Paul
Krugman Versus Reality
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Dollar
Bulls Beware
In his latest
weekly New York Times column, Nobel Prize-winning economist
Paul Krugman put forward arguments that were so nonsensical that
the award committee should ask for its medal back.
Recent rhetoric
from Washington has put the economic relationship between the U.S.
and China squarely on the front burner, and Krugman is demanding
that we crank up the flame. This week 130 members of Congress sent
a letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner demanding that the
Obama administration designate China as a "currency manipulator."
Following that, a bipartisan group of senators introduced a bill
that looks to force the Obama administration's hand. For its own
part, Beijing invites criticism by continuing to deny its utterly
obvious currency agenda.
As these tensions
escalate, most economists urge Washington to tread lightly because
of the negative fallout for America if China were to begin selling
its enormous cache of U.S. Treasury bonds. Krugman pushes back,
asserting that the U.S. risks little by playing hardball, and that
China has more to lose. He asserts that a Chinese decision to end
its purchases of U.S. Treasury debt would make only a marginal impact
on long-term interest rates. Did you hear that Stockholm?
According to
Krugman, our secret weapon of economic invincibility is the Fed's
ability to print dollars endlessly. If China were to foolishly decide
to attack us by selling our debt, the Fed could simply step in and
buy the excess with newly printed greenbacks. (In other words, Krugman
sees no difference between funding the debt and monetizing it. See
my latest video blog on the subject.) For Krugman, China would gain
little from such an attack, but would lose the ability to export
to its best customer and suffer severe losses in the value of its
dollar holdings. Krugman's worldview is reassuring but it
has absolutely nothing to do with reality.
There is a
huge difference between selling your debt to another and "selling"
it to yourself. When China buys our debt, it uses its own savings.
In order to purchase a trillion dollars of U.S. Treasuries, the
Fed would have to expand our money supply by a corresponding amount.
Even Krugman acknowledges that this would cause the dollar to lose
value; however, he feels that a weaker dollar is good for America
and bad for China.
Krugman does
not believe that a tanking dollar will translate into higher interest
rates or higher consumer prices at home. No matter how many dollars
the Fed creates, or how much value those dollars lose relative to
other currencies, he is confident that as long as unemployment remains
high, rates will stay low and inflation will remain under control.
This is absurd.
If the dollar
were to nosedive, the Fed would normally look to protect the currency
by raising interest rates, thereby increasing foreign demand for
the currency. But with an economy currently on crutches, the Fed
will ignore a weakening dollar and continue to try to boost employment
with near-zero rates.
But keeping
the Fed Funds rate low only holds rates down for U.S. government
debt. If the dollar weakens substantially, other rates offered to
other borrowers will rise as investors demand greater returns to
compensate for inflation. To keep rates low for homeowners, credit
card borrowers, corporations, municipalities, and state governments,
the Fed would be forced to buy, or guarantee, all forms of dollar-denominated
debt. The Fed would become the lender of only resort.
Once the Fed
shows that its commitment to low rates is limitless (the value of
the dollar be damned), private creditors will quit the game. Even
average Americans would hit the Fed's bid. It would be a race for
the exits, with no one wanting to be left holding a bag of worthless
paper dollars.
Most economists,
Krugman included, see cheap money as a panacea for all ills. And
while it's true that a falling dollar, by lowering the real value
of U.S. wages, would help make U.S. goods more competitive, it would
also lead to skyrocketing consumer prices, rapidly rising interest
rates, and a collapse in American living standards. Make no mistake:
this is the end game of Krugman's "get tough on China"
policy.
This apocalyptic
scenario can only be avoided if Washington jealously guards the
status quo, avoiding confrontation with China at all costs. Yet,
even that is an outcome that no one can rationally expect. Given
exploding U.S. government deficits and the inability of U.S. citizens
and corporations to repair their balance sheets, the United States
faces financing needs that even China's gargantuan savings stockpile
will be unable to cover.
Krugman is
right about one thing China's currency peg is destabilizing
the global economy and must end. But he fails utterly to understand
the implications for the U.S. and China. If China were to reverse
its role in the U.S. Treasury market, both economies would be destabilized
in the short-term. But in the medium- and long-term, China would
clearly emerge as the winner.
Absent Treasury-bond
purchases, the value of the Chinese currency would rise sharply,
causing goods prices to tumble in China. This long-delayed increase
in purchasing power for everyday Chinese will unleash pent-up demand
in what is already the largest middle class in the world. Chinese
factories would retool in order to produce goods for their own citizens
to consume. In RMB terms, commodity prices would plunge, making
it easier for China to produce all kinds of stuff, such as automobiles,
while also making it cheaper for the Chinese to buy gas. Millions
will trade in bikes for cars, and Chinese oil imports will swell.
The opposite
would occur in America, where an artificial, consumer-based economy,
supported by Chinese lending, will come tumbling down. Without the
ability to import cheap goods from overseas, Americans will pay
more and get less. While gas and food become cheaper for the Chinese,
they will simultaneously become much more expensive for Americans so too will automobiles, consumer electronics, furniture, and
just about every other product we want or need (even those few we
still make ourselves).
Washington's
best option is to recognize that the current relationship is unsustainable
and to plan, as best as possible, for a more viable future. We Americans
also must be honest with ourselves and recognize that we have been
living beyond our means and that our lifestyle has been largely
financed by austerity in China. We must conceive of a plan that
weans us from this dependence without provoking China to pull the
rug out from under us before we have a firm footing. To construct
a policy around Krugman's ridiculous assumption that we benefit
China more than they benefit us is to invite catastrophe on an unimaginable
scale.
March
20, 2010
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.
Copyright
© 2010 Euro Pacific Capital
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