In the last
Labour Leaders debate, screened by Sky News, last night, Jeremy
Corbyn removed every last vestige of the argument put by the Tory
media, and the Blairites that a Corbyn led Labour Party could not win
the next election. In the poll of Sky's viewers, who one can assume
are not an over representation of left-wing views, Corbyn was seen as
having won the debate by a whacking 80%. That support came from
Labour, Tory, Liberal, UKIP voters alike, all in huge numbers compared
to the other contenders. The only other candidate to increase their
standing as a result of the debate was Liz Kendall, with those
thinking that either Yvette Cooper or Andy Burnham had won, being
essentially deminimus.
The reason
Kendall's support was higher at 9%, than the other two who scored
around 5-6%, could be that she attracted more of the Tory vote than
the other two, but also, Kendall at least stuck to her Blairite
message, despite the fact that no one other than Tories and died in
the wool Blairites believes it anymore. She possibly picked up some
support for consistency, whereas Cooper and Burnham are seen as
technocratic and dissembling.
Burnham's
excuse for having argued against abstaining on the government's
Welfare Bill, and then abstaining, was pure sophistry. He was
sticking by his principles he argued, not the principle, of course,
of acting in accordance with what you claim to believe, and of
opposing Tory attacks on the working-class, but the principle that he
claimed the Labour Movement had always been based upon – that of
solidarity. The Shadow cabinet had agreed a position and he was
voting in accordance with that decision, even though he disagreed
with it!
His argument
in relation to the EU refugee crisis was also hardly inspiring. He
advised Cameron to be more amenable to taking in refugees now,
because he said, it would win him brownie points with other EU
countries to try to get through his other reactionary policies for
limiting the free movement of labour in future!
Yvette
Cooper saved her main fire, for attacking Corbyn over his economic
policy, and in particular the idea of a “People's QE”, to provide
some finance for a national Investment Bank that could provide
funding for a series of infrastructure projects and so on required to
improve the efficiency of British capital. For a trained economist,
it has to be said that Cooper's argument was either economically
illiterate, or else dissembling.
At least
Cooper did not try to put the ridiculous argument used recently by
Jack Straw, who tried to argue that QE to fund government spending
was inflationary, whilst QE to fund the bailing out of the banks was
not, and in the process illustrated that he clearly did not
understand how QE works, via the Bank of England creating electronic
deposits, which are used to buy government bonds from banks and
financial institutions.
Instead,
Cooper argued that Corbyn's proposal was inflationary, whereas the
previous QE was not, because at the time of the previous QE, the
economy was contracting, but now it is growing. This is an
essentially Keynesian argument that QE previously was not
inflationary, because without growth in the economy, the additional
money created, does not get into circulation, because there is no
demand to pull on it. As Keynes put it, its like pushing on a piece
of string. Now, however, with the economy growing, there is a demand
pull, so that the additional currency goes into circulation, and
thereby enables prices to rise.
What is
inflation? Over a year, there is a certain value of commodities that
are put into circulation. Some commodities are put into circulation
for final consumption, such as food, clothing and so on, whilst other
commodities are put into circulation, to be used in the production
process itself, such as raw materials, machines and so on. In a
money economy, the circulation of these commodities is brought about
by the use of money. If A has a commodity with a value of £1, they
sell it to B, and get in exchange £1 in money. A then uses this £1
to buy a commodity from B, with a value of £1, so that in reality,
what was exchanged was two commodities with a value of £1, and money
only intervened as a means of effecting the exchange. In reality, A
would buy commodities from C-Z, with the £1, who in turn would make
further exchanges, amongst themselves, but the net result is the
same.
If we assume
that the velocity of circulation of the currency is 1, that is each
unit of currency, on average, performs just one transaction during
the year, i.e. a £ coin only buys £1 of commodities in the year,
then the amount of money put into circulation, should be just equal
to the total value of commodities that are to be circulated during
the year. When the currency was comprised of gold coins, the Bank of
England used to put currency into circulation on this basis.
Money is
merely an equivalent form of value, and a money commodity, such as
gold, is merely a physical manifestation of this value, or in other
words, a physical manifestation of a given amount of social
labour-time. As Marx says, in Theories of Surplus Value, every commodity is money, in that every commodity is such a physical manifestation of this quantum of labour-time. Every commodity could act as money because it could be used to purchase other commodities of an equal value. Gold and silver come to be seen as money itself, rather than being merely money commodities, only because over time, they prove themselves to be the best suited to fulfilling that role. There is nothing specific about gold and silver that makes them money itself.
Prices, are then merely the name given to the exchange value of commodities when measured against this money commodity. If an ounce of gold has a value of 10 hours of labour-time, and a coat has a value equal to 10 hours of labour-time, then the price of a coat is 1 ounce of gold, and if this 1 ounce of gold is given the name £1, then a coat has a price of £1.
Prices, are then merely the name given to the exchange value of commodities when measured against this money commodity. If an ounce of gold has a value of 10 hours of labour-time, and a coat has a value equal to 10 hours of labour-time, then the price of a coat is 1 ounce of gold, and if this 1 ounce of gold is given the name £1, then a coat has a price of £1.
