital
goods as well as consumers goods and for thus maintaining
the desired balance in the face of growing magnitudes of spending.
Thus it is
the increase in the quantity of money and the volume of spending
that it supports that is responsible for net saving continuing
in being. In the absence of the continuing increase in the quantity
of money, net saving would disappear, and capital accumulation
would take place simply by means of a continually increasing purchasing
power of the same capital funds. That growing purchasing power
would be created by the increase in the production and supply
of capital goods and the fall in prices of capital goods that
would result.
Summary
and Conclusion
The real
estate bubble, like the stock market bubble before it, was caused
by credit expansion. The credit expansion was instigated and sustained
by the Federal Reserve System, which could have aborted it at
any time but chose not to. As a result, the Federal Reserve System
and those in charge of it at during the real estate bubble bear
responsibility for major harm to tens of millions of Americans.
In order
to avoid having to accept this responsibility, a specious doctrine
has been advanced by Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke, the former
and present Chairman of the system, and others. That is the doctrine
of a global saving glut. Not credit expansion but
the saving glut was responsible, they claim.
The truth
is that time preference puts an end to further saving long before
it could outrun the uses for additional saving. This makes a saving
glut impossible. In addition, there are five major reasons why
saving could not have been responsible for the real estate bubble
in particular. First, if saving had been responsible, rather than
credit expansion and the increase in the quantity of money, there
would have been a corresponding decline in consumer spending in
the countries allegedly doing the saving. The fact is that there
was no such decline.
Second, saving
implies a growing supply of capital goods, more production, and
lower prices, including lower prices of capital goods and even
of land. These are results that are incompatible with the widespread
increases in prices typically found in a bubble.
Third, if
somehow saving had been responsible for the housing bubble, the
spending it financed would not suddenly have stopped. Such stoppage
is a consequence of the end of credit expansion and the revelation
of a lack of capital.
Fourth, if
large-scale saving rather than credit expansion had been present,
banks and other firms would have possessed more capital, not less.
They would not be in their present predicament of having inadequate
capital to carry on their normal operations. This situation of
insufficient capital is the result of malinvestment and overconsumption,
which are the consequences of credit expansion, not saving.
Fifth, in
the absence of increases in the quantity of money and overall
volume of spending in the economic system, saving also implies
an immediate tendency toward a fall in the economy-wide average
rate of profit. This is another result that is incompatible with
what is observed in a bubble or boom of any kind, which is surging
profits so long as the good times last.
Especially
noteworthy is the fact that in the real estate bubble, there simply
was no saving glut. In the 13-year period 19942006, the
rate of saving in the US, together with all foreign saving allegedly
entering the country in connection with deficits in the current
account, never exceeded 7 percent, and in 8 of those 13 years
was 3 percent or less.
What has
served to conceal how low the actual rate of saving has been is
the fact that major fictional items have been counted in saving,
which add hundreds of billions of dollars every year to its reported
amount. The most notable instance is that purchases of single
family homes that the buyers intend to occupy and that will thus
not be a source of any money revenue or income to them, are treated
as though they were nonetheless purchases of income producing
assets and therefore represented an investment. Similarly, government
spending on account of buildings and structures is treated as
investment. Such overstatement of investment correspondingly understates
consumption expenditure in the economic system. And when the artificially
reduced amount of consumption is subtracted from any given amount
of national income or GDP, saving appears to be equivalently larger.
The alleged
saving entering the American economy via deficits in its current
account is in fact largely not saving at all, but the by-product
of US credit expansion and money supply increase. Dollars today
are a virtual global money. And in conformity with Ricardos
principle concerning the distribution of the precious metals throughout
the world based on the relative size of the economies of the various
countries, most of the additions to the supply of dollars and
short-term claims to dollars cannot remain in the possession of
Americans but must gravitate into the ownership of foreigners.
This creates a deficit in the balance of trade and in the whole
of the so-called current account. While it may appear that increased
foreign holdings of dollars and short-term dollar-denominated
securities represent foreign investment, the truth is that much
or possibly even all of the alleged foreign saving entering the
United States is nothing other than a consequence of US credit
expansion and money supply increase.
Finally,
net saving itself, as a continuing phenomenon is nothing more
than a by-product of the increase in the quantity of money, in
that it would come to an end if the money supply were to stop
increasing.
The conclusion
to be drawn is that the housing bubble was indeed the product
of credit expansion, not a saving glut.
Notes
-
David R. Henderson and Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, Greenspans
Monetary Policy in Retrospect, Cato Institute Briefing Paper
109, Cato Institute, Washington, D.C., November 3, 2008, pp.
4f.
-
-
This figure is arrived at by taking the sum of M1, sweep accounts,
money market mutual fund accounts both retail and institutional,
and one half of savings deposits as the measure of money market
deposit accounts, the data for which are apparently otherwise
unavailable. The same procedure is used as the basis of all
other statements of the money supply or changes in the money
supply.
-
Italics in original.
-
Reisman, Capitalism, p. 57.
-
Homer
Smith Lecture, St. Louis, MO, April 14, 2005.
-
For a comprehensive explanation of the role of the quantity
of money in determining the volume of spending in the economic
system, see Reisman, Capitalism, chaps. 12 and 19.
-
For an explanation of the role of saving in capital accumulation,
see ibid., pp. 621642.
-
For a thoroughgoing discussion of the determinants of the rate
of profit and its relationship to saving and capital accumulation,
see ibid., chaps. 16 and 17.
-
For a comprehensive explanation of the distinction between capital
goods and consumers goods and investment or, better, productive
expenditure and consumption expenditure, see ibid., pp. 445456.
-
For a detailed critique of the imputed income doctrine, see
ibid., pp. 456459.
July
8, 2009
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, and is
the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2009 by George Reisman
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