Everywhere
you look there is some kind of flation. In Japan, for the last 20
years, there has been deflation. In China, by contrast, there is
inflation. In Europe, including the UK, there is disinflation, and
it may be heading for stagflation, in the near future. In the US,
inflation is on the rise. Everywhere, except Japan, there is massive
asset price inflation.
Twenty years
ago, Japan had gone through a massive asset price bubble, similar to, but actually smaller than, that which western economies have
experienced, over the last few decades. When the Japanese bubble
burst, in the early 1990's, the stock market fell 82%, from over
39,000 to less than 7,000. With Japanese banks highly geared to
property and shares, the fall in the stock market also went along
with a fall in Japanese property prices, of around 90%. The sharp
fall in prices, also set in place the process of deflation that has
affected Japan, for the last twenty years.
Consumers, who saw that there was an advantage in saving money, rather than
spending it, because next week, the prices of things you want to buy
will be cheaper than they are this week, caused Japanese consumption
to fall, and its savings rise. Falling consumption itself plays into
deflation, because it tends to mean that aggregate supply is always
greater than aggregate demand. Pressure is constantly maintained, on
prices, in a downward direction. But, also, as savers save rather than
spend, producers seek markets elsewhere. At the same time, the
savers provide the state with the money it requires to fund its
expanding budget, as they buy its bonds.
The savers
also buy the bonds of foreign state's and companies, and thereby
provide them with the funds they require, to buy the commodities
exported to them from Japan, China and other surplus economies. The
income they receive, on these bonds, even as its squeezed by
“financial repression”, still appears positive, for the
Japanese saver, because even these low rates of return buy more, in an
economy where prices are falling, than where they are rising. Prime
Minister Abe, seeing the state deficit rising, whilst the Yen rises,
thereby increasingly threatening the ability of the economy to
finance itself, by high levels of exports, has attempted to reverse
the deflation, by promising to double the money supply, thereby
massively depreciating the value of the currency. Despite massive
money printing, Japanese consumer prices have only moved up slowly,
and whenever there is any global uncertainty, the Yen rises, as money
rushes towards safe havens.
In China,
without a welfare state or other means of social insurance, workers
similarly save large amounts of their income to cover unforeseen
eventualities. Yet, despite this high savings rate, China has seen
inflation rather than the deflation that has affected Japan.
Building its economy, on the basis of exporting large volumes of cheap
commodities, China pegged its currency to the Dollar, as its main
market for those commodities. In that way, whenever the US printed
money, to pay for its debts, and thereby reduced the value of the
dollar, the Remnimbi also fell, and the Chinese money supply
increased, pushing up inflation.
As China,
consumed ever more quantities of raw materials, to feed its rapidly
growing industrial machine, the prices of those commodities rose, and
was monetised by the increasing quantity of money circulating in the
Chinese economy. From 1999 onwards, as the new global long wave boom
swung into action, the prices of food and raw materials soared. That
pushed up the end prices of commodities, produced in China, that was
only offset by the massive rise in productivity that Chinese
productivity brought about. As China sucked in increasing quantities
of labour-power, from its countryside, Chinese wages themselves began
to rise, by around 10% p.a., some of it simply covering the rise in
prices, some reflecting an actual rise in Chinese real wages, as
workers living standards rose sharply.
For twenty
years, global commodity prices were kept low, because the new global
long wave boom brought with it massive rises in productivity, and rises in the
rate of turnover of capital, and in addition, because China pegged
the value of its currency to the Dollar, although Chinese domestic
inflation was pushed up, by the greater volume of money in
circulation, Chinese export prices were kept low.
But, China
has itself had to start sourcing production in lower wage economies, as wages have risen continually at home. In fact, its reported, in
some industries, that Chinese wages have risen so much that
production has been relocated to the US, because production costs are
now cheaper there than in China! Whilst the rise in global food and
raw material prices has more or less ceased, as new sources of
cheaper supply have been brought on stream, the huge rise in
productivity that occurred in the 1990's, and early 2000's, has also
slowed, so that unit costs are rising. At the same time, China has
allowed the RMB to rise, within limits. That helps to reduce its own
import costs, but simultaneously causes its export prices to rise.
At the same
time, the huge expansion of Chinese money supply, as elsewhere, has
caused an increasing bubble in Chinese property prices. Chinese
share markets have not bubbled up as they have elsewhere, because
large amounts of money-capital has gone into actual productive
investment, rather than simply bidding up existing share prices, but
another feature has been that, particularly smaller companies, whose
output is not encouraged within the objectives of the Five Year Plan,
have had to seek out funding from a shadow banking system, that has
also grown on the back of low interest rates, and a surplus of money
in circulation. Instead, the surplus Chinese money-capital, has been
converted into revenue, and invested in western bonds and shares,
creating massive bubbles in such fictitious capital.
This massive
rise in productivity, that went along with the new long wave boom, after 1999, as well as the fact that vast quantities of cheap
commodities were thrown on to the global market, by China, during this
period, has caused commodity price inflation, in Europe and the US,
during that period, to be low. Had there not been massive money
printing, during that period, there would have been actual deflation.
That is market prices would have been falling significantly rather
than rising. This is one reason that the real rate of profit is much
higher than it appears, on the basis of nominal prices. At the same
time, the massive rise in money supply, that started back in the late
1980's, caused a huge rise in asset prices. The real rise in those
prices, whether for property or shares, occurred in the 1980's and
90's; the bubbles blown up at that time have only been kept inflated
in the last 15 years. The Dow Jones, for example, rose by 1,000%
between 1982 and 2000, but has risen by only 70% since 2000.
But, as
productivity slows, and Chinese production costs rise, the potential
for the value of commodities to fall further becomes limited.