If, the
value of gold falls, because say, gold is found in California, that
requires less labour-time to produce, then it may be the case that an
ounce of gold has a value of only 5 hours. In that case, 2 ounces of
gold would be required to buy a coat, so that although the value of
the coat itself has not changed, its price will rise to £2. A fall
in the value of the money commodity, will, therefore, cause an
inflation of the prices of commodities.
But, where
precious metals are replaced as currency, by money tokens, or credit
money, this same rule still applies that only the amount of money
should be put into circulation that is equal to the value of
commodities to be circulated. (In fact, because the money performs
several transactions, only enough money needs to be put into
circulation that is needed to perform this function, divided by the
average number of transactions.) But, there is no restriction on the
quantity of these tokens that can be thrown into circulation.
Suppose, 10
ounces of gold needs to be thrown into circulation, and these
represent £10. Instead, paper notes could be thrown into
circulation, to represent this money. In that case, everything is
fine. But, if notes with a face value of £20 is thrown into
circulation, then the value of these tokens is thereby cut in half.
The prices of the commodities measured by these money tokens, will
rise from £10 to £20, even though there has been no change in the
value of those commodities, or of gold.
If, the
quantity of commodities to be circulated in the economy remains
constant, therefore, printing additional money tokens (and the same
applies with creating additional credit money, or bank money, by QE)
acts to depreciate all of the money tokens in circulation, and
thereby causes inflation. But, of course, things are not that
simple, which is why the argument put forward by Cooper as a trained
economist is either illiterate or dishonest.
First, of
all, one issue here is about whether the money is actually in
circulation. Additional money tokens that do not go into
circulation, but just sit in banks vaults, or people's pockets cannot
act to inflate prices, precisely because it is not in circulation.
It is the same as if each piece of money performs, on average fewer
transactions, so that the velocity of circulation is reduced. But,
the whole point of QE, if it has any, is that the money tokens do
go into circulation. So, the argument is rather moot, because the
increased money tokens can only cause inflation if they go into
circulation, but the whole point about any QE is that the tokens do
go into circulation. So, on this basis any effective QE, must cause
inflation, all other things being equal.
But, herein
lies the other aspect, in which things are not so simple, because, of
course, everything else is not equal. The argument put for QE, for
example, in the US and in Japan, and previously in the UK, is that it
was intended to reduce interest rates, and provide banks with
liquidity, so that, on the one hand, lower interest rates would
encourage people to borrow, and so stimulate economic activity, and
on the other would provide banks with the liquidity they needed to be
able to lend, to meet the additional demand for borrowing. In other
words, the purpose of the QE that was given was that it was intended
to stimulate additional economic activity.
Suppose the
level of activity is such that the value of commodities to be
circulated is £1 trillion, so that £1 trillion of money needs to be
put into circulation. If there is QE, which is effective in
stimulating additional economic activity, so that the value of
commodities to be circulated rises to £1.2 trillion, then so long as
only £0.2 trillion of additional money tokens are put into
circulation, this is not inflationary, because only as much value of
money tokens is in circulation as are required to circulate the value
commodities.
Now, on this
basis, its odd that Cooper, as a Keynesian economist, put the
argument she did. Keynes' argument was that in conditions where
there are unemployed resources, it is possible to stimulate economic
activity, and for this to be self-financing, because of the
multiplier effect. In other words, if £100 of additional spending
is put into the economy, those in receipt of this money will spend
it, and that means that those with whom they spend this money, also
thereby get additional income, which they in turn spend, and so on.
Keynes
proposed that the government would achieve this by deficit spending,
i.e. spending more than it took in in taxes, but, because the
consequence would be that economic activity increased, and incomes
were thereby raised, taxes would naturally rise, so that the gap
between the increased spending and taxation would be more than
closed.
Now, if we
look at the QE that was undertaken to bail out the banks, and the QE
that Corbyn is proposing, Cooper's argument appears even more odd.
The QE that was used to bail out the banks, actually did nothing to
stimulate economic activity. That was true in the UK, US and in
Japan, and it looks to be true in relation to the EU now too.
Interest rates were already very low, and in any case, as I've set
out elsewhere, QE does not reduce the average rate of interest. It
can only reduce the yield on selective financial instruments, i.e.
those actually bought by the central bank, with the newly printed
money, whose prices are thereby raised.
Individuals
who in all of the above economies are already massively in debt, and
who face an uncertain future – especially if you work in the public
sector, facing austerity, or in an industry that may be affected by
such austerity, or you are on a zero hours contract, or you are
self-employed and no idea whether work will be forthcoming – are
not likely to go out and borrow even more, just because interest
rates become a few basis points lower. By the same token, firms
facing such an uncertain future, with demand growth sluggish at best,
are not going to go out and borrow money to take on lots more
workers, build a new factory, by additional machines and material
etc.
