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WHICH FLATION WILL GET US?
from garynorth.com

Date 9/8/2009

  • Issue 109
  • One of them will. That’s if things work out really well. Two or three will if things go according to the Austrian theory of the business cycle.

    Americans have been living in the eye of the monetary hurricane. Prices have been stable. In July, both the Consumer Price Index and the Median CPI were flat compared to June. (http://GaryNorth.com/public/5405.cfm)

    There are five flations to consider.

    Deflation
    Inflation
    Stagflation
    Mass inflation
    Hyperinflation

    We had better consider all of them.

    FLATION: MONETARY OR PRICE?

    We should always keep in mind the fact that there are two ways to define flation: (1) as a change in the money supply; (2) as a change in the price level.

    This assumes two more things: (1) we can accurately define money; (2) we can accurately identify the price level. Both are questionable.

    The Federal Reserve three years ago dropped M3. It said that M3 was useless as an indicator of future prices. That was a long time coming. The FED was correct. M3 was the most misleading of these M’s: M1, M2, M3, MZM. It always vastly overstated the looming rise in the CPI. There is no doubt which M is best in this regard: M1. For my detailed “Remnant Review” article on this, go here:

    http://GaryNorth.com/monetarystats.pdf

    Furthermore, there is more to an M than predicting future consumer prices. There is also the question of predicting the business cycle. There is no agreement here among economists.

    Then there is the price level. Which basket of goods and services should statisticians use? What relevance should a statistician place on any of a hundred commodities and services? This weighing will change when consumer tastes change. No index survives intact over time. They all are revised when there are major changes, from the CPI to the Dow Jones averages.

    I look for trends. I use M1 and the Median CPI.

    The crucial fact is monetary policy. According to the Austrian theory of the business cycle, the cycle is completely the outcome of prior central bank monetary policy. Booms and busts are the result of central bank monetary inflation, followed by reduced expansion. The other schools of thought reject this theory. The other schools of thought are wrong. For an introduction to this issue, see Chapter 5 of my mini-book, “Mises on Money.”

    http://LewRockwell.com/north/mom.html

    DEFLATION

    Most of those who forecast deflation have in mind price deflation. A few think monetary deflation will take place because of bankrupt banks, but the position is difficult to defend. The FDIC can keep bank doors open. There are no runs on banks involving currency withdrawal. There are only runs involving the transfer of digital money to other banks. This does not affect the money supply.

    Price deflation can come through the free market. It results from steady increases in economic output in an economy with stable money. Here is my slogan: “More goods chasing the same amount of money.” A gold coin standard economy provides such a world, as long as central banks do not protect insolvent banks. So does 100% reserve banking, which we have never had. This is not the scenario offered by deflationists.

    Here is their scenario. Banks create credit. Fiat money lowers interest rates. People borrow. This is consistent with Austrian economics. This credit structure cannot be sustained indefinitely. Austrianism also teaches this.

    Here is where the schools of opinion depart. The deflationist says that people in general cannot pay their debts. They default. So, prices fall. Not just prices of market sectors that were bubbles, but all prices.

    There is a problem with this argument. If you find that half of the things you regularly buy cost less, you buy the same amount, or maybe a little more, and then buy more of something else. This includes the purchase of capital goods.

    You don’t put currency in a mattress. You buy something with the money that falling prices allows you to keep. You buy more of B when the price of A falls . . . or more of A.

    Simple, isn’t it? But those who call themselves deflationists do not understand it or believe it.

    The same money supply is out there. Someone owns each portion of it. You own some. I own some. We both would like to own more . . . at some price. But the credit contraction of a popped market bubble does not affect the money supply if the central bank or the Treasury or the FDIC intervenes and prevents a fractional reserve bank from going bust and taking all of the digital money with it.

    This is economic logic. If the logic is incorrect, then there should be detailed theoretical criticisms of it. Or, given the weaknesses of human thought, maybe logic does not correspond to reality. Economists are famous for constructing detailed theories that do not conform to reality. But the free market theory of price changes as the result of the supply and demand for money in relation to the supply and demand for products and services is straightforward. It undergirds all of economic theory. Throw it out, and what remains of economic theory?

