|
We occasionally read that deflation is inevitable
because the total amount of debt in the system is so huge. The
point will eventually be reached, according to those who are forecasting
a deflationary outcome, when the amount of debt carried by the
average person and the interest burden associated with the debt
is so large relative to his/her income that he/she will be unwilling
or unable to take-on additional debt; and at that time the total
amount of money and credit in the system will begin to contract.
That is, deflation* will occur.
No one can predict the future with certainty, but
we would be extremely surprised if the uninterrupted inflation
of the past 70 years were followed by a period of genuine deflation
(a prolonged decline in the total supply of money and credit).
One of the reasons this would surprise us is that there IS so
much debt in the system. The high debt levels actually make deflation
LESS likely, not more likely, because the current monetary system
-- the world's greatest-ever Ponzi scheme -- could not survive
a bout of genuine deflation. That is, deflation will never be
a viable policy option regardless of how bad things get. Instead,
the central banks of the world will likely risk destroying their
currencies and obliterating the values of their bonds before they
will permit deflation to occur.
The question then becomes: central banks may well
WANT to avoid deflation at all cost, but will they be ABLE to
avoid it? Will they be able to implement policies that cause the
currency to lose its purchasing power in an environment where
almost all potential borrowers are 'tapped out'?
We don't really understand why this is even a question
because it's such a basic economic truth that someone with the
ability to increase the supply of some 'thing' by an unlimited
amount also has the ability to push the price of the thing down
by as much as they desire. This is true regardless of whether
the thing in question is a dollar or an apple or communications
bandwidth. Central banks have the ability to create currency in
unlimited amounts so they have the power to reduce the purchasing
power of currency under any and all circumstances should they
choose to do so.
But assuming the central banks don't just print
currency and then drop it out of helicopters, how would new currency
be brought into circulation at a time when most individuals and
corporations were cutting back on their borrowing/spending?
One option would be for the government -- an entity
that will always be able to borrow more currency into existence
regardless of its current level of indebtedness -- to shoulder
the entire burden of keeping the supply of money in an upward
trend and the purchasing power of money in a downward trend. But
even if the government decided not to go down this path the central
bank would have other options. It could, for instance, start monetising
the mortgage debt held by private banks.
There is a chance that monetising debt (buying debt
with newly printed currency) would not be effective because it
would simply shift debt from the balance sheets of commercial
banks to the balance sheet of the central bank. The debt would
continue to exist and the borrowers -- the people who mortgaged
their houses -- would be in the same financial situation; it's
just that they would owe money to the central bank instead of
owing it to private banks.
There is, however, a surer way to get more money
into circulation and reduce the purchasing power of the money.
Taking the example of the US, instead of monetising debt the Fed
could monetise assets. That is, rather than buying mortgages from
commercial banks the Fed could buy houses. Furthermore, to achieve
the desired purpose -- a reduction in the dollar's purchasing
power -- the number of houses that would actually have to be bought
might not be that great. The reason is that if the Fed came out
and said something along the lines of "for the next 90 days
we will use newly printed dollars to purchase anyone's house at
a price equal to today's market value or the amount owing on the
mortgage, whichever is the higher" there's a good chance
that there would immediately be a substantial devaluation of the
dollar relative to houses (and every other tangible asset).
The time when the Fed needs to resort to such drastic
measures in order to keep the inflation going is probably many
years away. The point is, the Fed does have the power to keep
the inflation going and the fact that debt levels have become
so high means it has no alternative other than to keep the inflation
going. Our view, therefore, is that the inflation will continue
until the dollar and all other fiat currencies become so devalued
and discredited that they cease to function as mediums of exchange,
or, at least, until inflation fears become great enough that the
current monetary system is abandoned in favour of something else.
As we've said many times in the past, keeping the
inflation going is not the real challenge for the Fed; rather,
the real challenge for the Fed is to keep inflation EXPECTATIONS
in check. In our opinion, the next time inflation expectations
spiral out of control will be the last time because doing what
Paul Volcker did at the end of the 1970s (pushing interest rates
to astronomical heights) is no longer a viable policy option.
This is why the Fed's biggest fear is an uncontrolled rise in
inflation expectations.
*Prices go up and down for many reasons,
but a price decline is only associated with deflation if it is
CAUSED by a contraction in the total supply of money and credit.
In other words, a price decline that has not been caused by a
contraction in the total supply of money and credit is not related
to deflation in any way.
*****
Regular financial market forecasts
and analyses are provided at our web site:
http://www.speculative-investor.com/new/index.html
One-month free trial available.
|