Posts Tagged ‘US’

What can you do to protect yourself from increasing currency volatility?

Sunday, September 19th, 2010

Six months ago, we wrote about America’s consideration to label China as a “currency manipulator” in Watch April 15 2010: simmering tensions between US and China. Just before the deadline, China appeared to make a little concession about their RMB, thus avoiding the “currency manipulation” label.

Today, currency tension between the US and China is rising again. The little concession that the Chinese government made was simply not enough. American lawmakers are getting impatient and are itching to enact laws to slap China with trade sanctions. Should that happen, it will be the beginning of a damaging trade war between the world’s largest economies. Their charge is that China’s artificially low currency is responsible for (or at least contributed to) America’s economic woes. But as we wrote in Watch April 15 2010: simmering tensions between US and China,

But the mob wants to find a scapegoat to blame for their woes. It so happens that the most convenient scapegoat is China (specifically, China?s policy of artificially holding its currency down) because at this point of the cycle, China is looking very good. It is perceived that this policy worsen America?s unemployment rate. By implication, it is perceived that with China?s official unemployment rate much lower, China is ?prospering? at America?s expense.

Currency tensions between China and the US are nothing new. As we wrote in that article, it’s been around for the past 3 to 4 years. Many times, the rhetoric about America labelling China a “currency manipulator” came and went away without eventuating into reality. However, that does not mean that it will never happen. As America’s economic woes worsen, the pressure to find a scapegoat will increase. As a result, the probability of a trade war will increase.

The Chinese, on the other hand, are not standing idle, waiting for a trade war to happen. For starters, they are establishing trade and investment links with Asia, Middle-East and Africa. Secondly, it is no secret that they have been diversifying their colossal hoard of reserves away from the US dollar. Given the well-known intention of the Federal Reserve to print more money, diversification has become increasingly urgent. But that in itself is not easy because given the colossal size of the money involved, any whispers and hints about any particular Chinese diversification strategy will move the markets quickly in a big way. For example, the recent rumours that China was buying up Japanese government bonds probably helped to contribute to the surging yen. As a result, the Japanese government became very unhappy because a very strong yen will negatively impact on their export-oriented economy. In response, the Japanese government may take concrete actions (beyond just talking about it and taking token measures) to weaken the yen, in which the end result is more Japanese purchase of US government debt.

In such an environment of competitive currency devaluation and price volatility, what should investors and savers do?

To us, it is clear that having all your savings and investments confined to a single country or currency is an increasingly risky proposition. Currency exchange rates will become more volatile, with implications on asset values, price inflation and economic growth (see Real economy suffers while financial markets stuff around with prices). For example, in Japan, real businesses are suffering as a result of the rising yen. The Germans, on the other hand, are secretly gloating whenever the euro weakens. In Australia, should the banking system fall into a crisis as a result of the bursting of the property bubble, the consequence of a resulting collapsing Australian dollar will be price inflation (see Can price inflation occur in the midst of debt deflation?).

If currency volatility goes to the extreme, investors will even have to question the idea of national currency as a store of value. So, what can investors and savers practically do to mitigate against this?

Quite some time ago, we talked to the guys at GoldMoney.com and learnt of how a lot of their clients (presumably the “rich”) use them. In case you do not know, GoldMoney.com (a regulated company operating in the financial services industry) enables

… you to hold gold, silver & platinum that is fully insured and stored securely in specialised bullion vaults in London, Zurich and Hong Kong. All metal is owned directly by you with no counterparty risk.

You can “easily buy gold, silver & platinum and take delivery of physical bars of gold.”

What their clients did was to use their GoldMoney.com account as a conduit to link their bank accounts all over the world. This strategy makes sense as it gives investors and savers the flexibility to shift their savings all over the world, using gold, silver and platinum as an anchor for the store of value. In an environment of currency volatility, this flexibility is a valuable aid in helping to protect your hard-earned savings from hare-brained government interventions.

However, for those who are ultra-pessimistic and distrust any assets that have any hints of paper, the only way to go is to take possession of physical gold and silver (see How to buy and invest in physical gold and silver bullion).