    If a central bank creates a boom with fiat money, and then ceases to inflate, it can create deflation. How? By refusing to bail out busted banks. It allows the money supply to contract as bankrupt commercial bank deposits disappear. Fractional reserve banking implodes. That will create a deflationary depression. We have not seen anything like this since 1934: the creation of the FDIC.

    Don’t bank on this just yet.

    INFLATION

    Monetary inflation produces price inflation. On this, Chicago School monetarists and Austrian school economists agree.

    If the central bank expands the money supply, prices will rise. This takes time. Economists debate about the lag time: 6 months, a year, 18 months. But monetary expansion will raise prices. The new money has to go somewhere. It has to wind up in someone’s bank account.

    If the central bank expands the monetary base by buying assets of any kind, it creates money to buy them. The recipients of those assets spend the money. If the Treasury gets it, Congress spends it. (In both theory and practice, if Congress gets its collective hands on money, it spends it. All economists are agreed on this point.)

    The expansion of money by the central bank is the source of economic booms and specific asset bubbles. The expansion of money temporarily lowers the interest rate. Someone borrows this newly created money.

    America suffered from monetary inflation from 1914 to 1930. Then, with a 3-year hiatus of collapsing banks, we have suffered from 1934 until today. The dollar has fallen by 95% since 1914. No, I don’t believe the CPI tells us this exactly. But I can follow the trend. The trend is up for prices and down for purchasing power.

    For as long as the Federal Reserve creates money, we will have price inflation. The only thing that can retard this is if the FED raises reserve requirements or commercial banks send excess reserves to the FED. The monetary effects are the same: increased reserves are the result. This reduces the multiplier of fractional reserve banking.

    Price inflation of under 10% per annum is what I call inflation. But before we get to this, we will suffer from stagflation.

    STAGFLATION

    This was the burden of the 1970′s. There was monetary expansion and massive Federal deficits. Why, the Federal deficit was a staggering $25 billion in 1970, and as bad the next year. Unthinkable!

    The dominant Keynesian theory was that Federal deficits would overcome recessions. The central bank need only inflate enough to cover part of the Federal deficit. But there were two major recessions in the 1970′s. Unemployment rose, and prices rose. That combination of events was dubbed stagflation.

    That we can have economic stagnation in today’s world is obvious. Just about every mainstream economist and forecaster is predicting slow economic growth next year. The familiar V-shaped recovery is not a popular forecast these days. More typical is the forecast of Muhammed El- Erian, the CEO of PIMCO, the largest bond fund in the world. He calls this “the new normal.”

    Global growth will be subdued for a while and unemployment high; a heavy hand of government will be evident in several sectors; the core of the global system will be less cohesive and, with the magnet of the Anglo-Saxon model in retreat, finance will no longer be accorded a preeminent role in post-industrial economies. Moreover, the balance of risk will tilt over time toward higher sovereign risk, growing inflationary expectations and stagflation. (http://tinyurl.com/p4vsbd)

    This scenario is a combination of slow growth and rising prices. Today, we have no growth and flat prices. So, slow growth and rising prices is not much of a stretch conceptually.

    I think stagflation is likely, once the recovery comes. But we are seeing a gigantic Federal deficit. Ross Perot in 1992 spoke of a giant sucking sound. He said that was the sound of jobs lost to Mexico. I think it is the sound of the Federal government sucking up all excess capital in the United States and much of the world. This money will not be going into the private sector.

    What is the basis of a sustained economic recovery? Increased capital formation. We are seeing capital destruction.

    For a time, we will suffer from stagflation. It will not be stagdeflation. It will be staginflation.

    What do I envision? Economic growth under 2% per annum, coupled with price increases of 5% per annum or more.

    MASS INFLATION

    This phenomenon will appear when the Federal deficit cannot be covered by private investment and purchases by foreign central banks. This seems certain within a decade. I think it is likely before the end of the next President’s term. I think the Social Security trust fund will cease to provide a surplus that is used to purchase nonmarketable Treasury debt, as it is today. The trustees will have to sell some of these nonmarketable Treasury debt certificates back to the Treasury. The Treasury in turn will have to sell conventional Treasury debt to cover the redemptions by the trust fund.