Meanwhile, the huge volume of currency thrown into circulation, and
the inflation of banks balance sheets, on the back of this fictitious
capital, provides the potential for money prices, of these commodities, to rise sharply, with only a small rise in the velocity of
circulation. That is being witnessed now in the US, as both Producer
Price and Consumer Price indices have begun to rise sharply. This
poses a severe problem for the Federal Reserve. It has been
“tapering” its money printing for several months, and yet is
still engaging in quantitative easing to the extent of $15 billion a
month.
Many are
already saying that the Federal Reserve, and other central banks, are
way behind the curve, in relation to inflation. It takes around two
years before changes in money supply feed through into the economy,
to be shown up in prices. Having previously targeted the
unemployment rate, as a point when they would cease money printing,
and begin to raise official interest rates, the Federal Reserve and
the Bank of England, have both abandoned that criteria, after it was
met, to justify continued money printing and low official rates.
Now, they are targeting wage inflation. But wage inflation always
arises – if it arises at all – after price inflation, not before.
The process
is, as occurred in China, that commodity prices rise, and cause
profits to rise. If the rise is sustained for long enough, so that
firms believe that it is a permanent state of affairs, they begin to
take on additional workers. Eventually, the number of workers
available begins to fall, relative to this demand, so firms have to
begin to bid up wages, to attract them. There are indications this is
already happening in the US, and, in the UK, there are shortages of
workers, with the necessary skills, for a number of industries, which
has been exacerbated by the Liberal-Tory immigration controls.
If the Fed
and the Bank of England wait until they see actual wage inflation,
they will be two years too late. An inflationary spiral will already
be under way, and any action they take will require two years to have
any effect. It will have to be that much more drastic as a
consequence. That is why there are increasing voices being raised, at
the Fed, for the pace of action to be speeded up, why its more recent
announcements have sounded more hawkish, and also why the minutes of
the last Bank of England MPC meeting showed that two members – Martin Weale and Ian McCafferty – voted to increase rates
immediately to 0.75%.
But, both
the Fed and Bank of England are reluctant to stop the money printing
or raise official interest rates, because as soon as they do so, the
massive asset price bubbles will collapse, and that means that the
banks, whose insolvency is only hidden, by their fictitious balance
sheets, will start to go bust on a large scale. The ECB has already
enlisted the help of a US firm that dealt with bank failures in the
US, in preparation for the expected failure of many European banks.
In the US,
Robert Shiller has pointed out that, on his Cyclically Adjusted P/E
ratio, shares are at levels only previously seen ahead of major market
crashes, in 1929, 1987, 2000 and 2008. He also believes that property
prices are once again in a similar bubble. Following a 30 year
secular bull market, in bonds, that has raised their prices to levels
not seen in centuries, this is another asset class that is in bubble
territory. Almost everywhere you look, asset prices have been bubbled
up, as investors seek places to put their money that might provide
some modicum of return. Worryingly, one of those has been in the so
called “Junk Bond” market.
Junk Bonds,
are bonds issued by countries or companies with poor credit ratings.
They tend to pay a bit higher yield because lenders are reluctant to
lend to them for fear that they will not get their money back. But,
there is another problem with Junk Bonds, especially as they have
begun to be bought via exchange traded funds. That is that they are illiquid. Fewer people invest in them than other, safer assets.
That means that if investors run for the doors, there is no potential
buyer of these bonds, at almost any price, so they fall through the
floor, taking investors with them, and that causes the kind of
financial panic and credit crunch that was seen in 1929, and 2008.
For years,
UK inflation was way above the Bank of England target of 2%. The
reason was that the value of the pound was falling, and that pushed
up UK import costs, for things like food and energy. When the US
began QE III, whilst the Bank of England stopped its policy of money
printing, the pound rose against the dollar by about 15%, going from
$1.50, to over $1.70. That reduced UK import costs, and inflation
fell. A similar cause lies behind the fall in Eurozone prices, as
the Euro rose from around $1.20 up to $1.40. The other factor was
that recession and austerity in the Eurozone depressed prices. As
Marx demonstrated, lower wages do not cause lower prices. They bring
about higher profits. However, in a global economy, prices and wages
are determined at this global not national level. Within this
context, lower wages can only result in higher profits, if the firm's
involved are globally competitive, so that their prices remain the
same. In much of peripheral Europe, the industry is not even
competitive within the EU, let alone the global economy. Under these
conditions, lower wages do not translate into higher profits, but
into lower market prices, in order to enable the company not to go
bust.
But, with
global productivity gains slowing, global commodity prices rising, as
the cheap prices offered by Chinese producers disappear, and are
replaced by rising prices of Chinese commodities, the consequence is
an overall squeeze on profits, whilst the demand for labour-power
rises, and causes wages to rise. Moreover, the consequence of
austerity measures is to constrain demand, and reduce the level of
output to meet it. As was seen in the 1970's, the consequence of
this is not to put downward pressure on prices, but to put upward
pressure on unit production costs. The result is stagflation, low
levels of economic activity, combined with steadily rising prices.
It creates
the worst of all possible conditions, for asset prices. Share prices
fall sharply, as the rate of profit declines, and available
money-capital is required for productive-investment, rather than
speculation. Workers have less money available, despite rising
nominal wages, as inflation rises. Low levels of economic activity,
mean they are less likely to spend on things like property. But,
also as inflation rises, interest rates rise sharply, as bond
investors seek compensation for the constantly falling value of the
money they are paid in. The rise in interest rates causes share
prices to fall further, and collapses the property market, especially
where it has been in the kind of massive bubble that has built up
over the last 40 years.
That is why
the central banks have continually changed their message as to when
they will stop money printing and begin to raise rates, because the
end of this story is coming closer by the minute.
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