Currency crisis: UK, Japan and US

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Continuing from Currency crisis: first countries in the line of fire- PIIGS, we will discuss more on the next sequence of events to happen. As we said before, we are not ?predicting? or forecasting the future- what we are presenting is just a rough sketch of what may possibly happen.

After the PIIGS countries, the next country to be in danger of public debt default or currency crisis is the United Kingdom. At the current rate of deterioration of its public finance, the national debt of UK will reach 17% of GDP in 2010 and 100% by 2013. Niall Ferguson, author of the famous The Ascent of Money series, said

We?re not Iceland or Ireland, but we?re closer to them than we are to the U.S.

The reason why the UK is in a more vulnerable than the US is because,

The big difference between the two countries is that the U.S. issues the world?s No. 1 currency and is regarded, partly for that reason, as a safe haven,? Ferguson says. ?The U.K. used to be, but we?re not anymore. That means we have much more currency risk here.

Of course, this does not mean that the UK government will default or that the pound will face a currency crisis. But certainly, the risk is increasing as shown by the increase in price for the credit default swaps (CDS) of UK government debt. The time-frame for a currency crisis in UK is around the vicinity of 3 to 5 years.

The next country in the line of fire is Japan. We all know about the demographic time-bomb in the United States (see How is the US going to repay its national debt?). But Japan’s population is ageing earlier than the US. Worse still, they’re ageing at a time when their government debt is twice the size of their GDP. The reason why Japanese government debt could get so high in the first place is because Japan is a nation of savers. Currently, only 6% of their national debt are held by foreigners, whereas it is 57% for the United States. However, the problem for Japan is that as their population ages, their savings rate will have to fall. That implies that buyers of Japanese government debt will turn to sellers. That means that the Japanese government will have to look to borrowing from foreigners. Time-frame: say, 5-10 years time.

Finally, the next in the line of fire is the United States. We had already mentioned about them at How is the US going to repay its national debt?, Is the GFC the final crisis? and America?s balance sheet. The time-frame is around 10 to 12 years. Others believe it is 5 to 10 years time. That’s why President Obama is pursuing health care reforms. As he admitted on TV, if the US does not solve its health care issues, the Federal government will go broke (see Ladies and Gentlemen, the US Is Insolvent).

On that note, Australia is not in better position either. As PM Kevin Rudd warned recently (see Work harder to support ageing Australians: Rudd), Australia’s time-frame is around 15 years time onwards.

Chinese-American military posturing, post-GFC (whatever that is)

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

In our previous article, we gave a rough road-map of what can possibly happen in the short to medium term. Today, we are going to straining our vision to look further ahead. Since we are looking too far out into the future, we are essentially guessing. Our guesses of the long-term are as good as yours. Therefore, please feel free to pitch in some of your ideas in the comments below.

Currently, the US and Chinese economies are like two partners in an unhealthy co-dependency relationship. Simplistically speaking, one lends and produces and the other borrows and consumes. As with any unhealthy relationships, this state of affairs is unsustainable. In the long run, we believe it is only a matter of time before the Chinese economy decouples from the US economy. To imagine how such a scenario will look like, consider what we wrote in Can China really ?de-couple? from a US recession?,

The needs of the Chinese consumption economy is different from the US consumption economy. Some Chinese are rich. But some other parts of China are unbelievably poor. Wealth distribution in China is rather uneven and there are still many pressing social and environmental issues to be solved. Currently, the Chinese export economy is tooled towards US consumption. To re-tool and re-configure the Chinese economy towards its domestic needs requires a period of adjustment in which capitals are destroyed and built.

A de-coupled Chinese economy will be driven by its own internal consumption and trade with its neighbours. When such a day arrives, it is doubtful that the US dollar will still remain the world’s reserve currency because the Chinese will no longer have any reason to accumulate them.

The loss of reserve currency status will be a serious problem for the US. As we wrote in How does the US export inflation?,

Through this convention, the US can expropriate resources from foreign countries by buying their goods and services with its own printed money.