    This stage will be the indicator that the present borrow-and-spend model has failed. The FED will be called upon to supply the difference between purchases of T-debt by the public and borrowing by the government. When the FED complies, the rate of monetary inflation will rise. Prices will also rise.

    I define mass inflation as double-digit price inflation above 20% but below 40%. Americans have not seen this. No industrial nation has seen this except after a major military defeat.

    The disruption of the capital markets will be extreme. The government will absorb virtually all capital formation. There will be no net capital formation. There will be capital consumption.

    The international value of the dollar will fall. But other Western nations will be pursuing comparable policies. It is not clear how far the dollar will fall. It depends on the competitive race to national self-destruction. Every Western nation faces the day of reckoning: the bankruptcy of Social Security/Medicare.

    At this point, the FED will have to make a choice: put on the brakes or destroy the dollar.

    HYPERINFLATION

    The worst-case scenario is hyperinflation. Ludwig von Mises called this the crack-up boom. It leads to the destruction of the currency. The economy will move to barter or to alternative currencies. The division of labor will collapse.

    No modern industrial economy has suffered this since the recovery after World War II. The West is not Zimbabwe. The West is not a backward agricultural nation that still has functional tribal organizations to help their members.

    Think about the implications of your money not buying anything of value. How would you live? You are urban. You are dependent on a complex system of computerized production and distribution. It is all governed by profit and loss. The profit-and-loss system will cease to function at some point. That is when the economy shifts to a new monetary system.

    This would be the destruction of wealth on the scale of a war. It would create a new social order.

    I do not think the Federal Reserve will allow this. This would destroy the banking system. The FED’s unofficial but primary job is to preserve the biggest banks in the banking system. If it’s a question of providing fiat money for the government’s debt vs. destroying the dollar, the FED will cease buying Treasury debt.

    That will be the turning point.

    DEFLATION

    Then we will get the crash. The FED will protect the biggest banks, which will swallow the assets of smaller banks. A lot of smaller banks will go under. They will take deposits with them.

    We will get bank runs. People will demand currency. The FDIC will be busted. These banks will go under. So will depositors’ money. It will be “It’s a Wonderful Life” without the 6 o’clock escape hatch in the script.

    You had better have your money in Potter’s Bank, not the Bedford Falls Building & Loan.

    The contraction of digital money will be matched by a truly serious recession. Bankruptcies will be widespread. Unemployment may not rise, but only because the final phase of mass inflation had created so much unemployment.

    This will be a period of restoration. The cost of the restoration will depend on how bad the dislocations of the mass inflation had been. If they are very serious, which I would expect, the time of recession will be tolerable if you have currency and a job. But the investment strategies of hedging against mass inflation will produce losses. An opposite set of strategies will appear. Be a debtor in mass inflation. Be a creditor in the post-inflation recovery.

    If the Federal Reserve intervenes again, repeat the cycle from the top. But the numbers will be much larger.

    CONCLUSION

    Pick your flation. You can try to beat it, but each successive flation threatens your capital.

    We are entering a period of capital consumption in the United States. I think this problem will afflict the West. The same political promises have been made. They will be broken.

    He who sustains his lifestyle through these flations will be blessed indeed. Getting rich will be miraculous.

    article120408

    from email subscription at GaryNorth website.

    Is Obama constitutionally eligible to serve?.

    Striker101WND aka WorldNetDaily has been a prolific leader in the battle to induce Obama to produce his true birth certificate.  Their webpage lists over 200 items and varied approachs to action.
    My personal objection to Obama is much more about his immoral philosophy of collectivism and force, which is “REgressing” America into economic collapse of which the worst is yet to come.

    However, if we can somehow get into the locked vault(s), America will be rid of him in a heartbeat.

    Nobody wants to mention tax rises just ahead of the elections,” said Thorolfur Matthiasson, an economics professor at the University of Iceland. “But if the budget deficit is 10 percent of GDP and the official debt is approximately what the nation can produce in one year, then the politicians will have to raise tax and reduce public spending.

