The title was so promising: "Time to shut down the US Federal Reserve?"
http://tinyurl.com/29uygzw
I thought finally, Ambrose has combined his already wonderful commentary and analytical skills with good policy prescription skills. While he has always been very strong on calling out the establishment in a very clear, effective manner, he has been equally weak in his recommendations for actions of a different sort. Like almost all commentators, Ambrose offers prescriptions right down the middle of the Keynesian, mercantilist camp. Maybe a little more creative, but in the same ballpark.
So I see the headline of this commentary and I believe for a moment that maybe Ambrose finally has seen the light -- the cause of our boom and bust, the cause of bringing the world to its knees, the cause of transferring greater amounts of wealth to fewer and fewer people must be shut down. Bring it on Ambrose, only you can write this column so eloquently. Get rid of fiat money, no more lender of last resort, no more 100 to 1 leverage ratios, no more fractional reserve banking -- and best of all, a hard money standard. WE WANT GOLD backing our currency. GO AMBROSE!
Ambrose can write this so much better than I can -- I was giddy with anticipation to read the entire article.
"Kartik Athreya, senior economist for the Richmond Fed, has written a paper condemning economic bloggers as chronically stupid and a threat to public order. Matters of economic policy should be reserved to a priesthood with the correct post-doctoral credentials, which would of course have excluded David Hume, Adam Smith, and arguably John Maynard Keynes (a mathematics graduate, with a tripos foray in moral sciences)."
Well, not exactly the start I was looking for, but who am I to judge the writing style of Ambrose. Besides, the world would probably be better off if we excluded one or two of those guys from the priesthood.
The sub-quotes below are Ambrose quoting Kartik:
" 'Writers who have not taken a year of PhD coursework in a decent economics department (and passed their PhD qualifying exams), cannot meaningfully advance the discussion on economic policy.”
Don’t you just love that throw-away line 'decent'? Dr Athreya hails from the University of Iowa.
'The response of the untrained to the crisis has been startling. The real issue is that there is an extremely low likelihood that the speculations of the untrained, on a topic almost pathologically riddled by dynamic considerations and feedback effects, will offer anything new. Moreover, there is a substantial likelihood that it will instead offer something incoherent or misleading.”
You couldn’t make it up, could you?
'Economics is hard. Really hard. You just won’t believe how vastly hugely mind-boggingly hard it is. I mean you may think doing the Sunday Times crossword is difficult, but that’s just peanuts to economics. And because it is so hard, people shouldn’t blithely go shooting their mouths off about it, and pretending like it’s so easy. In fact, we would all be better off if we just ignored these clowns.'"
This isn't right! This is Ambrose upset at the FED because they are upset with him...and others like him. A fistfight of the opinionated.
Now, I won't spend time to take on Katrik -- that is much too easy and I expect many are doing it even this minute. Suffice it to say, the entire thought that we should rely on the economic wizards to save us from the catastrophe they alone have created (well, with the help of the politicians) is laughable.
But Ambrose, for a moment, you gave me hope. Unfortunately the moment was fleeting. Then you jumped right into the policy prescriptions you would have gone for, or critiques you have of the FED's chosen path. For example, rates were kept too low for too long (a gimme), M3 was allowed to grow too fast, then too slow (or shrink), Quantitative Easing wasn't done right. And then this:
"The root error of the modern academy is to pretend (and perhaps believe, which is even less forgivable), that economics is a science and answers to Newtonian laws."
No, Ambrose. The root error of the modern academy (and economy) is to pretend (and perhaps believe, which is even less forgivable), that a handful of "experts" (or bloggers) are qualified to price fix the most fundamental item that a free-market capitalist system requires -- that is the price and quantity of money. It is central planning of the kind that we used to laugh about when the Soviets tried it -- but even they never spread the disease as fully around the world as the FED has -- or as you continue to do.
So when I read your version of what the FED did wrong and should have done differently, I think -- who are you? Just another guy with an idea. What makes you so smart that you are qualified to centrally plan and price fix the most critical factor in a modern economy fully dependant on a complex division of labor...money?
No one is qualified. No small group is qualified. The market is quite capable of properly pricing money as it is capable of pricing other goods.
It is a scheme, Ambrose. Set up to transfer wealth from the 99.9% to the 0.1%. It has worked well for 100 years. Until it dies the death it deserves, it will continue to serve this function. In every crisis, more wealth is transferred. You treat it as if a few tweaks in the policy prescriptions are what is necessary. In reality, what is required is a stake through the heart.
Given the mess that has been created, it will die from a self-inflicted wound.
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Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Monday, June 28, 2010
Hyperinflation or Hyperdeflation
This post is in repsonse to Dr. Fekete's recent article posted at The Daily Bell: http://www.thedailybell.com/1048/Antal-Fekete-Hyperinflation-or-Hyperdeflation.html
I attempted to reply on the site, but failed...several times.
I was subsequently encouraged by others who comment on the site to try again. I did, and failed...again (see in the comments section): http://www.thedailybell.com/1157/Antal-Fekete-Architecture-for-a-New-World-Financial-System.html
In any case, here are my comments to Dr. Fekete's article regarding Hyperinflation or Hyperdeflation:
There are too many fallacies in this commentary to list; I will only touch on a few:
1) "People postpone buying indefinitely because they expect prices to fall further."
In the one market where prices regularly have come down -- that is technology and consumer electronics -- do we see people postponing purchases forever? Especially as these goods are almost completely discretionary, it would seem easy to delay. I am amazed that Apple has sold a single iPod to date. I have been postponing that Blackberry purchase for ten years. Meanwhile, I have a nice hole in the wall of the family room because I haven't bought that flat screen TV yet -- I am waiting for that last price decrease. Of course not true – all of these products have done quite well in the market despite regularly falling prices and higher capability.