Without the ability to expropriate resources from foreign countries, the US government will not be able to honour its unfunded liabilities to its own citizens (see Is the GFC the final crisis?). What can the US government do? It can repudiate its unfunded liabilities to its own citizens and protect the US dollar (to still function as money) or fulfill them by destroying the US dollar (hyperinflation). It cannot remain solvent and protect the US dollar simultaneously unless it finds a way to expropriate resources from foreign nations by force (i.e. go to war).

But war is out of question in an age of nuclear weapons. A military dwarf can be on the same par as a military giant just by possessing nuclear weapons (and a way of delivering them). With mutually assured destruction (MAD) no nuclear armed nation can be at a military advantage from another nuclear armed nation.

Unless…

… the nuclear armed nation has a way of neutralising the other nuclear armed nation’s means of delivering nuclear weapons. Well, the US Pentagon is working on that as we speak- missle defence shield system. That’s the reason why American’s missle defence shield project is highly provocative. A working missle defence shield gives the US dollar a military backing, which is highly useful in forcing the status quo to be maintained.

The Chinese, on the other hand, mindful of their humiliation in the 19th century due to their weakness militarily, will not be standing idle (and surely, they will not mind if they can take over the role of America). Last year, they shot down one of their own satellites in space, which is said to be quite technically challenging.

We believe the ability to shoot down any satellite is a very powerful way to neutralise any missle defence shield. In a missle defence shield system, the challenge is to shoot a missle with another missle, which is like shooting a bullet with another bullet. That requires sophisticated communications between base stations and anti-missle missle, navigation and tracking capabilities- all done on real time. Without satellites, all these complex tasks will not be possible. And the Chinese had demonstrated that they can shoot down any one they wish.

In addition, the Chinese and Americans are now preparing cyberspace as another military frontier.

As we wrote in Nations will rise against nations,

Therefore, outwardly, the world may be at peace. But inwardly, we believe there will be jostling for power, influence and resources between the major nation blocs. Bigger nations will use smaller nations as pawns, international armed non-state groups will intensify their activities and inter-ethnic conflicts will arise. We have no doubt that there will be plenty of Black Swans appearing in the days to come.

Nations will rise against nations

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

A few days, as reported widely in the news media, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said at a press conference that

We have lent huge amounts of money to the United States. Of course we are concerned about the safety of our assets.

To be honest, I am a little bit worried and I would like to … call on the United States to honour its word and remain a credible nation and ensure the safety of Chinese assets.

Those words, when translated into English in writing, sound bland. But if you watch what he said in full video in the original language, then you will be able to appreciate the immense gravity of the situation from the tone of his voice.

But dear readers, you must understand that Premier Wen was just stating the obvious. There’s nothing new in what he said. All you have to do is to turn back to what we wrote in December 2006 and read Will the US dollar collapse? and Awash with cash?what to do with it? to see the big picture of what’s going on for years. As we wrote back then,

Lately, we are again hearing that central bankers are murmuring about diversifying their foreign reserves away from the US dollar. Does it mean that there is an imminent liquidation of their US dollar reserves? Well, this is not the first time they murmured about it and it is definitely not in their (including the Federal Reserve?s) interest to see a collapse of the US dollar. The Chinese, with their US$1 trillion of reserves, would not want to see their stockpile of US dollars to lose significant value.

That paragraph was written in the final days of 2006. Today, China’s US dollar reserve had doubled from they had more than 2 years ago. The major difference between today and back then is the emergence of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC).

Thanks to the GFC, the status quo, which had been running for decades, is stressed towards a breaking point (but who knows, perhaps that inevitable  breaking point could still be delayed for longer before an almighty snap happens). There are far too many contradictory and conflicting interests among nations.

For the US, as we said before in How is the US going to repay its national debt?, is facing a situation in the coming decades of having to pay a colossal amount of public debt. The public sector is facing a massive debt many times its GDP from the unfunded Medicare and social security liabilities. With the GFC, the US government is transferring more and more private debt to the public sector through bailouts, handouts and stimulus. It is either the US mobilise its monetary printing press to massively inflate away (i.e. print copious amount of money) all these debts or they face up to the reality that they are bankrupt and go through the cold turkey of an almighty deflationary collapse (read: almighty depression). If the US chooses the former, China will be furious because that will be doing the very opposite of what Premier Wen called on the US to do, namely to “honour its word and remain a credible nation and ensure the safety of Chinese assets.”

