
“
Nations
are wading deeper and deeper into an ocean of boundless debt. Public
debts, which at first were a security to governments, by interesting
many in the public tranquillity, are likely in their excess to become
the means of their subversion. If governments provide for these
debts by heavy impositions, they perish by becoming odious to the
people. If they do not provide for them, they will be undone by the
efforts of the most dangerous of all parties; I mean an extensive
discontented monied interest, injured and not destroyed. The men who
compose this interest look for their security, in the first instance,
to the fidelity of government; in the second to its power. If they
find the old governments effete, worn out and with their springs
relaxed, so as not to be of sufficient vigour for their purposes,
they may seek new ones that shall be possessed of more energy; and
this energy will be derived, not from an acquisition of resources,
but from a contempt of justice.”
Edmund
Burke - “Reflections On The Revolution In France” pp 263-4
Burke is the theorist of counter-revolution. It was a phrase in the
above work, which provided Marx with that opening line of the
Communist Manifesto. But, his comments above are highly relevant to
the current situation. The spectre haunting Europe today is not of
Communism – actually as Marx and Engels admitted later in their
lives, it wasn't in 1848 either – but of debt, and of the potential
for reaction if that debt is not dealt with, and a financial collapse
ensues.

Yesterday, the
ECB, as expected, came out with a
commitment, once
more, to do what is necessary to deal with the
sovereign debt
problems of the
European periphery, in order to prevent the collapse
of the
Eurozone. Yet, even as it does so, the chance of
Greece
leaving the Eurozone by the end of the year, has been raised to
around
90%, by the markets. Despite the ECB, German and other
Eurozone politicians, now speak openly about the possibility of such
an event, even though, no one really knows what the
consequences of
that would be. The
politicians, and the
EU bureaucrats and
bankers,
appear to
believe that, over the last two years, they have
done
enough to
transfer the
Greek debts, that were sitting on the
private
balance sheets of banks, and financial institutions, on
to the
Balance Sheets of states, or
quasi-state bodies. They hope that any
such exit can be contained. It might work.

On the other hand, the examples of what happened with
Lehman
Brothers, what has happened so far with
contagion, of
financial
crises, within
Europe, does not provide much encouragement for such
hope. Yesterday's announcement, by the
ECB, in a way
demonstrates
the problem. There is actually
little in the ECB statement that had
not been said before, and
yet markets soared on the news. If the
past is anything to go by, they are
likely to reverse that in the
next few days.
Markets have
risen by around
30% in the last year or
so, but it is almost entirely a
consequence of
money printing by the
US Federal Reserve and
Bank of England. The
ECB has engaged in
two
rounds of
LTRO – Long Term Refinancing Operations – in which they
lend
significant sums to
European Banks, for terms up to three years,
at
low rates of interest. Its the closest thing to money printing –
Quantitative Easing – the ECB has done. Today, the
ECB has said
that it will buy the
Bonds of countries like
Spain and Italy, in the
secondary markets, in order to
reduce the yields on those bonds,
which the ECB determines as being too high. It hasn't said exactly
what level it thinks is too high, just it will say when it has
intervened.

