The
Thrill Is Gone
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
Alan Greenspan is playing with fire. His recent lowering of the
federal funds rate by half a point suggests that he is unwilling
to allow the economy to settle into a recession, liquidating unwarranted
investment.
There’s only one problem with this strategy: sometimes, and probably
this time, a recession cannot be stopped. In any event, attempting
to forestall one creates even more problems that can end in utter
calamity.
If Greenspan had any sense or guts, he would hold the line on interest
rates, and permit the economy and the stock market to tank. The
screams would appear unbearable, but in 12 to 18 months the economy
would be back on a solid footing and prepared for real growth in
the future. This would also teach an important lesson to investors:
that they can’t count on the Fed’s printing presses to bail them
out.
But prodded by political considerations and deluded into believing
that he really is the Master of the Universe, Greenspan appears
to be pulling wildly at every lever at his disposal. He has the
power to create money, and right now he is using that power. What’s
more, this is not doing himself, George W., or the economy any good.
Wall Street responded to the half point decrease in the federal
funds rate by selling stocks at lower and lower prices the opposite
of what was supposed to happen. A financial sector addicted to cheap
credit is screaming at him that he is not going far enough. Print
money, they say, regardless of the consequences.
Those calling for more money expansion point to some very bleak
signs. Consumer and mortgage delinquencies are growing, as are corporate
bond defaults. Industrial production is falling. And, most pressingly,
$4.7 trillion has been lost on the stock market during the past
year. Investors, assured by their brokers and media commentators
that stocks are not risky and anyone who keeps a passbook savings
account is a boob, are shell shocked.
But if you think that printing money is the answer, here’s something
else to consider. Consumer prices in February rose at a rate well
above that forecasted. This follows reports that wholesale prices
are also starting to rise. And these increases are not just in one
or two sectors but across the board. If Greenspan keeps it up, this
is going to get worse and worse. A return of roaring inflation seems
like a remote possibility now but so did a stock market crash one
year ago.
A quick inflation primer: why do artificially lower interest rates
create inflation? Here’s how it works. The Fed lowers the rate it
charges its member banks for overnight loans, which then permits
banks themselves to lower rates for borrowers.
If banks find takers for the money, the effect is to create credit
that is unjustified by the pool of savings. Assuming no other changes,
this new money waters down the purchasing power of all existing
money. The banks and their connected interests are able to spend
the money before prices rise, while the consuming public gets stuck
with the bill down the line.
The effects of inflation are deadly for long-term growth. Inflationary
expectations can quickly take hold. Instead of saving, then, consumers
began to realize that they are far better off spending, that is,
getting rid of their cash before its purchasing power decreases.
These spending patterns further increase prices until a spiraling
upward begins to take effect.
What will the Fed do at that point? It can either slam on the brakes
and prompt a dramatic economic downturn, or it can guide us into
a hyper-inflationary environment. It turns out, however, that inflation
is the last thing anyone cares about right now.
Saving America’s mutual funds from further calamity is apparently
more important than forestalling wholesale robbery via inflation
of what is left of American savings. There are even signs of growing
inflation vogue. The Financial Times of London has called
on the Bank of Japan, for example, to pursue policies that "take
the risk" of "hyperinflation."
This is a shortsighted view, one that is as popular now as in the
1920s, when the business press couldn’t get enough of low interest
rates. Ludwig von Mises in 1928 identified this as a "mania
for low interest rates." "Every single fluctuation in
general business conditions the upswing to the peak of the wave
and the decline into the trough which follows is prompted by the
attempt of the banks of issue to reduce the loan rate and thus expand
the volume of circulation credit," he wrote.
Mises noted that people widely deplore both inflation and depression,
but very few see the connection between those events and the actions
of the central bank. That is why inflationist policies, such as
those being pushed by Greenspan, keep coming back again and again.
But as Mises said, if your prescription for downturns amounts to
nothing but printing money, the end result will always be "crisis
and depression."
Recessions are not natural disasters. They are the flipside to
an unwarranted economic boom brought about by unwise monetary policy
that feeds overinvestment in capital-goods industries. The thing
to do is grit your teeth and get through recessions, and, above
all, resist the temptation to pile error on top of error.
They
didn’t listen to Mises in 1928. But Greenspan has the chance now
to reverse himself, let the economy swallow a downturn, and get
on a sound footing for the future. Forget the boom times. Any Fed
chairman looks good when stocks are rising. Now is the time of testing.
March
23, 2001
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He also edits a daily
news site, LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2001 LewRockwell.com
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