Unfortunately, the big problem is that the US (along with countries like Australia and UK) has been de-industrialising and hollowing out its economy for a very long time, while the China has been doing the opposite. To put it simply, the US is consuming more and more while China produces more and more. This gross imbalance has been playing out for too long. With the GFC, the US consumers are effectively bankrupt and cannot borrow any more to buy from China. China has lost its biggest customer and is in trouble too.

The coming G20 Summit will be filled with countries with conflicting agendas. The US (and UK) wants more stimulus (and of course, bailouts when required), which can only happen if they print money (i.e. devalue the US dollar), which is as good as spitting on China’s face. Europe (headed by Germany and France) wants the focus to be on regulations and prevention, which means they are less keen on stimulus and bailouts. This is because the latter will involve the tax-payers of countries like Germany rescuing the tax-payers of other EU nations. China, on the other hand, wants an overhaul of the current world order so that they can have more power and say to better reflect their status as America’s creditor. Obviously, the US will not like that because that will mean they have to voluntarily descend for an ascending China.

There are plenty of temptations to take the easy way out. For example, if the Chinese expect the US to inflate away their debts by printing money and thereby, devaluing the US dollar, they will be likely to devalue their RMB in order to continue the process of hollowing out the US economy. The US (and the Europeans), in response, could impose trade barriers on Chinese imports. The Chinese could retaliate by dumping their holdings of US Treasuries. Remember, these are just examples of what may happen and they are by no means predictions. But we trust that you get the idea here.

Therefore, outwardly, the world may be at peace. But inwardly, we believe there will be jostling for power, influence and resources between the major nation blocs. Bigger nations will use smaller nations as pawns, international armed non-state groups will intensify their activities and inter-ethnic conflicts will arise. We have no doubt that there will be plenty of Black Swans appearing in the days to come.

‘Making’ money or wealth preservation?

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Over the past year, the many countries in the world had witnessed a substantial synchronised asset price deflation. In the US, the median property price is said to have fallen 10% over the past year. The property bubble in the UK and Spain is said to be bursting too. Stock prices in China had falling 50% since the October 2007 peak (see Chinese stock market overrun by bears). The Indian stock market is also falling. The Chinese property bubble in major cities such as Shenzhen is reportedly to be bursting as well. The Australian stock market had fallen 18% from its November 2007 peak, with its financial stock index falling 32%. The Japanese stock market is also in a bear market.

Back in March last year (when it was still a bull market), we said in How does the US export inflation?,

That is why when the US opens up their spigot of US dollars and engages in a global spending spree, foreign countries have to follow suit by inflating their own money supply so that their currencies will not be overly expensive relative to the US dollar. The result is worldwide synchronised price inflation and asset bubbles.

Today, the reverse process is active. With the US experiencing deflation (see How money & credit can shrink (i.e. deflation)?), liquidity is being withdrawn from the global financial system, resulting in a synchronised asset price deflation (see Marc Faber on why further correction is coming?Part 2).

Yet curiously, at the same time, despite the asset price deflation, the world is experiencing price inflation for gold, oil, metals, food (see Why are the poor suffering from food shortages?) and other commodities.

Dear readers, do you see that this combination of asset price deflation plus general price inflation is the worst possible combination for investors? The whole point of investing is to increase the investor’s purchasing power in the long run. This inflation-deflation combination works together to decrease investors’ purchasing power. In Australia, with its high and rising interest rates, a saver does much better than an average investor (assuming that the official CPI figures is a reliable measurement of price inflation- see How much can we trust the price indices (e.g. CPI)?). The worst off are those who borrow heavily to buy assets that are falling in value in a rising interest rate environment.

As we said before in Is this sub-prime or solvency crisis?,

The problem is that much of the economic boom that we enjoy over the past several years are financed by the explosion of credit (which is debt on the opposite side of the balance sheet). There is such a colossal amount of debt created and scattered throughout the globe that it does not take a genius to see that massive amount of bad debts have to accumulate and build up in the global financial system. Eventually, all bad debts will be exposed as what they truly are.