    Striker

    Striker

    It’s hard to pay attention to what’s happening in such a seemingly small, remote and insignificant country as Iceland, but the parallels of retro-progress in Iceland and USA are stunning and terrifying. Think for a moment, this is a part of global collapse begun here in our USSA with the last trigger on this shotgun being the CRA. Then note our Rulers now considering renewal of the CRA to cure the problems caused by the CRA.

    Please read this article and review the Digg comments.

    read more | digg story

    Rahm Emanuel, Uhbama’s chief of staff, was actually quoted saying, “Never let a serious crisis go to waste…it’s an opportunity to do things you couldn’t do before,” such as Socialist agenda items like “green” energy, gigantic health care programs, and a New World Order with a common world currency and governance. Hey, you wanted “change,” right?

    strikeravatar64x646

    FTA: “I, for one, am not willing to be a part of this $10,000,000,000,000 Ponzi scheme. Are you?”
    No, absolutely not willing to be part of any of this. But hear me… All our talk will not put an end to this. Beyond unwilling, we must REFUSE! Certainly one way of refusing is http://morality101.net/blog/category/5-tax-strike/
    America is already down the tubes. The current insanity may delay the inevitable but make collapse even worse. Only understanding the Morality of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness can ever restore us.

    read more | digg story

    Ever wondered why there aren’t more “criminals” in this whole mortgage mess? Why there aren’t more mortgage broker perp walks? After all, they were predatory lenders, right? And where are the World-wide manhunts for the Wall Street iBankers escaping extradition? What they did to Iceland was against the law… right? Right?

    strikeravatar64x645For those who want the truth, rather than the evasion and excuses.
    This is a MUST READ!

    read more | digg story

    There are several names that describe societies in which government dictates what the market must produce and what consumers must buy; free-market society is not among them. America’s founders respected both the Creator and the laws of nature. The government they created was designed to obey both. It hasn’t been going that way, unfortunately.

    Striker: The sanctity of the individual is to be subjected to “superior other individuals”, who become Government using the unnatural and immoral power of Force refute the sanctity of all individuals. Happily, that refutation includes themselves – that’s called self-abuse!

    We give lip service to “Freedom of Choice” while dutifully paying taxes to support it’s degradation? We see America in utter collapse and falling into the Dark Ages because of this irrational morality, and continue to pay taxes to support our own demise?
    Atlas Shrugged.

    http://morality101.net/blog/category/taxstrike/

    read more | digg story

    America let these crooked politicians take her to the cleaner to give free money to their bankster buddies. Now the politicians/looters admit that we will never know if the money did any good. How’s that for accountability? I say, bring on the tar and feathers!

    Striker: Please see my comment to this, then spend some time here on m101.

    read more | digg story

    Here is another video, of juror Marcy Brooks, about serving on a jury which said “not guilty” to charges of not filing income taxes, because there is NO LAW requiring same.  Not filing is protected under the 4th and 5th Amendments.  Please note that not filing is far different than filing (which is your admission that you may owe something!), and that filing falsely can definitely land you in the clinker.  Beyond that, your admission by waiving your Amendment rights opens the Audit Door, and somehow gives the IRS the privileges of Lien and Attachment without due process.

    So YES YOU CAN stop filing and YOU CAN stop paying and YOU CAN stop withholding income taxes!

    And you SHOULD stop filing and paying taxes!  Why?  By paying taxes you are supporting a government now completely out of your control, which ignores your Constitution, and negates your personal rights and liberty.  The system has indebted itself (supposedly YOU) to the point where bankruptcy is inevitable.  We are destined to fall into total economic and moral collapse; paying taxes is as immoral as the government you support.

    This not-too-long speech is in two parts. Two short clips, you’ll be back in about 15 minutes.

    The page with juror Marcy Brooks videos is HERE!

    Ayn Rand predicted the current financial crisis would occur and why?

    Striker: Short but sweet explanation of how and why we get to this collapse.

    read more | digg story

    Following up on earlier posts America is History and - the Meltdown.

