Unless you
watch the business channels, or read the financial press, you might
not have been aware that over the last week there has been some panic
in global markets. Not only have the US stock markets fallen every
day for a week, sometimes by more than 1% per day, with other stock
markets following suit, but there has been increasing fear that the
emerging economies might go into a crisis. The currencies of many of
the latter have fallen sharply, reminiscent of the Asian currency
crisis of the late 1990's, and their central banks have held
emergency meetings at midnight to sharply raise interest rates to
protect those currencies, and guard against rising inflation fears.
The cause of these panics is cited as being the introduction of
“tapering” of QE by the US Federal Reserve. The real
cause is not the tapering, but the QE itself, together with the
changes in the Long Wave conjuncture I have set out elsewhere -
Rates of Profit, Interest and Inflation.
The effect
of QE, is not to have reduced interest rates as generally proposed.
Global interest rates have fallen since 1982, for the reason Marx
sets out. High and rising rates and volumes of profit, produced a
greater supply of potential money-capital, relative to the demand for
money-capital. This greater relative supply then pushes down on
money markets causing interest rates to fall. Money printing cannot
have this effect, because it simply reduces the value of the money
tokens printed, causing a relative rise in prices, which, in fact
causes potential lenders to seek to protect themselves against such
inflation by demanding higher not lower interest rates. QE, can
increase the price of the bonds bought by the central bank, thereby
reducing their yield, but this only causes yields to be higher than
they would have been elsewhere, because money flows away from them
towards where the state has provided a safe bet. The state cannot
buy every bond, be the provider of printed money for every borrower
without causing hyper-inflation. As Marx put it,
“The
entire artificial system of forced expansion of the reproduction
process cannot, of course, be remedied by having some bank, like the
Bank of England, give to all the swindlers the deficient capital by
means of its paper and having it buy up all the depreciated
commodities at their old nominal values.”
“Incidentally,
everything here appears distorted, since in this paper world, the
real price and its real basis appear nowhere, but only bullion, metal
coin, notes, bills of exchange, securities. Particularly in centres
where the entire money business of the country is concentrated, like
London, does this distortion become apparent; the entire process
becomes incomprehensible; it is less so in centres of production.”
The
difference here is that QE was not intended as a means of forced
expansion of the reproduction process of productive-capital, but only
as a means of bailing out the swindlers of financial capital. It was
not intended to buy up depreciated commodities, but to buy up highly
inflated financial assets, each time they began to be depreciated!
In fact, the huge capital gains which were to be made from such
speculation during this 30 year period, acted in many economies to
divert potential money-capital away from productive use, where it
could have been profitably employed. As a money-capitalist – and
as Marx points out from the end of the 19th century nearly
all the big capitalists were really just money-capitalists who simply
made their money available to the professional managers of their
businesses - why, even if you could make 30% plus p.a. profit and
rising from investing your money in productive-capital, would you do
so, if you could buy technology shares in the 1990's, whose price was
rising often by 70% p.a.???
During that
same period, a lot of money-capital was invested in productive
capacity in the Asian Tigers, but likewise, for the above reason, a
lot also went into speculation in rapidly inflating property, until
that crashed. The same thing happened when entry into the Eurozone
made available large amounts of money, at lower interest rates than
would otherwise have been the case, to countries like Greece, Spain,
Portugal, Italy, Ireland and so on.
What QE did
was not to reduce interest rates, but to devalue money, and thereby
to prevent the nominal deflation of commodity prices, whose value was
falling because massive rises in productivity reduced the labour-time
required for their production, in addition to which vast new reserves
of labour-power in China and other parts of the globe, where the
value of labour-power was much lower, became employed to produce
manufactured commodities using these same highly productive methods.
In the process, this hugely increased volume of money tokens,
together with the huge relative increase in the supply of money,
itself resulting from the increased volume of surplus value, flooded
in to buy up a restricted supply of fictional capital, fuelling
massive bubbles in stocks, bonds, and property. Because, these
financial assets provide the backbone of financial capital – the
balance sheets of the banks, building societies, insurance companies
etc. - and because this financial capital sits at the heart of
capital markets, and therefore of the capitalist system, any bursting
of those bubbles threatens the existence of those financial
institutions and the functioning of the capitalist system, at least
in the short run.
A look at
what happened in Japan in the 1990's indicates that. As the
financial bubble burst, the value of property and shares on the books
of Japanese Banks collapsed by up to 90%. That undermined the
capital base of those banks restricting their ability to lend, which
in itself then has economic rather than purely financial
consequences. It set in place the conditions for Japan to remain in
deflation and the doldrums for more than 20 years.