Now, we have a money-printer in the Fed who is answerable to the Congress, who in turn is answerable to the mob (see A painful cleansing or pain avoidance at all cost?), we have the situation whereby the US is attempting to print its way out of mass bad-debt insolvency. Adding fuel to the fire, we have two (one is already more than enough!) 600-pound gorillas, namely China and India, devouring the earth’s resources at a ferociously unprecedented rate.

Is this sustainable? The sky-rocketing gold, silver, energy, metals and food prices could be an indication that resource mis-allocation and mal-investments is accumulating in the global economy. If so, we cannot rule out at least one of the 600-pound gorilla stumbling, bruising its bloody nose and knocking things all over in the short to medium term (see Can China really ?de-couple? from a US recession?).

Our hunch is telling us that something just do not feel right. Thus, now is not the time to be greedy about ‘making’ money. Wealth preservation is our greater concern (see Why should you invest in gold?).

Analysing recent falls in oil prices?real vs investment demand

Saturday, January 13th, 2007

In November last year, we explained our opinions on the future of oil prices (see Is oil going to be more expensive?). Recently, oil prices had been falling very rapidly to even below US$53. Were we wrong?

Before we answer this question, we have to understand the distinction between the real and financial side of the economy. The real side where you find the physical market for goods, services and labour. The financial side is where you find the flow of financial capital, assets and payments. For example, the stock, debt and derivatives markets are part of the financial side of the economy. As Ross Gittins said in his article, Two sides to the story of nation’s rising prosperity, as the financial side grows in importance, it balloons and crowds out the real side. In Australia, with hundreds of millions more of superannuation money seeking to find a home, we can expect the financial service industry to grow even more, which means the financial side of the economy will rise in further prominence in the future.

Now, let?s go back to oil. What makes up the demand for oil? There are basically two types of demand for oil: (1) The physical demand where the real side of the economy uses for its everyday needs and (2) The investment demand where the financial side of the economy shifts the money here and there from one asset class to the other. We need to ask ourselves the following question: Has the physical demand for oil changed? Will it change in the long run?

From the International Energy Agency (IEA), we can see that world oil supply exceeds world oil demand by just around a couple of millions of barrels per day (or around 2.5% of demand). From the US Department of Energy (DOE), we learnt that,

In the AEO2006 reference case, the combined production capacity of members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) does not increase as much as previously projected, and consequently world oil supplies are assumed to remain tight. The United States and emerging Asia?notably, China? are expected to lead the increase in demand for world oil supplies, keeping pressure on prices though 2030.

World oil demand is expected to increase to around 120 million barrels per day in 2025, from 84.5 million in 2006, with developing nations (notably China) capturing a mounting slice of the increase. World oil supply is expected to barely keep up (assuming that Peak Oil is not true) with the demand.

These forecasts are based on a fundamental economic assumption: ceteris paribus, which means ?everything else being equal.? But as we know in real life, things rarely happen nicely according to plan. Unexpected surprises often do happen. The biggest wild card is the geopolitical situation in the Middle East. Would the Israelis or the Americans strike Iran, resulting in Iranian retaliation by disrupting the global flow of oil? Will the US succeed in creating a viable state in Iraq or will Iraq descend into chaos, thus removing a major oil-producing nation from the equation? Would war break out in the Middle East again, destroying and damaging oil infrastructures in the region?

As we can see, the fundamentals of oil are still intact. Therefore, from what we can see, such a rapid drop in oil prices is mainly due to the change in investment demand?asset managers (we prefer to see them as ?money shufflers?) shifting their preferences from one asset class to another.

Some of the reasons given by the financial media to ?explain? the recent falls in oil prices are nonsense. For example, they blamed the warmer than expected weather in North America for the price fall. In reality, oil demand is primarily driven by transportation needs, not by winter heating needs.

One more thing: as oil prices fell because of the fall in investment demand, guess what will happen to the real demand for oil?