What is
more, large companies already had lots of cash, and didn't need to
borrow, whilst small companies could not get loans, because banks
didn't want to lend to them, under such conditions, because they
might not get the money back. It was much easier, for the bank to
use the additional liquidity that the central bank provided to them,
instead to buy all those financial assets that the central bank was
themselves underpinning. So, it was better for banks and financial
institutions, to buy more of the government bonds, whose prices were
being pushed up, by central bank purchases, or to buy the shares of
companies, as stock markets were sent into ever higher bubbles, as a
result of the same process.
So, this
process of QE to bail out the banks did nothing to stimulate economic
activity. To that extent, the money did not get into circulation,
and so was not inflationary. But, in another sense, it did get into
circulation, and was hyper inflationary. The money got into
circulation to buy these bonds, and to buy shares, and as a
consequence it sent the prices of these assets soaring. That is bad
for a number of reasons. Firstly, it does nothing to stimulate
economic activity, or to create additional value, and so the
additional money tokens that have been created, have no value
equivalent in circulation. At some point, when that money stops
circulating around financial markets, and enters the real economy, it
will be hyper inflationary, precisely because it has not contributed
to any additional increase in the production of value, i.e. it has
led to the production of no additional commodities, as an equivalent
value to the money tokens.
The second
reason that it is very bad, is that this QE killed workers pensions.
By massively inflating the prices of shares and bonds, it made them
much more expensive for workers to buy with their monthly pension
contributions. So, they bought fewer of them into their pension
funds, so those funds generated less income with which to pay
pensions. Moreover, because the same process sent yields on bonds
and shares down to near zero, this cratered the income generated by
pension funds even further, which is apparent in the worthlessness of
annuities on private pensions. This is why many companies have
massive black holes in their pension funds.
The reality
here is that the need to provide for old age via a pension is a part
of the value of labour-power, and QE massively increased that cost,
as a result of the above, and massively increased the value of labour-power. It should have been compensated by a consequent rise
in wages, so that workers could increase their monthly pension
contributions, so as to be able to buy the required number of bonds
and shares, into their funds, so as to be able to provide the
required pension income. That has not happened, and if it had, then
not only would the real rate of inflation have been massively higher,
but the rise in wages would have cratered profits. But, the problem
has not gone away, it has simply been deferred to a future crisis.
The same
applies with property prices. Loose money policy in the 1980's
through to the present caused excessive borrowing to finance the
purchase of houses at increasingly ludicrous prices. Again, if the
price of houses was included in the inflation figures, the real
inflation figure would have been much higher than it is indicated.
Once again, had wages risen accordingly to cover this hyper inflation
of property prices, then profits would have been cratered, and again
this is a crisis that is yet to be resolved.
In the
latter stages, house prices became so ludicrously high that workers
could not be enticed into buying them even with near zero interest
rates, and no questions asked financing. Instead, capital that might
have gone into productive activity, went into property speculation,
as amateurs frustrated at getting no returns on their savings and
pensions, gambled with their money as buy to let landlords, acting to
keep the bubble inflated for a while longer. In both the US and UK,
in the last year or so, it has been almost entirely buy to let
landlords that have bought up properties, and they have been
encouraged to do so by governments that have given them favourable
tax treatment even over individuals taking out mortgages to buy
property to live in.
In other
words, the QE that was undertaken caused a hyper inflation of the
prices of fictitious capital. In so doing, it caused a massive rise
in the value of labour-power, which has not yet been reflected in the
required rise in wages. Either the prices of this fictitious capital
will collapse, or wages will have to rise massively, or both. Wages
are not going to rise massively, but will undoubtedly have to rise,
which means that the prices of fictitious capital will collapse with
the consequent economic implications. But, what makes this worse, is
precisely that it had none of the beneficial effects that a Keynesian
stimulus would have had of actually stimulating economic activity,
and thereby increasing the amount of value created in the economy, as
the corollary of the additional money tokens, which would then have
prevented it from being inflationary.
So, compared
to this QE, that Cooper and other Labour Ministers have had no
problem with, the form of QE proposed by Corbyn, seems eminently
sensible, because it is designed not to keep financial bubbles
inflated, and thereby further inflate the fictitious wealth of the
top 0.001%, but rather to encourage additional economic activity, to
create additional value, and so if anything is far less inflationary,
than the type of QE that Cooper has supported in the past.
Of course,
there is nothing socialist about such a social-democratic strategy,
but it is far more rational, as a social democratic strategy, which
meets the needs of big industrial capital, than is the current
policies of monetary stimulus combined with fiscal austerity that
Cooper and the Blairites are signed up to along with the Tories.
One danger
for Corbyn, however, might be that with his popularity amongst the
general public now so high, and a general election victory looking
all the more likely, he might find himself the unwilling beneficiary
of the support of Rupert Murdoch. Murdoch always likes to back a
sure winner, as was seen by his support for the SNP in May. It would
be an irony that Blair and his supporters won the backing of Murdoch,
by their pathetic fawning at his feet, and accommodation to his
reactionary politics, whilst Corbyn obtained it by the opposite, by
sticking to his principles, providing a clear alternative, and
winning the support of the electors. What a refreshing change.
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