2) "This defeats the arguments of Turk and others who try to refute the case for deflation by pointing to high or rising costs of food and energy."
So, if we ignore the items where prices are increasing, we have prices decreasing....
3) "You cannot make a case, as Turk is trying to do, out of the fact that the price of crude oil doubled as compared to its recent low. Another fact, more startling, is that the price of crude oil has declined 45 percent as compared to its all-time high. We must see the general decline in world prices, even though in some cases they may be disguised as a loss of pricing power of the producers."
Both examples are flawed -- to pick a recent high or low to make a case is invalid. However, any long term graph of the price of oil in US Dollars makes clear that there is price inflation, not deflation.
4) "Deflation is the measure of wealth in the process of self-destruction — wealth gone for good."
What is this definition? One can speak of monetary inflation or deflation (that is, changes in the quantity of money), or price inflation or deflation (changes in the average prices). In either case, I am wealthier in deflation, and poorer with inflation. My dollar can buy more in a climate of deflation. By either definition, I am wealthier.
In the era of modern central banking, there is only inflation. One cannot even credibly use Japan as a proxy. Check the numbers; they have had some minor pluses and minuses -- but nothing coming close to wholesale deflation of prices. Plus or minus two percent per year is within error -- given the manipulation and randomness of the statistics used.
Central banks want inflation. This has proven difficult to achieve lately, however do not discount for a minute the desire to get it. There are still many tools available for banks and governments to get this wish. As long as we do not have price inflation in the standard government statistics, they will feel free to keep pumping. So they will keep pumping until they get price inflation. Any shrinking in credit markets only gives room to pump further.
The FED’s balance sheet tripled during the crisis of 2008/2009. Who says they will not keep tripling it until price inflation gets in the way? There is no argument one can make for the FED to not buy junk debt from the banks at face value in order to save the banks…until we get to price inflation or mass inflation. Nothing has stopped them from buying a lot of junk so far.
They may only stop to avoid hyperinflation, as this will destroy the banks. Let’s hope they do.
That's it. I will add, that since I first tried to post my comments there is now talk of the FED increasing its balance sheet to $5 trillion. As long as their yardstick is inflation as measured by the CPI, they will be under no constraints to continue pumping until they get serious inflation as measured by the CPI. And, as they cannot control things as well as they like, by then it will be too late to stop the runaway train.
All aboard!
I attempted to reply on the site, but failed...several times.
I was subsequently encouraged by others who comment on the site to try again. I did, and failed...again (see in the comments section): http://www.thedailybell.com/1157/Antal-Fekete-Architecture-for-a-New-World-Financial-System.html
In any case, here are my comments to Dr. Fekete's article regarding Hyperinflation or Hyperdeflation:
There are too many fallacies in this commentary to list; I will only touch on a few:
1) "People postpone buying indefinitely because they expect prices to fall further."
In the one market where prices regularly have come down -- that is technology and consumer electronics -- do we see people postponing purchases forever? Especially as these goods are almost completely discretionary, it would seem easy to delay. I am amazed that Apple has sold a single iPod to date. I have been postponing that Blackberry purchase for ten years. Meanwhile, I have a nice hole in the wall of the family room because I haven't bought that flat screen TV yet -- I am waiting for that last price decrease. Of course not true – all of these products have done quite well in the market despite regularly falling prices and higher capability.
2) "This defeats the arguments of Turk and others who try to refute the case for deflation by pointing to high or rising costs of food and energy."
So, if we ignore the items where prices are increasing, we have prices decreasing....
3) "You cannot make a case, as Turk is trying to do, out of the fact that the price of crude oil doubled as compared to its recent low. Another fact, more startling, is that the price of crude oil has declined 45 percent as compared to its all-time high. We must see the general decline in world prices, even though in some cases they may be disguised as a loss of pricing power of the producers."
Both examples are flawed -- to pick a recent high or low to make a case is invalid. However, any long term graph of the price of oil in US Dollars makes clear that there is price inflation, not deflation.
4) "Deflation is the measure of wealth in the process of self-destruction — wealth gone for good."
What is this definition? One can speak of monetary inflation or deflation (that is, changes in the quantity of money), or price inflation or deflation (changes in the average prices). In either case, I am wealthier in deflation, and poorer with inflation. My dollar can buy more in a climate of deflation. By either definition, I am wealthier.
In the era of modern central banking, there is only inflation. One cannot even credibly use Japan as a proxy. Check the numbers; they have had some minor pluses and minuses -- but nothing coming close to wholesale deflation of prices. Plus or minus two percent per year is within error -- given the manipulation and randomness of the statistics used.
Central banks want inflation. This has proven difficult to achieve lately, however do not discount for a minute the desire to get it. There are still many tools available for banks and governments to get this wish. As long as we do not have price inflation in the standard government statistics, they will feel free to keep pumping. So they will keep pumping until they get price inflation. Any shrinking in credit markets only gives room to pump further.
The FED’s balance sheet tripled during the crisis of 2008/2009. Who says they will not keep tripling it until price inflation gets in the way? There is no argument one can make for the FED to not buy junk debt from the banks at face value in order to save the banks…until we get to price inflation or mass inflation. Nothing has stopped them from buying a lot of junk so far.
They may only stop to avoid hyperinflation, as this will destroy the banks. Let’s hope they do.
That's it. I will add, that since I first tried to post my comments there is now talk of the FED increasing its balance sheet to $5 trillion. As long as their yardstick is inflation as measured by the CPI, they will be under no constraints to continue pumping until they get serious inflation as measured by the CPI. And, as they cannot control things as well as they like, by then it will be too late to stop the runaway train.
All aboard!
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