The Bubble Economy

Monday, October 30th, 2006

 

Introduction

Over the course of the past several years, the ?wealth? of many people in the Western English-speaking countries (mainly the US, Australia and Britain) had increased, thanks to the real estate price boom. Consequently, the economies of those countries had been growing and expanding over that period. This type of economic growth is what the IMF called the ?asset-driven growth.? One manifestation of this kind of growth is the rise of ?wealth-creation? fades, which advocate the attainment of riches through property ?investments.?

As contrarians, we see that such growth should be more appropriately called ?bubble-driven growth.? For the economists trained in the Austrian School of economic thought, such kind of growth is unsustainable. Furthermore, they believe that the severity of the following eventual bursting of the bubble is related to the preceding inflation of the bubble.

It is good if we could learn from our own mistake. We would be wiser if we learn from the mistake of others. But if we repeat the same mistake of others, we are indeed fools. It is amazing to see that the US, Australia and Britain (for convenience?s sake, let?s call those countries the ?UBA countries? from now on) are not only not learning from the mistake of Japan, but even worse, following the same path. The collapse of the Japanese property bubble in the 1990s led to a downward recessional spiral of the Japanese economy for more than a decade. Property prices have been falling (at least not rising) for 16 years since. At least the Japanese have their savings to count on. But what about those UBA countries, whose savings rates are below zero (that is, they are already deep in debt)? What will happen when the property bubble burst in these countries?

Illusions of ?wealth?

Sydney?s housing property market was the epitome of the great amount of ?wealth? generated by the housing boom in the UBA countries. It started in the mid-1990s, accelerated after the 2000 Olympics and reached its apex in 2003 when house prices were rising at staggering rate of more than 20 per cent a year!

Yes, you heard it right. More than 20 per cent a year!

Where can you find other financial investments that can pay more than 20 per cent return except for the ones that are highly risky in nature? The belief that housing property investment was the way to great wealth was highly delusional. Surprisingly, the mob believed that. At that time (in 2003) there were proliferations of seminars that taught attendees how to be rich through property investments. A cursory glance at the investment sections of bookshops yields titles upon titles of wealth attainment through real estates.

In reality, such ?wealth? was and always is an illusion.

First, let?s see the ludicrousness of the idea that a nation?s general rise in asset value equals a rise in wealth. In a nation?s stock of real estate, only a tiny fraction of it got sold and changed hands in any given year. Those sale prices were imputed into the values of the vast majority of the other properties that never got traded in the market. Therefore, in a rising market, the vast majority of un-traded properties have rising imputed values, which is commonly described as ?rising asset values.?

Theoretically, an economy with only (a very important qualifier) rising asset prices does not produce a single extra widget. That is, there is no real growth. Rising asset prices are illusionary in nature because they are basically imputed values, which are rising fast during the bubble period of exceptionally low interest rates. Meanwhile, the real economy is theoretically no better than before, regardless of the movements of asset prices.

In the case of what is happening in those UBA countries, rising property values merely created higher valued collaterals for which money can be borrowed. With the introduction of equity redraw facilities, borrowers could even extract the ?values? in their properties as cash. As long as property prices kept rising, borrowers needed not worry about repaying back the loans – the increase in the ?value? of their property would take care of that. Meanwhile, some ?investors? (more accurately, speculators) used a sophisticated sounding financial strategy called ?negative gearing? to bet on continuing rise in house prices. Thus, with the economy awash with plenty of borrowed money, there was little wonder why people felt rich! With such feelings of wealth, people tended to spend more. This effect is what the economists call the ?wealth effect.?

Today, with the benefit of hindsight, we could see what a great spectacle it was!

Source of the ?wealth?

Now, the question is: where is the source of all these ?wealth??

For the answer to this question, we will take the case of Australia for example. Over the past 5 years, Australia?s money supply (M3) grew (that is, printing of money) by 10.1% per annum, which is much faster than the rate of economic growth. In other words, the growth of the amount of money circulating in the economy exceeded the growth in the production of goods and services. The natural consequence of this is inflation as there are now more money chasing fewer goods and services.

