There was a
perfect example of just how unable the financial analysts and
journalists are to deal with the current situation, last night. The
BBC's Robert Peston, discussed the crash in global markets, and
invited a number of analysts to contribute. The basic story we are
told, is that its all China's fault. Earlier in the evening, the
FT's Gillian Tett, had given the same message, that China's
Stalinists had done a great job in rapidly growing a backward
economy, by central planning, but now, the economy was just too big
for it to be planned in that way, and the wheels were coming off, as
they found that you cannot dictate the market prices for commodities,
which will be set by the interaction of supply and demand. At the
end of Peston's piece, we were all consoled, however, by another
analyst, who concluded, but the good news is that if you have a
mortgage, this means that the Bank of England probably will not be
raising interest rates, so your mortgage will not be going up!!!!
This was
said with a straight face, with no sense of irony, in consideration
of everything that had just been said. So, the line they are
spinning is; the Chinese economy is crashing because central planners
cannot determine prices, but don't worry, because OUR central
planners, at the Bank of England, CAN set prices, they can determine
the price of capital, for eternity, irrespective of the laws of
economics!
In fact, as
on many previous occasions, when the pundits, and the central bank
planners at the Bank of England themselves have confidently told us
that “interest rates will not be going up”, UK interest rates
yesterday DID go up, and they went up again this morning, along with
interest rates in most EU countries. In other words, the actual
interest rates, the yields on various government bonds, continue to
move up and down, dependent upon whether the lenders of money-capital
provide relatively more or less of it, in relation to demand, went
up, despite all of the selling of shares, which would normally send
money into bonds, as a safer haven, and especially into UK government
bonds, which are a safer haven than all of the “emerging market”
bonds and shares, which have seen trillions of dollars flooding out
of them in recent weeks.
The fact is
that, whatever the Bank of England, or the Federal Reserve might want
to ordain as the official price of capital, they will find, as have
the Chinese central planners, that the actual price of capital, the
rate of interest that borrowers have to pay, to borrow money-capital,
will be set, not by the central bank, but by the willingness of
owners of that money-capital to lend it, compared to the willingness,
or need of borrowers to borrow it. The former will be determined by
how much of this money-capital is created by the mass of realised
profits increasing, or by the proportion of revenues in the form of
profits, interest and rents that are thrown into the money market, to be
loaned (and that means to provide new loans, to buy new shares/bonds,
not to simply bid up the prices of existing property, shares and
bonds). The demand for this money-capital will depend upon the
extent to which firms need to borrow money-capital to buy means of
production and labour-power to expand their capital, which depends
upon whether they see the potential for rising demand for their
output, or in a crisis, the need for money just to stay afloat.
For the
reasons Marx, Hume and Massie describe, that rate of interest cannot
be reduced simply by the central bank printing more currency. Only
if the central bank could itself make every loan, buy every share,
bond, mortgage and so on, could it do that, and the cost would then
be that the value of the currency itself would be utterly destroyed.
In other words, there would be hyperinflation.
The problem
is also illustrated by the fact that none of these pundits seem to
grasp the difference between the real economy, real capital and the
fictitious capital that swirls around the financial markets. The
crisis that will at some point break out in the financial markets, on
a far bigger scale than that of 2008, will not be the result of
weakness in the real economy. Quite the contrary. It is relative
strength in the real economy that provided the spark for the 2008
crisis, as rising inflation in 2007, caused market interest rates,
and then official interest rates to rise. It will again, be rising
market rates of interest, as the demand for money-capital rises
relative to the supply of money-capital, which will spark the next more monumental financial crisis. The instinctive response of those
pundits and speculators to cheer every bit of bad economic news, is
founded upon this fact.
Between
1980-2014, the Dow Jones Index rose by 5 times the rise in US GDP and
the biggest rise in the Dow was during the period of slowest growth.
So there is no correlation between a rising economy, and a rising
stock market. Quite the opposite, in fact.
During
periods such as the early 1980's, capital begins to introduce a range
of new labour saving technologies, which significantly raise
productivity where they are introduced. The effect of these new
technologies is typically contradictory. Considered within the
sphere in which they are introduced, because they displace large
amounts of labour, they reduce the produced surplus value, which acts
to reduce the general rate of profit, in the way Marx describes in
his Law of the Tendency for the Rate of Profit to Fall. But, because
of the operation of prices of production, the industries that
introduce these new technologies actually experience higher than
average rates of profit, until such time as additional capital moves
into these spheres, to increase supply and reduce market prices.
Moreover,
the consequence of this labour-saving technology, as Marx sets out,
is to increase the relative surplus population. Wages fall, as
unemployment rises, which leads to a rise in the rate of surplusvalue and profit. These new technologies, bring about a significant
“moral depreciation” of existing fixed capital, and rising
productivity reduces the costs of circulating constant capital,
particularly as raw material costs tend to be low during such
periods. The effect is that although economic growth may be sluggish
or stagnant, the annual rate of profit begins to rise sharply. Its
this which causes share prices to rise significantly.
On the one
hand, rising rates of profit causes the earnings bit of the
price/earnings ratio to rise, so share prices appear cheaper. On the
other, the increase in the realised money-capital, from higher
profits, reduces interest rates, which causes p/e multiples to widen.