But, it will
sterilise any such
intervention. That is, any money it
spends buying bonds, it will
cover by
withdrawing money from
elsewhere in the system. The consequence of that could be that it
funds Spain, but at the cost of
causing a squeeze on
available funds
elsewhere in the
Eurozone, which could rather
nullify any effects of
LTRO in providing
liquidity to banks. That, at a time when those
banks are already
reducing lending, because of
rising interbank
rates. That is why banks like
Santander have
raised mortgage rates
in Britain for example. Reducing
available credit in
Europe, at the
moment, is likely to put
further strain on an economy that is
heading
back into recession, and which in some countries is already at
Depression levels. And, precisely for this latter reason, the
buying
of these
bonds will
do nothing for the
economies of places like
Spain, Italy, Portugal, Greece and so on. It isn't really intended
to do so. Its intended to
assuage those
monied interests, and to
transfer even more of those
potential private losses on to the public
Balance Sheet. In the meantime, its hoped it will
buy more time so
that in the words of
Mr. Micawber, something might turn up.
The ECB has also said that it will intervene to buy only short term
Bonds i.e. those with a duration of up to three years. One
consequence of that may well be that holders of ten year bonds,
switch out of them in favour of Spanish or Italian 1, 2 or 3 year
Bonds, which will now have a floor put under their prices as a
consequence of the ECB guarantee. The other side of that, is selling
of ten year bonds, and a consequent rise in their Yields. It may
also pose a problem for the UK, as I'll come back to later.
 |
Liberal-Tory Incompetents - Campo, Foggy Osborne, and Clegg |
Already, the
international Bond Markets are looking
extremely bubbly,
and at some point, someone will get an
itchy trigger finger, and
decide to
get out of Bonds that are already at
stratospheric levels,
when it comes to the
US, UK, Germany and Japan, because no one will
want to be
second in line, when the
selling actually does start.
In this context, the
UK looks
most at risk, because there is
little
reason for UK Gilts to be at their
current levels outside the
huge
money printing by the
Bank of England. The
UK is
not really a
safe
haven in the way that the US or Germany or Japan are. The
US is a
safe haven because of the
huge size of its economy, and because of
the role of the dollar.
Germany is a safe haven, because of the
strength of the German economy.
Japan is a safe haven because of its
huge foreign exchange reserves, and strength of its
exports. The
UK
is a relatively
small economy compared to the US, Japan, China and
Europe. The UK does not have the global competitiveness of Germany,
Japan or China. The
UK Government is increasingly seen as
economically incompetent, a fact that was highlighted by the comments
of former
US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers on
Newsnight on
Wednesday. None of the
Liberal-Tory economic prognostications have
proved correct, the centrepiece of their economic strategy –
deficit reduction based on
austerity – is in
tatters, as austerity
has resulted, as I and many others, long ago predicted it would, in
the
economy tanking, and the
deficit increasing as a consequence.

With
inflation in the
UK rising, interest rates already about
as low
as they can go, past exercises in
QE having
bailed out the banks, but
done
nothing for the economy, other than to
raise inflation, and
decimate pensions and
savings, there is
little reason for the
UK to
be saved by the
kindness of strangers lending it money at
record low
rates. And, when those
rates start to rise, as I said recently, the
consequence will be that it will
crater the housing market even
faster than it is already declining.
Arrears are at
extended
levels, whilst
real incomes are
falling. When
Banks worry that they
may not get their money back on all the houses they have
mortgaged,
they will
start to foreclose. I was watching “A Place In The Sun”
yesterday, which was featuring a load of luxury homes in Florida that
are being “short sold” by the banks. A luxury 6 bedroom house
was being sold for £97,000, which is a fraction of what it was a few
years ago. But,
that will also collapse the banks when that happens,
which is why the
banks and the Government and
Bank of England have
been doing everything they can to prevent it. Not out of concern for
home buyers, but out of
concern for the banks!

That is what happened in
Ireland where the
Banks made lots of these
irresponsible loans that blew up a
housing bubble, which then
collapsed, taking
property prices down 60%, and
bankrupting the
Irish
Banks. If you want to
buy a cheap house at the moment,
Ireland is
the place. The
Irish State then bailed them out, and mirroring
Burke's comments above, “
provide(d) for these debts by heavy
impositions” on the people, manifest in swingeing cuts in state
spending on welfare etc. They did so, rather than upset “
the
most dangerous of all parties; (the) extensive discontented monied
interest, injured and not destroyed.” That
monied interest in
western economies, has been
dominant for the
last 30 years. It has
predominated over the productive capitalists who were on the back
foot during the
Long Wave downturn. The
monied interest, has been
injured by the
Financial Meltdown, but it is most certainly
not
destroyed, and its
interests continue to be
represented through the
Tory Party, even at the
expense of productive capital, which would
actually
benefit from a
collapse of the
speculative bubbles, which
have
diverted financial resources away
from productive investment,
and
raised the
Value of Labour Power, by
increasing the
cost of
housing for workers. Huge amounts of
Surplus Value is
drained from
Productive Capital, as a result of the
interest payments that workers
make on their
credit cards, student loans, mortgages and so on. That
is all money, which otherwise would have gone to buying commodities.