But in Australia?s case, the inflation remained within the Reserve Bank?s target of 2-3%. Where did all those excess money go? Part of the answer to this question, as you would have guessed by now, lies in the inflation of asset (house) prices. The well-known ?inflation? that everyone talks about in the media is the consumer price inflation, which can be seen statistically by the rise in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and experienced by everyone from the general increase of price levels in everyday life. Unfortunately, the CPI figures do not capture the price behaviour of assets (property, stocks, bonds, etc.). In Australia?s case, the housing boom was contributed by such excess money printing.

Furthermore, another force was at work in curbing Australia?s consumer price inflation – the rise of Chinese manufacturing. In recent years, Chinese productivity had soared, which means overall, the Chinese economy was producing more and more goods at lower and lower costs. In China itself, that had a good deflationary effect – the fall in the consumer price levels. As China exported more and more of its cheaper goods to Australia, the effect on Australia was disinflation (decelerating growth in consumer price inflation). That helped keep a lid on the Australian consumer price inflation.

This phenomenon is an example of what were happening in the UBA countries. It began in the US in 2001 when it suffered the mildest ever recession after the crash in technology stocks. In order to prop up the economy, the US central bank – the Federal Reserve (commonly called the ?Fed?) – embarked on a massive expansionary monetary policy. That is, the Fed printed huge amount of money, which also increased the amount of credit granted (the flip side of granted credit is owed debt) in the economy. When central banks print money, they cannot control how the excess money is being used. In the case of the UBA countries, the excess money and credit fed the housing bubble.

In the US, interest rates consequently had to fall significantly to accommodate the monetary inflation (printing of money). With that, other countries had to follow suit by lowering their interest rates (to prevent their currencies from appreciating too much against the US dollar), resulting in a worldwide trend towards lower interest rates and monetary inflation.

Effects of the rising ‘wealth’

What was the effect of rising house asset prices, which were caused by the increase in money supply and credit in the economy?

When house asset prices rose, house owners felt wealthier. When they felt wealthier, they increased their spending. This is what the economist called the ?wealth effect.? Increased consumer spending in the economy resulted in businesses expanding their production due to their perception of increased demand by the consumers. Ideally, expanding production should in turn lead to increase in hiring and business investments, which in turn increase employment and productive capacity of the economy respectively. That should result in economic growth.

But unfortunately, the reality in the US was not as good as the ideal. The increase in consumer demand resulted in the increase in import of foreign goods. That showed up in the widening current account deficit, which simply meant that the US was spending more than it produced. The implication for this was that the increase in production in the US economy was not keeping up with the increase in consumer demand, which was fuelled by the boom in house asset prices, which in turn was fuelled by the inflation of money supply and credit in the economy.

Meanwhile, the amount of debt owed (its flip side is credit granted) in the US economy ballooned as the rising house asset prices increased the collateral for which money could be borrowed for consumer spending.

Indeed, this was how the UBA countries? economy grew. The IMF called this ?asset-driven growth.? The question is, how sustainable is this kind of growth?

Sustainability of such growth

Is such kind of economic growth sustainable in the long run?

Before we decide on the answer for this question, let us ponder upon this quote:

The deficit country is absorbing more, taking consumption and investment together, than its own production; in this sense, its economy is drawing on savings made for it abroad. In return, it has a permanent obligation to pay interest or profits to the lender. Whether this is a good bargain or not depends on the nature of the use to which the funds are put. If they merely permit an excess of consumption over production, the economy is on the road to ruin. – Joan Robinson, Collected Economic Papers, Vol. IV, 1973

In the case of the US, the side effects of the economic growth manifested itself in the form of ballooning household debt and widening current account deficit. Put it simply, the US, as a nation, was borrowing money not to invest in the betterment of its future, but to consume to the detriment of its future. Since 2001, the economic growth was accompanied ?with unprecedented large and lasting shortfalls in employment, income growth and business fixed investment? (Restructuring the U.S. Economy – Downward). Indeed, such kind of profligacy is the beginning of the transference of wealth from the spend-thrift nations to the prudent nations (see Transference of wealth from West to East).

These are some of the serious questions we would like to ask:

  1. As the US spends its way into economic ruin, its economy is being damaged structurally. How much longer can the US sustain its colossal debt?
  2. Right now, the US housing bubble is deflating. Will it eventually burst and wreck havoc on the rest of the economy?