Following the financial crash of 1987, this was exacerbated by the
actions of central banks, which printed money and promoted the buying
of these bonds and shares, and thereby created the series of huge
asset price bubbles that are now bursting.
In fact,
now, for all the reasons I have set out before, productivity growth
is slowing, wages will start to rise, profits will start to get
squeezed, (even as the mass of profits rise), because the cost of
producing those profits will rise, the supply of money-capital will
fall relative to the demand, so interest rates will rise, and that
will be reflected in a bursting of the property, share and bond
bubbles. It is not a faltering global economy that is behind the
current market sell-offs. Those markets are selling off, because
huge financial bubbles were created within them, and they are no
longer supportable. It is merely appearance being brought into
alignment with reality.
The same
financial pundits, for example, have explained the sharp drops in the
price of oil and other primary products by claiming that again it is
due to declining demand for these materials in China. That is
reminiscent of the claims of Ricardo, Mill and Say that there could
be no overproduction, only under consumption. Marx showed that claim
was nonsense. It was not the failure of the millions of Chinese to
consume the masses of textiles and opium Britain was sending them,
that was the problem, but the fact that Britain had overproduced the
commodities it wanted to sell to them, because it had expanded
production via the use of ever more powerful machinery that was the
cause of the inability to sell them.
The same
applies today. The demand for oil, for example, is NOT declining,
but rising. According to the IEA global oil consumption increased by around 2% last year, and is
forecast to rise by 2% again this year. It is not falling
consumption of oil that is causing the price to collapse, but the
fact that high oil prices after the start of the new long wave boom,
caused the usual increase in exploration and search for new
technologies to extract more oil, and use existing supplies more
effectively. The sharp fall in oil prices is caused by
overproduction, for example, the fact that fracking has made the US
self sufficient in oil and gas, not reduced demand from slower
Chinese growth.
The same can
be seen in respect of consumption of copper,
and with iron ore. It is not falling demand that explains sharply
lower prices, but sharply increased supply, which is always what
happens at this juncture of the long wave cycle. A look at the oil
market shows that even at these low prices, additional supply
continues to be added. Even many of the high cost producers continue
to pump oil, rather than close down, which means that, at some point,
many of these producers will go bust, as the large amount of junk
bonds, which financed them will go bust too, spreading a further
financial panic into financial markets. Not only will those bonds go
bust, but it will trigger a cascade of claims on CDS's etc., as
happened with the failure of mortgage backed securities in the
sub-prime crisis.
In the
meantime, Saudi Arabia, which needs oil prices at around $90 a barrel
to balance its budget, is prepared to keep pumping out oil, down to
its cost of production of around $15 a barrel, in order to retain and
extend its market share, and force out of business the US shale
producers, and at those kinds of prices, many North Sea producers
would go bust too. This is a classic example, of the kind of partial
crisis of overproduction that Marx describes in Capital III, Chapter
15. In the meantime, Saudi has gone from a large supplier of
loanable money-capital in global money markets to a borrower, a
similar effect has happened with Norway and its sovereign wealth
fund, and the same applies to all those economies that have benefited
from huge amounts of revenue in the form of rents, which provided
part of the huge mass of money-capital into money markets over the
last 30 years.
Yesterday, I
watched a number of pundits who said, that they were buying large
scale into these falling markets. Some of them were the same ones
who have said the same thing over the last few weeks, as markets
continued to drop, contrary to their predictions. In all these
cases, the pundits and fund managers based their faith that they were
doing the right thing on the fact that they claimed that they have
“been doing this job for thirty years”. But, that is the
problem. They have only been doing their job for the last thirty
years! They have only been doing their job during a thirty year
period when overall markets have gone up. When they didn't go up,
because of economic fundamentals, they went up, because of
speculation, fuelled by low interest rates, and a capitalism
structured around the needs of fictitious capital rather than
productive-capital. When that speculation failed, and market crashes
occurred, conservative governments and the representatives of that
fictitious capital, in central banks, intervened to print money and
buy bonds, and shares to underpin those prices, which is why with
such a one way bet, the owners of money-capital were happy to gamble
with it, bidding up the prices of property, shares and bonds, to
totally ridiculous and unsupportable levels, that has required ever
more state intervention, ever more elaborate financial engineering
and manipulation of the figures to sustain.
It is why we
repeatedly hear the pleas of the financial journalists, who ask,
“what can the authorities do to bring the selling to an end,” as
though those authorities can or should do anything to bring it to an
end.
Its the same
thing with those journalists as with the Blairite politicians who
cannot understand the world they are now living in. They too have
only been in their jobs for thirty years, and many for more like
thirty months! They have only known a world where property prices,
share prices and so on go up, and where the world revolves around
this paper wealth, and the conservative ideas that flow from it. Theworld is changing, Corbyn, Syriza, Podemos, Bernie Sanders are merely
a reflection of it. The material conditions that support
conservatism fictitious capital are weakening, and the conditions
that support social-democracy and big socialised, industrial capital
are strengthening.
No comments:
Post a Comment