What's Behind the Financial Market Crisis?
Daily Article by
Antony Mueller
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Posted on 9/18/2008
The financial crisis is not over. Neither tax rebates nor low
interest rates nor higher or lower exchange rates can do the job of
reviving an economy that is burdened by debt loads that are too high.
On the contrary: the policy measures that the US authorities have been
applying will prolong the agony. Be prepared for the challenges of
extended financial turmoil and economic stagnation.
Early this year, the US central bank decided to manage the debt
crisis in the light-hearted belief that a few aggressive rate cuts
would "unfreeze" the banking system. Yet as of the end of the third
quarter of 2008, the arteries of the financial system are still
cluttered, and the financial system has moved even closer to total
collapse.
Those banks and brokerages that haven't yet failed have been kept
alive by emergency monetary transfusions from the US central bank. The
Fed has cast away all restraints of economic rationality and is acting
in a purely political way. The Board of Governors of the US Federal
Reserve System is pursuing the goal of getting the financial system
through the mess — at least until the end of the year, no matter how
high the costs will be thereafter.
The American central bank has adopted the financial equivalent of
the military strategy of scorched earth. The economic philosophy of the
current chairman of the US Federal Reserve System can be summarized in
the slogan, "No depression under my rule!" He resembles a military
leader who stubbornly declares, "No defeat under my rule!" the more the
chance of victory is slipping away, and defeat can be denied no longer.
The current economic disaster is the result of the combination of
negligence, hubris, and wrong economic theory. For decades, an economic
and monetary policy has been practiced based on the illusion of, "It
doesn't matter." At first it was, "Deficits don't matter." From that,
the policy of "it doesn't matter" got extended to money creation, the
credit expansion, the stock-market bubble, and the housing boom. Now,
we're being told that buying financial junk by the central bank to beef
up banks and brokerages also doesn't matter.
As a byproduct of this mindless economic and monetary policy,
financial market operators, too, have lost their heads. Trusting the
official cheerleaders, investors hold on in the trenches until they
will have lost their last shirt. Economic weakness is spreading around
the globe. There is no new spurt of economic growth in sight. Yet many
investors stay put because they have been conditioned to believe that
government will bail them out.
The current financial crisis is not of a cyclical nature. The
financial turmoil is the symptom of the structural imbalances in the
real economy. Over decades, expansive monetary policy has gone hand in
hand with implicit and explicit bailout guarantees, and this has
distorted the process of capital allocation. Under such perverted
conditions, those investors will win most who cast away the restraints
of prudence. It is a game that can go on for a long time — up to the
point when the irrationality has become systemic.
The behavior of the investment community reflects the incentive
structure that has been put in place by the authorities. Investors have
learnt to dance to the tunes of the pied pipers at high places. After
all, the individual market player could see from those who were ahead
of him in the abandonment of prudence how money is being made. In the
wake of this, financial companies have become overextended and are now
in need of deleveraging. Yet the core problem lies in the imbalances of
the real economy.
In the Austrian theory of the business cycle, the distinction is
made between the "primary" and "secondary" depression. The secondary
depression is what catches the eye: the turmoil in the financial
markets. Yet the underlying cause is the distortion of the economy's
capital structure: the primary depression.
The simple fact is that the US economy is burdened with a highly
lopsided capital structure as the consequence of a wide discrepancy
between consumption and production, which, in turn, is the result of
monetary policy. Persistent trade imbalances are the symptoms of this
discrepancy. This means for the US economy that lower interest rates
and government incentives aimed at boosting consumption work as pure
poison. Instead of more consumption, more savings, less consumption and
fewer imports are needed.
The current financial crisis reflects that many debtors have reached their debt limit and
that creditors are lowering that limit. From now on, business and
consumers, governments and investors must work under the restraints of
lowered debt ceilings.
Economic policy as it is currently practiced is in a fix: lower
interest rates may temporarily help to alleviate the financial crisis,
but they exacerbate the fundamentals that are the cause of the
financial crisis. Equally, a lower dollar would make imports costlier
for the United States, while a strong dollar comes with lower import
prices. But while a low dollar would help to expand exports, a strong
dollar impedes export growth. Therefore, the United States will have
high trade deficits as long as the economy does not fall deeper into
recession.
Without an adaptation that would increase savings, decrease
consumption, and reduce imports, the US economy can only go on in the
old fashion with ever more debt accumulation. But the limit of debt
expansion has been reached. The financial crisis has reduced the
willingness of domestic and foreign creditors to extend loans.
Foreign creditors are getting ready to reduce their holding of US
debt in a more drastic way. The governmental takeover of the mortgage
agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bailed out the monetary authorities
of China, Japan, Russia, and other foreign countries that hold agency
debt. As a result of the socialization of the so-called
government-sponsored enterprises, the Treasury opened a window of
opportunity for these countries to unload their US assets at subsidized
prices, all at the cost of the US taxpayer.
A profound restructuring of global capital has become unavoidable.
Such a process is quite different from a recession in the traditional
sense. In contrast to a sharp and typically short-lived recession,
when, after the rupture, business as usual can go on, the restructuring
of a distorted capital structure will require time to play out.
Rebalancing the distorted capital structure of an economy requires
enduring nitty-gritty entrepreneurial piecemeal work. This can only be
done under the guidance of the discovery process of competition, as it
is inherent in the workings of the price system of the unhampered
market.
Anticyclical fiscal and monetary policies are of no help when it
comes to the daily toil in business to work towards reestablishing a
balanced capital structure. The so-called income multiplier won't work,
and lower interest rates won't stimulate spending. On the contrary:
these policy measures only make the task of the entrepreneur harder.
The difficulties ahead arise from the problem that business as usual
cannot go on under conditions of a credit crunch, which has its roots
in the distortions of the economy's capital structure. Thus, even if
the financial market turmoil were to settle, there won't be the simple
resumption of the old ways of doing business. The belief that, after
the financial crisis is over, the real economy can reemerge unscathed,
is probably the greatest error that many investors share with the
policymakers.
As a result of the bailouts and the socialization of the mortgage
agencies, the financial system is now fully infected with moral hazard.
The disastrous effects of these government interventions will show up
soon. The major task of bringing the capital structure in order is
still ahead and more pain is in the waiting.
As long as governments and central banks continue to focus on the
monetary symptoms of the "secondary depression" and continue to ignore
the structural aspects of the "primary depression," they act like
quacks. Ignorant of the lessons of the Austrian School, the authorities
will most likely continue with their disastrous policies. |