The following is taken from The Matterhorn Interview of Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard (AEP), December 2012
AEP gave a long and wide-ranging interview. The entire interview is worth reading; I
comment here on a few sections.
…I don’t really share the view that
the banks were the cause of the great crisis of 2008/09 and the worldwide
stagnation that we’ve had ever since. There are much deeper causes to it. The banks are simply the agents of this.
Agents! Correct. However, I have learned by now not to expect
AEP to finger central banks as the root cause, despite his flirtatious
language.
The real cause of the massive
imbalances is in the capital and trade flows that occurred under globalisation
over the last twenty years – the China effect if you like.
Good thing I didn’t get my hopes up.
Let me get this straight: Chinese people, with an annual per
capita income of maybe $5,000 today (and maybe $100 when the growth began
twenty years ago) were somehow able to accumulate capital at the expense of
American people, with per capita income of $50,000. Does this sound like something that would
occur naturally in the market, without any non-market influences involved?
This is “the real cause of the massive imbalances”?
You could get capital for nothing,
and you could get capital for nothing because the emerging economies were
accumulating ten trillion dollars of excess reserves, and it had to go
somewhere. Furthermore, you had the Japanese leaking about a trillion through
the carry trade into the system. You had all these sources of capital.
In a normal, free-market, one without manipulation, is it
really reasonable to expect that “you could get capital for nothing because the
emerging economies were accumulating ten trillion dollars of excess reserves”? The poor, underdeveloped, rapidly growing
markets were able to accumulate capital as opposed to require capital to fund
the growth? This is the opposite of what
every businessman with a new and growing project knows to be true.
Doesn’t this seem backwards?
There are certain things you need
to do for reasons of social equity. You need to control the bonus structure of
the banks, the payoff systems they get when they screw up, and the golden
handshakes of vast sums of money; this is undermining popular consent for free
market capitalism, the political consent for our economic structure.
How does AEP suggest that “[y]ou need to control the bonus
structure of the banks, the payoff systems they get when they screw up, and the
golden handshakes of vast sums of money…” and somehow continue to call such an
environment “free market capitalism”?
They
have so screwed up. The whole regulatory culture
has made a total mess of it. They didn’t
see the crisis coming, they allowed
rampant credit growth, they allowed
the shadow banking system to get out of control, they made so many mistakes –
and then suddenly in panic they swing to
the other extreme, they go wild
and go do overkill at the worst possible moment, which is right now.
Who is this “they”? Would
things be better if we only had a better “they” in charge? What about the market acting as the “they”? Let’s see if this is where AEP takes us (don’t
get your hopes up).
There seems to be no joined up
thinking about this; people are not thinking through what are the implications
of the banking regulations for the rest of their economic policies. So you’ve
got fiscal policy, you’ve got fiscal austerity, you’ve got monetary policy,
you’ve got banking regulation, and they are all being pursued independently of
each other. Nobody is sort of thinking how do these interrelate, and this is
the critique I have.
No, AEP is not looking to the markets to provide regulation;
he is just dreaming of more perfect regulators.
[Regarding the BRICS nations’ complaints
around the international monetary system]
I don’t have much sympathy for this. China pegs its currency to the
dollar, it doesn’t have to peg it’s currency to the dollar. It could do what
other countries do and have an independent floating currency and then it
wouldn‘t have any of these problems, it wouldn’t then be importing American
monetary policy which was too loose for them 2009/2010 when America cut rates
to zero; it basically imported this monetary policy, causing a huge
inflationary surge in China.
He is quite correct here.
A central bank controls monetary policy within its currency
jurisdiction. Inflation cannot be
imported without the consent of the home central bank.
[Regarding the EU project] The
problem is that they are concentrating more and more power in a structure that
does not have any viable, working democratic institutions.
It is not that I see positive solutions via a democratic
system, but this statement is correct. At
least the implementation of the EU structure is stripping away the fallacy that
the people are somehow in charge in a democracy.
You’ve got a completely
undemocratic structure, accumulating more and more power, and I don’t see how
that could ever be made to function. You could make the whole leap forward to
complete political union, you could replicate the United States with a genuine
European parliament and an elected European president and so forth, but I think
it is unworkable because there is no unified European people. There is no
single language, there is no single way of looking at things, there is no
shared political culture, it is a completely absurd project, and highly
destructive for democracy.
Not only destructive for democracy, but destructive for any
remaining semblance of freedom. However,
it seems clear that those in power will not give up on this attempt until the
market and the uprisings force their hands.
