The chart
shown here is from data produced by the Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis. It illustrates the proportion of US household and non-profit
organisation net worth to household income. It is a useful measure
of the extent of financial asset price bubbles, because that net
worth is essentially the nominal value of people's houses, mutual
funds and pension funds.
Now of
course, as a measure of two things, one can rise or fall relative to
the other, because one variable rises, or the other falls, or a
combination of the two. Its certainly true that household income in
the US has not moved very much in the last few years, even though
wages are now starting to rise, as labour shortages begin to appear.
But, the rise in net worth, relative to household income, cannot really
be explained by any significant fall, in recent years, of household
income. The spike in the relation, seen at the far right hand of the
chart, can only be explained by a sharp rise in nominal net worth,
i.e. a sharp rise in nominal prices for property, stocks and bonds.
Put another way a series of bubbles.
A look at
the rest of the chart illustrates the point, and also the
significance. Almost identical spikes in the relation can be seen just ahead of 2008, and ahead of the Tech Wreck of 2000. An almost
identical picture could probably be obtained for the UK, given the
huge property bubble that has blown up, in recent years, and given
that UK stock and bond markets have followed the US into bubble
territory once more too.
As the chart
shows, when the crash happens, it comes suddenly once this
relationship has hit its peak. The chart already shows that the peak
is already as pronounced as in 2008, and more pronounced than in
2000. It also indicates that the turn downwards has begun.
I have
indicated over recent years, the basis of the crash that will
ultimately arise, and which this chart indicates may be not too far
away. I have also described it in my book Marx and Engels Theories of Crisis - Understanding The Coming Storm.
Back in 2013, I described the fact that a conjunctural shift had occurred in
the long wave. It meant several factors were about to start to kick
in. Firstly, the sharp rise in primary product prices that was
typical of every Spring phase of the long wave, and which had again
been seen after 1999, would come to an end. That meant that the
prices of things like oil, copper, iron ore, steel, food and so on
would drop sharply.
That
happened on cue. The prices of all those things began to drop
sharply in 2014. The basis of the fall in price is a reverse of why
they rose in the previous phase. Firstly, high prices encouraged
large scale investment in new production of all these primary
products. That new production is much lower cost than the older
existing production. It exploits newer, more productive land, and
the investment from the start uses the latest equipment and
techniques. Consequently, as this new production comes on stream,
and accounts for an increasing proportion of total output, so it
reduces the price of production of these various products.
Secondly,
because it takes a long time for this new production to come on
stream – around 10-12 years before a copper mine is producing at
its optimal level – demand continues to outstrip supply for a long
time keeping prices high, and thereby encouraging continued
investment in new production. When that production does then all
start to come on stream, it leads to a rapid rise in supply, which
then outstrips demand, causing market gluts and drops in market prices. That has been seen in the fall in oil prices from a peak of
$147 a barrel, and sustained prices over $100 a barrel, down to its
trough a few weeks ago of $26 a barrel. But, it has been seen also
in the sharp drops in the prices of copper, iron ore, steel, milk and
so on.
Eventually,
the oversupply tends to work its way out of the system. There has
been an almost total cessation of new capital investment in many of
these primary products, which means that as existing sources of
supply are exhausted they are not replaced, so increases in supply
slow down, and then more or less stop. That can be seen with oil
production, particularly in the higher cost oil production, and in
the steady decline in the US oil rig count. So, that element of the
drop in prices comes to an end, but market prices stay relatively low
compared to the past, because of the other element, the lower price
of production of this new supply.
It was on
that basis that at the end of 2014 I wrote that I expected that the
price of oil could spike down as low as $25 a barrel – it actually
dropped to $26 – but that during this year it would steadily rise
within a range of $40 - $70 a barrel. Oil is now hovering around $50
a barrel. I also pointed out, at that time, that the drop in oil
prices, whilst good for the economy, because they reduce the value of
constant capital, and thereby raise the rate of profit, as well as
reducing the value of labour-power, and thereby raising the rate of surplus value, was bad for financial markets.
Firstly, a
lot of oil production finances huge rental incomes for states in the
Gulf, Russia, Norway and so on, and those revenues tend to get
recycled via the petro-dollar markets into financial markets, buying
up a limited supply of shares, bonds and property, which blows up
bubbles in all those financial assets. It represented a huge supply
of loanable money-capital thrown into money markets, which pushed
down global interest rates, and in turn pushed up financial asset
prices via capitalisation. The sharp drop in those rental revenues,
meant that this large supply of loanable money-capital would be
reduced.
What is
more, some of those economies, like Saudi Arabia, Russia, Venezuela,
which depended on these revenues to finance their state spending
suddenly found that although their low cost oil production was still
very profitable at these low prices, the revenues were no longer
adequate to cover their budgets. Instead of being net suppliers of
money-capital into global money markets these countries became net
borrowers.
