Beggar Thy Neighbor, Beggar Thyself

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This essay is excerpted from the most recent version of the HCM Market Letter.  To subscribe directly to this publication, please go here.

HCM

“Money may no longer be physically printed and distributed in the voluminous quantities of 1923. However, ‘quantitative easing’, that modern euphemism for surreptitious deficit financing in an electronic era, can no less become an assault on monetary discipline. Whatever the reason for a country’s deficit – necessity or profligacy, unwillingness to tax or blindness to expenditure – it is beguiling to suppose that if the day of reckoning is postponed economic recovery will come in time to prevent higher unemployment or deeper recession. What if it does not? It is alarming that some respected bankers and economists today, in the US as in Britain, are still able to commend ‘the printing press’ (in so many words!) as a fail‐safe, a last resort. A country’s budget can indeed be balanced in that way, but at the cost, to whatever degree, of its citizens’ savings and pensions, their confidence and trust, their morals and their morale.”

Adam Ferguson (2010)

For those of our readers itching to vote Nancy Pelosi and her Democratic cohorts out of office on November 2, there is an episode from the Weimar years that can remind us just how severe the views condemning wealth and consumption can grow in periods of economic distress.

In the early 1920s, the Bavarian authorities were coming under severe pressure to quell the social unrest that rising inflation was causing. The Bavarian Prime Minister came up with the brilliant idea of submitting a bill to his parliament to render gluttony a crime. For purposes of this bill, a “glutton” was defined as “one who habitually devotes himself to pleasures of the table to such a degree that he might arouse discontent in view of the distressful condition of the population.” A first offense was punishable by imprisonment and/or a fine of up to 100,000 marks (about £75), and a second offense subjected the offender to imprisonment for up to five years, a fine of up to 200,000 marks, and the deprivation of civil rights. Caterers and other coconspirators were also to be held to account, and foreign offenders were subject to expulsion from the country. The legislation was never enacted, but it was a sign of the times. Conspicuous consumption had fallen into disrepute in a period of runaway inflation and mass economic dislocation. While this proposal might seem absurd today, people in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones – the modern legislative record is hardly something to write home about. At the very least, the anti-gluttony bill was indicative of the political upheavals and horrors that were about to be unleashed, not only on Germany but on the world.

Elections have consequences. As they say in Chicago, vote early and vote often on November 2!

The challenge remains, however, who to vote for. Neither the Republicans nor the Democrats have demonstrated their fitness to lead this country in a fiscally responsible manner. Many commentators are rooting for a Republican takeover of the House of Representatives in November in anticipation that such a victory would lead to political gridlock, which they view as preferable to the Obama administration’s anti-business agenda. While HCM agrees that Mr. Obama’s economic policies are failing, gridlock would be a sad state of affairs. The United States is facing imminent economic problems that cannot wait for solutions. We cannot afford two years of paralysis. The fact that we are seeing currency wars and political paralysis speaks to the severity of our ongoing crisis and the need for new leadership.

The race to the bottom

Currency wars are an ugly spectacle to watch. While certain short-term benefits can be gained by such actions – cheapening a country’s exports and therefore giving a quick boost to its economy – every devaluation ends in tears.

The world is now being treated to the spectacle of three of its largest currency blocks competing to reduce the value of their currencies. Even more striking is the fact that the central banks in charge of these suicidal operations are being forced to engage in non-conventional means to accomplish their goals because conventional mechanisms of monetary policy have broken down.

  • The U.S. Federal Reserve is talking about engaging in a second round of quantitative easing. The media and others have termed this approach “QE2”, a name that sounds like a cruise ship. That is probably appropriate since such an approach is likely to meet the same fate as the Titanic.
  • The European Central Bank (ECB) was forced to bail out the peripheral members of the European Union with a €1 trillion rescue package that also included aspects of quantitative easing. In fact, European central banks recently purchased Irish government obligations after Irish interest rates rose to the highest levels since 2003.
  • Japan has seen the Yen rise to levels that are crushing its exports and has engaged in direct intervention in the currency markets. On October 5, the Bank of Japan pledged to keep its benchmark interest rate at “virtually zero” until deflation has ended and cut the overnight call rate target to a range of 0 to 0.1 percent from 0.1 percent, a gesture whose microscopic size speaks to the lack of options available to a central bank incapable of thinking outside the box.

I take no pleasure in saying with a high degree of certainty that none of these efforts are going to yield the desired result. Currency interventions never work in the long term and rarely produce more than a fleeting short-term boost to an economy. The only way to manage currencies effectively is to manage the economies that employ them effectively. Currency imbalances are signs of underlying economic imbalances, and the current currency chaos is nothing more than a reflection of failed economic policies in the United States, Europe and Japan. It would be far more effective for each of these countries’ central banks and governments to promote pro-growth, equity rather than debt-financed tax and economic policies rather than the current unsustainable debt-financed growth that has led them to their current precarious positions. Currency problems are just a symptom of underlying economic diseases, and these countries need to treat the diseases and not the symptoms if they want their economies to heal. There is little indication, however, that they are prepared to do so. The reasons for this failure are both political and intellectual.

Unless the laws of economics have been repealed, there can only be one outcome from the actions of the Federal Reserve and the ECB – weaker currencies and higher inflation. As for Japan, a weaker Yen and inflation are highly unlikely for reasons peculiar to that country. But nobody is going to get what they want from their efforts. A little inflation in the West would not be a problem, but we are not talking about a little inflation. The mountains of money that are being created will lead to high levels of inflation that will result in much higher interest rates, even slower economic growth, and social and political instability. This is what the incessant rise in the price of gold is telling us.