For those
economies that did not engage in the same kind of money printing that
the US and UK did, the consequence, provided their economy had the
potential for earnings, was that their currency appreciated. For two
reasons this is anti-inflationary. Firstly, most globally traded
commodities are denominated in dollars. So, if say the price of oil
is $100 a barrel, and your currency appreciates against the dollar by
20%, then the price of a barrel of oil to you falls by 20%. So
countries that needed to buy things like food, energy or even things
such as capital equipment saw their prices fall often by significant
amounts. By the same token, if you are a supplier of some strategic
raw material, then the price you obtain for it in your own currency
rises by 20%. That helps strengthen your currency further. In a
period when the Spring Phase of the Long Wave cycle was causing
primary product prices to rise sharply, this is significant for many
emerging economies, a large part of whose income came from such
commodities. But, the second anti-inflationary aspect of this is
that as your currency rises in value, so the exchange value of other
commodities denominated in it (their price) falls. It puts pressure
on domestic producers to lower prices. In other words, a rising
value of money acts as a monetary contraction, just as a monetary
expansion acts to create a devaluation of money. In fact, the recent
falls in inflation in the UK and EU, are a result of sharp rises in
the value of the £ and € against the dollar. Both have risen by
more than 10% in recent months. This will be reversed in coming
months, as the underlying increases in commodity values, referred to
in the post above, together with a strengthening of the dollar, as
the US economy rebounds, will reverse those trends. A look at the
rash of strikes in South African mines, the sharp rises in wages for
workers in China and elsewhere indicate that the analysis I gave 7
years ago -
Prepare To Dust Off The Sliding Scale
– is correct.
But, as I
pointed out a while ago -
QE etc.,
whilst QE could act to resolve a credit crunch, it could not change
the underlying insolvency of the banks and financial institutions,
nor could it act to stimulate economic activity, because without
sufficient demand, it was merely pushing on a string. The
continuation of QE proved not only that point, but showed that
continuing that policy was causing other contradictions to arise and
intensify. That was containable so long as the economy was in the
Spring Phase of the Long Wave boom, but as that conjuncture changes
to the Summer Phase, it is not. Productivity gains begin to erode,
innovation in new products also slows (the latest results from Apple
shows this trend I have highlighted previously –
Apple Also Confirms The Conjuncture.
Global
interest rates have been rising for the last year, for the reasons
set out in these previous analyses. The danger for the US Federal
Reserve was that it would be behind the curve, and the markets would
take matters into their own hands, causing the bond bubble to burst.
Tapering is not the cause of rising interest rates, but a response to
it. Just as QE did not reduce interest rates but reduced the value
of the dollar, so tapering is not causing rising interest rates, but
is causing the dollar to rise in value against all those emerging
market currencies that benefited from it. Turkey's economy has grown
spectacularly in the last few years, but its currency has now started
to drop sharply against the dollar, forcing the central bank to hold
an emergency meeting to raise official interest rates by more than
2.25 percentage points, to around 10%, a rise of more than 25%.
Similar rises in official rates are likely across emerging markets.
The
consequence of these higher official rates as well as of rising
market rates will be that it will attract hot money flows as a means
of defending the currency, but it will burst the asset bubbles that
have developed in many of these economies. As well as the risk of
contagion in global financial markets that entails, there are other
risks to inflated asset prices in developed economies. That was
highlighted in the recent heated debate between the Singapore
Monetary Authorities and the business magazine Forbes as I pointed
out recently –
Is Singapore The Next Iceland?.
Many of these Asian economies like Singapore and Hong Kong have
highly inflated property markets reminiscent of the 1990's. A sharp
rise in interest rates, and falling currencies are likely to burst it.
But speculators from many of these countries have also been heavily
involved in speculating in property in London and elsewhere. When
they get their fingers burned its likely to have a similar effect on
speculation in London property, as well as in property in parts of
Europe, like Spain where the property bubble has not yet fully been
deflated. According to the biggest estate agent in Spain, Idealista,
prices there still have another 15% to fall. Some analysts believe
that could be more like 50%. In the event of a renewed global
financial crisis, the latter may still be an underestimate. That in
turn will have huge consequences for the European banks that are
essentially bust, but are given the semblance of life only by listing
such property on their books at these inflated prices.
More
worrying is the situation in China. The same processes that created
this huge sea of liquidity have sent large amounts of money via the
shadow banking system into a range of investments that are unsound.
In fact, it was one of these -
China Trust
– that was partly the spark for the sell off in global markets in
the last week. The immediate problem was addressed by a bail-out,
but as Marx's quote above demonstrates, you cannot simply keep
bailing out every bank, or every company that has such problems. In
China there are many more instances of this kind of problem. Because
China pegged its currency to the dollar, whenever the US printed
money to lower the value of its currency, China had to do likewise.
That is on top of a huge amount of actual money being created in its
economy as a result of the growth of surplus value. With the US now
tapering QE, the consequences of that are manifesting themselves via
all the contradictions that money printing created.
The problems
highlighted by the financial crisis of 2008 have not been addressed,
QE has simply multiplied and magnified them. In store is a much
bigger financial crisis than 2008. Whether it comes this week, this
month, or this year, no once can say. The longer it is delayed, the
worse it is likely to be.
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