The other
point I made back in 2013, was that more than thirty years into a new
cycle of productivity-raising innovations, that process would reach
its peak. The process can be viewed in terms of intensive andextensive accumulation. It can be thought of like this. At the
start of the cycle, say a firm has 10 machines. As one is worn out
and due for replacement, it is replaced by a new machine that does
the work perhaps of two of the older machines. The following year,
when a further machine is worn out, therefore, it does not need to be
replaced, as the new machine is already doing its work. It means the
worker who operates this machine can then also be made redundant.
The new machines thereby simply replace the old worn out machines,
but do not add to the installed fixed capital, or necessarily bring about a
rise in output. But, they do mean that this same level of output is
now produced more efficiently, at lower cost, and with fewer workers.
Labour is replaced, and wages fall, pushing up profits.
But, there
comes a point whereby all of the older machines have been replaced,
and the pace of development of even newer more efficient machines has
slowed down, or the improvement they offer is not so great. At that
point, it is not a matter of 1 new machine being introduced to
replace two older machines, but of simply more of these newer
machines, being installed alongside the existing installed base of
more or less identical machines. Output and employment then rises,
but productivity does not, or only rises slowly by comparison.
The
consequence is that as employment rises, wages rise, and the rate of
surplus value and profit declines. Each capital needs to borrow
relatively more money-capital, so interest rates begin to be pushed
higher. If we consider this in a global context, one reason that
inflation was kept low, despite huge amounts of money printing, was
that this huge rise in productivity caused the value of commodities
to fall. China pumped masses of cheap commodities into western
consumer markets, which kept the value of labour-power in those
economies down. But, now productivity growth in China is slowing,
for the reasons described above. In addition, Chinese wages and
living standards have risen sharply, whilst the value of the Yuan has
risen. The consequence is that the prices of commodities to be
bought by global consumers are starting to rise.
Already the
point has been made about the recovery in the oil price, and that has
a fairly immediate effect on consumer prices, as it enters a wide
range of consumer products, including petrol used not just in family
cars, but in transporting every other commodity around the economy.
From a fear of deflation a couple of months ago, Britain saw its
monthly inflation figure spike up to 0.5%. Last month it fell back
to 0.3%, but that is likely due to temporary factors, and a short
term rise in the pound versus the dollar. But, continued rises in
primary product prices, like oil, together with a likely sterling
crisis as a vote for Brexit looks increasingly likely, will cause it
to spike sharply. Meanwhile US inflation rose by 0.4% for last month
alone, which would take annual inflation to over 5% if it continued
at that rate. US core inflation is already above the 2% figure that
the Federal Reserve claim is its target.
That higher
inflation has several other consequences. Firstly, workers begin to
demand higher wages to compensate for these higher prices, and they
are better able to achieve that as the supply of labour-power begins to
shrink, and the demand for labour-power increases. Firms also compete more
intensely for new workers, and offer higher wages to attract them.
That pushes down the rate of surplus value, and rate of profit, and
causes firms to need to borrow more money-capital, pushing up
interest rates. In addition, more workers in employment, and more
workers earning higher wages, begin to consume more, and so firms
have an incentive to match this increased demand for wage goods, by
additional supply, which requires additional investment of capital,
if only investment in more materials, and more workers to process
them. Again that means an increased demand for money-capital, and an
upward pressure on interest rates.
In the
previous period, the owners of fictitious capital have been
obsessively concerned with obtaining capital gains. They have been
encouraged in that activity by the fact that central banks have put a
floor under stock, bond and property markets, buying into them
whenever they showed signs of falling. So potential money-capital
went into such speculation rather than productive investment. A look
at the situation in the UK shows that the majority of bank lending
went to finance property speculation rather than productive
investment. But, if interest rates rise and bubbles begin to burst,
without central banks being able to prevent it, the attraction of
such speculation ceases, and the owners of that money-capital must
again seek out yield on their money wealth. Real investment in
productive activity again becomes a more attractive proposition.
Although,
the cycle of technology acting to raise productivity is coming to a
close, or has reached it, and although some of the new types of
commodities developed in the last 20 years have become long in the
tooth – witness the last few generations of iPhone – there
remains many new type of commodity left to be developed. That is the
case in relation to the continued growth in space technology,
driverless technology and other forms of robotics, materials
technology (graphene etc), as well as huge ranges of new commodities
in the realm of gene and bio-technology, cybernetics, and health
science. All of these are areas that have not been developed on the
scale they should have been in recent years, as potential
money-capital instead went into financial speculation.
But, all of
these types of production are highly profitable, and have massive
scope for the development of extensive markets, for many years into
the future. The sooner the financial bubbles burst, and these new
exciting areas of production are developed the better for all
humanity.
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