A
similar process to what happened in
Ireland is occurring in
Spain.
It has been proposed to establish a so called
Bad Bank. The idea is
that the
Spanish Banks and
Cajas, who have
lent money recklessly over
the
last 10 years or so, and blown up a
huge property bubble, will be
able to
transfer all of their effectively
worthless property
portfolio to the
Bad Bank. Depending upon the prices they are paid
for that, it means those
banks essentially get a
“Get Out Of Jail
Free” card. If the Bad Bank, buys those properties at their
book
value i.e. the value the bank placed on them when they made the loan,
not the fraction of that which they are worth today, the bank will
have lost no money for its reckless behaviour. Instead, the
Bad Bank
will assume it all. Then, the Bad Bank will get a
bail-out for all
the
losses on these properties from the
EU via the
EFSF or
ESM.
Ultimately, the
burden will fall on
EU taxpayers.
 |
When prices of Bonds, Shares other assets fall, it means
you can buy an increasing amount on a regular basis for the
same amount of money. It also means the yield rises on these
investments, which can be used to make larger payments of
Pensions, or can be reinvested with the dramatic effect
of compounding. |
But, sooner or later
EU taxpayers, for which
read workers, will
tire
of bailing out bankers. It will become
“odious” to them. At
that point, the issue arises
what happens when the
people refuse to
bail out the bankers? In the past, I've suggested that the
longer
term consequences might
not be
as bad as everyone expects. As stated
above, there are
good reasons for believing that a
thorough Financial
Meltdown would have a
purifying effect. In the
US people just walked
away from their houses, and the
debts on them,
leaving the problem
with the banks, which is why
prices their
have fallen so much, and
now stabilised. A
huge fall in share prices would
not change the
profits that real
productive companies make, or the
dividends they
pay out. That would
benefit Pension Funds, which
pay out pensions
from the
income they receive, and who would be
able to buy many more
shares at their
new lower levels. The same with
Bond Prices. If
Bond prices fell, and
yields rose to more normal levels,
Pension
Funds would be able to
buy more Bonds, and
receive a
higher income on
them. It would also mean that
Annuities would rise, so that
Pensions
paid out would be
much higher. Finally,
if house prices fell back to
their
long term average levels, it would mean a fall of
around
75-80%, which would mean
housing costs, including
rents would fall.
Workers would have
more disposable income, and would be
able to
afford to buy a house once again. As in the
US, it would
stabilise
the market at this
new lower level, and probably
create the basis for
more
house building. But, as
Burke suggests, its not likely that
this
“most dangerous party” would simply take that lying
down.
“Third
problem - a region like Valencia, where I've just returned from: the
city of Valencia is home to numerous multi-million pound building
projects paid for by a government that is on the verge of bankruptcy.
Without
the ability to lard the palms of property developers and architects
and numerous vested interest, both political parties - the People's
Party happens to be in charge in Valencia but this phenomenon goes
nationwide - may begin to lose their grip on middle class voters,
much as happened to Pasok in Greece, which is now being out polled by
a bunch of violent, Nazi-saluting fascists.”
And,
“
On
Tuesday next week there is set to be the mother of all demonstrations
in Barcelona against this, and it will be one of those demos where
the risk assessment for journalists will have to include getting
blinded by the flashing diamonds on the wrists and fingers of the
middle class ladies who will flock down the Ramblas holding "Goodbye
Spain" placards, alongside gritty communists with hammer and
sickle flags.”
One of the most notable features of politics across Europe, and to an
extent the US, is the absence of anything like the mass workers
parties of the past – or even mass parties of the bourgeoisie –
instead, what we see in abundance is a range of populists and
demagogues. That is very dangerous from the perspective of the
working class.

The
Tories are largely
talking nonsense when they repeat the
mantra
that you
can't solve a debt problem by taking on
more debt. Of
course,
you can. If
additional borrowing allows you to
increase your
income substantially – which is
what businesses do when they
borrow
to invest, and what
individuals do when they
borrow to buy a car that
enables them to
take a job that otherwise they could not – then, of
course this is a way of resolving a debt problem! But, at the same
time, they are right in another sense. That is, if you
borrow simply
to
pay off your
existing debts then you will get into
deeper
problems. Each additional loan, not only drives you
further into
debt, it also drives you further into the
hands of more usurious
lenders, like the
pay day loan sharks. Unfortunately, that is the
situation
Greece and Portugal have been driven into. At the moment
it is the approach of the
ECB, and
Eurozone politicians. Simply,
lending more money, even at
lower rates to
Spain and Italy, will
not
resolve the problem. On the contrary, to the extent it is tied to
the requirement that these countries undertake
further measures of
austerity, which tends to be the opposite of encouraging investment,
it
will only make things worse. Its like telling someone they have to
cut back, and sell their car, which then causes them to lose their
job!!