    This post has also been submitted to Digg – you may comment here or there.

    Back in the 60′s as a much younger man, I became a home-builder, and soon headed west to pursue that love in a more agreeable atmosphere.  It grew nicely until the economy then hit a slump, which cycle repeated about every 7 years, but I didn’t understand why.  The 3rd of such cycles came along, my business hit bottom again and, barely able to survive, I finally went to college and discovered a new love in economics.  Of course we learned of Adam Smith, the supply demand curve, the Federal Reserve and another principle — ignoring Cause can bring only irrational treatment of Effect.  Somewhere in those years, other factors of life came together for me, a foundation of consistency of philosophy which has integrated happily for this long remainder of life.

    Which brings us to the latest & greatest calamity of the sub-prime mortgage, in which both the borrowers and the lenders are being blamed while at the same time being the victims!  Therefore we watch the daily futile and insane attempts of our President and Congress to treat Effects with “meltdown bailout”, while studiously avoiding the Cause.

    So here is what really happened — the Cause.  Simply put, it was manipulation of our economy, loose money, then tight money, by The Fed with the virtually silent cooperation of Congress.

    • The economy seems to be dragging, housing starts are down, soften the interest rates!
    • Hmmm, needs a bit more kick in the pants, loosen loan standards!
    • Ahhhhh, we got the housing market rolling really good now, arn’t we looking good!
    • Oh Oh! The economy is overheating, there’s inflation signs, tighten up the money!
    • Oh Oh!  Interest rates are up, we gotta adjust those ARM’s!

    Going back to my days in the building business, now we get the picture –It’s “The Seven Year Itch”!  All caused by Congress and it’s pet playmate The Fed.  But this round it has finally crossed the point of no return.  The reason is not Wall Street, it is not deadbeat borrowers, it is not Golden Parachutes.  The much ballyhooed “lack of confidence” is, again, Effect.  Confidence without stability is impossible — cure the instability and confidence will reign.  Too much borrowing, impossible national debt, for war, for socialism, for a hundred immoral efforts to deny the choice and liberty of the people.  Months back, the “Bush Team” knew we were going to hit this crisis point; they drew up their horrid little plan to present when the stick got stuck too deep in the mud, so here we are.  Tonight or Tomorrow the House will vote for the Senate’s latest plan and we will be screwed yet again.

    Can you now understand why this long tiresome election campaign never made our economic collapse an issue?  THEY caused it; they don’t know how to fix what they did, therefore let’s just ignore it and hope the problem goes away. Our MSM when right along with their game, when they should have been asking such questions.  Then we have the first presidential debate, at which Jim Lehrer could so easily have asked “What caused this economic crisis, and how do you propose to fix it?”

    pseudo-Libertarian Barr blew the golden opportunity to speak and make this case — 163 days before election day, but now is way too late.  Ron Paul made good noises but isn’t a candidate, so now says merely “Vote 3rd Party”, when there are no candidates of ANY party, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, who can win and fix this mess after waiting too long.

    I really do not believe that there is any viable solution available now, but let’s brainstorm on this.  (added 3 Oct 08) Since the Fed caused this headache, why not dump it back upon the Fed to fix it?  How?  Just let them loan to the investment bankers whatever they need to unravel the credit crisis.  The system is broken anyway, so what more harm could be done?  Yes, it would be hugely inflationary, but any bailout will be inflationary anyway, so what else is new?  Just maybe inflation will skyrocket enough to make the bad mortgage loans look good again?  If not, hell, they caused it, now let them eat their own manure!  The taxpayers didn’t do this, so why should we eat it?

    The insanity of our government has mushroomed our national debt beyond hope of redemption.  The effects of earlier bailouts, this bailout and inevitable future bailout attempts will serve only to further plunge our dollar toward hyperinflation and force America into collapse and a new dark age.

    As individuals, we have only the option to courageously resist in all ways possible, and to attend to our survival as best we can.  I initially built this morality101.net website in part to encourage you to go on tax strike, with some success, but the time for that to be highly effective has passed.  We have lost the simple basic morality necessary to return.  There can be no return until and unless we insist that our lives belong to no other.