Until, the
EU combines the
ECB intervention – which will have to
move to
money printing to
avoid simply causing a
credit crunch
somewhere else within the system – with a
strategic plan for
investment across Europe, measures like those yesterday can only be
palliatives, which
assuage the
money interest at the
expense of
everyone else. Ultimately, they will
not assuage the
money interest
either. The
real problem in the
US, in
Ireland, in
Spain, in
Italy,
and in the
UK has
not been
Public Debt, it
has been private debt. In
the
US, it was the
private debt built up over nearly
thirty years,
and which erupted via the
sub-prime crisis that
broke the banks.
That is still
not over, because in the
US, the
next big area is
student debt, which stands at
over $1 trillion, and is now
more than
Credit Card debt. The same was true in
Ireland. It was the decision
of the
State to
bail out the banks, which
created its
sovereign debt
crisis. The same is true in
Spain. Its economy is
not the most
efficient and
globally competitive in the world, but the
real problem
in Spain has again been
private debt blown up by a
twenty year
property bubble, that still has
not really popped. In the
UK, the
same is true.
Private debt in the UK is
more than twice the Public
debt, and once again it has been
built up on the back of a
huge,
unsustainable property bubble, which
has yet to pop, but which
inevitably will.

All
austerity does, is to
make that
private debt problem worse,
because it means that
workers lose their jobs, their
incomes fall
etc. and so they
cannot pay their mortgage, their
credit card bill
and so on. Eventually, after a
long period of arrears, of going to
ever higher interest lenders, there is nowhere else to go, but to
simply walk away from the debts. Then the
banks are
left holding
worthless assets, but now the
State cannot bail them out, because the
economy has been
too weakened to sustain the bail-out. There is
not
enough people in work, not even business etc. to pay the taxes to
cover the bail-out. You
end up like Greece.
Two years ago, I thought that the permanent state bureaucrats were
smart enough to realise that. I thought the Big Productive
capitalists would impose that message on Governments. In the US,
they were, and they did. In the UK, and parts of Europe they have
not done so. But, slowly the message seems to be getting across.
The ECB decision yesterday seems to be part of that. The conditions
that will be imposed on Spain, are likely to be lighter than those
imposed on Greece or Portugal or Ireland – which begs the question
why those countries will not seek a renegotiation. As Paul Mason
puts it,

“
So the
Spain problem as a whole weighs heavily on the conditionality debate.
Nothing I have seen today dissuades me from the hunch that German
Chancellor Angela Merkel has had enough of inducing political
collapse in Southern Europe and will go along with a relatively mild
conditions regime for Spain.”
But, my hunch is that simply lighter conditions will not cut it.
What is required is not lighter conditions, but a wholesale reversal
of policy, and the introduction not of austerity, but of fiscal
expansion, based around a programme of investment in infrastructure,
and in a restructuring of Capital towards areas of production that
can be globally competitive. Without that, it will not take long for
global capital markets to realise that the problem has not been
solved, and in fact, it might even have been made worse.
Two years ago, I wrote a blog -
A Momentous Change
– which argued that there were
two ways things might go,
particularly in
Europe. It starts from the
premise that we are in a
Long Wave Boom, likely to
last until around 2025. On that basis it
argues that,
European politicians could take the
sensible decisions,
as described above, and the
European economies could gradually
heal
themselves within the
benign conditions the
Long Wave Boom provides.
On the
other hand, and I thought it
probably more likely, they would
dither, they would face
problems of
persuading electorates and so on,
and the
markets would
lose patience creating a further,
more serious
Financial Meltdown, that would
look something like the Great
Depression of 1930-33. The
key factor in bringing that about would
be the
property market. That still
looks correct to me. I should
add, that in that
analysis I also argued that, because we are in a
global Long Wave Boom, the
consequence of such a
Depression, unlike
the 1930's, would be
a very sharp rebound from it.

The
reason there will be a
sharp rebound is that the
Long Wave Boom
creates the
potential for
massive growth. In
China and elsewhere,
whose
economies are
not burdened by debt, that
potential is being
realised. Look at companies like
Microsoft or
Apple. They are
making
massive profits. Most of that profit goes
not to build
additional capacity for
additional production, as used to happen in
previous decades. Both companies, and many more like them,
do not
increase their revenues or profits by investing in
additional
capacity. Micrososft increases its revenues and profits, by
introducing a
new version of
Windows, or Office,
Apple by introducing
a
new iPhone, or
iPad, and so on. In the
US, Corporations have
around
$15 Trillion of cash waiting
to be invested, and there are
no
shortage of
potential new products to be invested in. But, why would
you do so, when the
immediate future looks so
uncertain. Why would
you do so, when investing not in production, but in shares can bring
you a 30% Capital Gain in a year?
Once the uncertainty is removed, once the froth is taken out of
financial markets and speculation, the conditions exist for a massive
expansion of productive investment, and economic growth. On the
other hand, its possible that economies may bumble along. Markets
might give politicians time, and the ECB has shown as, Paul Mason
comments, that super states like the Eurozone, do have massive power
to use, when they think markets are dysfunctional. Today, we will
get US payroll numbers. The ADP report yesterday was much better
than expected. For the last thirty years at least, there has been a
three year cycle. It coincided with the 2008 Financial Meltdown,
which made it worse, and it began around the third quarter of 2011,
which is why there has been a cyclical downturn in the US, UK, Europe
and China since then. But, this cyclical downturn lasts usually for
only around 3-4 quarters. By that token, it should begin to reverse
by the end of this year/beginning 2013. That is possibly why the US
economy seems to be improving again, despite the Republicans trying
to scupper it. Depending upon how strong the cyclical upturn is, and
whether it is not overpowered by incompetent measures adopted by
politicians. They might just dodge the bullet. Personally, I
wouldn't bet the house on it.
2 comments:
An excellent summary. I'm interested in your comments re the ECB plan and sterilisation, i.e. the likely restriction on liquidity that this will give rise to. You imply later that this will fail: "[the ECB will] move to money printing to avoid simply causing a credit crunch somewhere else within the system".
But a credit crunch will not necessarily be coterminus with the Eurozone. The ECB can discriminate as to where it restricts liquidity, i.e. at a bank level. Isn't there the possibility that politics will intrude here and result in some banks being disfavoured over others - i.e. beggar thy (weaker) neighbour?
David,
Thanks for your comments. As I understand the way the ECB sterilises funding, its via Open Market Operations. That is it sells Government Bonds its holding into the system, which are then paid for in Euros i.e. those Euros are then taken out of the system.
To be honest I'm not clear about whether the ECB can do that as a restricted sale to only Eurozone Banks. Logically, as long as it withdraws Euros, it doesn't matter where they come from. Also logically, the most likely purchasers will be Banks and Institutions in a relatively strong position.
I suspect that in the background, there is a belief that - as in the US - there are way to many Banks at a Euroopean level, and there needs to be considerable amalgamation. I don't think the calls for breaking up the banks should be given much heed. In Spain, huge numbers of banks have disappeared and been merged.
If you are going to have a Banking Union, it needs to be manageable, which means a limited number of large bodies, operating within a controlling organisation.
The specific answer to your question is that politics already has intruded. Switzerland has set a cap on the Euro/Swissy exchange Rate, because a sharply rising Swissy was damaging Swiss exports. Switzerland prints money to keep the Exchange Rate down. Money printing by large economies always ends up forcing other economies to follow suit. The ECB will have to openly print money for that reason. Its politics, which is preventing that happening at the moment.
I think the larger picture is that without the economy itself generating additional demand (which might happen next year if the cycle turns up) then money printing goes not into additional borrowing to finance investment - or even consumption when individuals try to delever - but either sits on Bank balance sheets, or is used by Banks for speculation - most of the data suggests that retail investors are largely out of the markets - which pushes up financial asset prices, which creates a self-sustaining upward spiral, until the bubble bursts.
The more money you print, the more likely it is that this happens, and that at a certain point the bubble bursts. Therefore, as keynes pointed out Monetary Policy without a supporting fiscal policy is like pushing on a string. The question then is, how do you create a fiscally stimulative environment that directs the money into productive investments, which are globally competitive, and provide high value employment - what I understand Ed Miliband is now calling "Pre-distribution".
In a comman economy like China you can do that. Japan and other Asian economies succeeded to an extent. In the 1960's, part of the rationale of the EEC was to develop the Nuclear Industry and so on. Wilson's "White Heat of Technology" and the IRC were not so succesful. Probably, Britain does not have the same culture of statism that exists in France, germany and Japan where industrialisation was udnertaken by Bonapartist regimes.
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