I think the bond market is
fantastically mis-priced. I think the relationship of sovereign bonds to
equities is completely out of proportion. This is unprecedented. I know this
continued to occur in Japan and people said back in the nineties that bond
yields couldn’t fall any further, and here we are fifteen years later and they
are still falling. You know they’ve gone below one percent on ten year bonds
and so it could continue, but I don’t think the rest of the world is Japan.
They think that Europe and America are not going to go that route; I think they
will reflate, they will engage in massive monetary stimulus to get out of this,
they will not allow deflation to take root.
So the outcome is going to be different and that means bonds will be massacred.
Here, AEP is quite correct: he points out the mispricing of
bonds; the inability to time the necessary adjustment (by pointing to Japan);
and mostly in the fact that there will not be deflation in the west. Whenever deflation threatens, central banks
will monetize. With the US alone having
over $200 trillion present value of unfunded liabilities, there will be plenty
for the Fed to buy in the coming years.
Ignore those who advocate that a general price deflation is
coming. Certainly not until we live
through the crack-up boom, and even then not in the same currency unit.
This paper by the IMF is a revival
of the Chicago plan from the 1930s….They are basically arguing you could cure
the entire debt crisis at one stroke. You simply change the whole monetary
system, you force the banks to hold one hundred percent reserves. The
government then gives them money as an equity stake. It is kind of complicated,
but essentially just wipe out the debt at one stroke and America would not have
any public debt – you know, you could do it in ten minutes. Same for all the
western European countries, just eliminate your debt.
Here he is referring to the possibility of replacing
debt-based currency with nothing-based currency, and use the nothing-based
currency to pay off the debts. Just like
that, a miracle cure.
There are no miracles in economics. There is the market, and there is political
manipulation. Each path comes with its
own set of possible outcomes. Via the
market, real growth is possible and sustainable. Via political manipulation, system-wide booms
and busts are commonplace. This “miracle
cure” is nothing more than default by a different name.
I was also suspicious, whenever you
concentrate more power in the state you create potential for some form of abuse
later and I’m a libertarian personally and I think the power of the state
should be limited always, should be carefully controlled. Every time you give
further powers to the state you have to have a very clear argument in my view
about to why this is being done. My natural reflex is one of the foundations of
English common law which is that you should be able to do
anything you want unless the law specifically prohibits it and the law must
have a very good reason for prohibiting it and that should be
the foundation of our legal and political system; that’s a libertarian perspective.
This is not a libertarian perspective. A libertarian perspective is based on the
non-aggression principle. There is no
room for the idea of having “a very clear argument” about why some new
intervention “is being done,” or how something can be prohibited as long as
someone has “a very good reason” for doing so.
You could have what von Hayek
called a “catallaxy of currencies”, you have competing currencies.
You throw it all open and say right, well, if the state is running a bad
currency let somebody else run a good one and see if people use that one
instead – the good will displace the bad.
If you have monopolies like this and you say only the state can do it and
nobody else can do it then you know, well, ok if you have a good state fine, if
you have a bad state it goes horribly wrong. You have no alternative that can
hold the state to account.
Here, AEP demonstrates the most wisdom. Open up currencies to free-market
competition. Remove all regulation and
laws favoring one currency over another, eliminate tax consequences from
currency transactions, and allow tax payments to government in any currency.
Yes. I mean, oddly enough the
British Chancellor Exchequer Nigel Lawson proposed a version of [competitive
currencies]. He was suggesting having a sort of competing currency, you could
have a European currency that operated alongside the national currencies and if
it worked it worked. That actually was a very good idea; it would be a lot
better than what they did. I’m not against this sort of idea, this “catallaxy
of money”; I’m all in favour of creative solutions, and if it’s good money and
people accept it – excellent, just let the market decide.
If I recall correctly, this British idea was to allow each
country in the Euro-zone to continue to issue its national currency alongside
the new Euro, with the various national currencies accepted in all Euro-based
countries. This would have been a good
idea, as far is it went – only that private alternatives should also be
available.
This is another reason I’m against
the gold standard, I think it is good to have free gold that is not controlled
by any government, and instead of trying to use it as a foundation for currency
which they will try to manipulate. It is better to have it as free, as a store
of value and it holds public currencies to account – people can see gold rising
against other currencies and that tells you something. It is the final reproach
for the other currencies; it is sort of the umpire if you like. It sits there
as a store of value and it goes up and down and by its movement it tells you
about the other currencies. It holds governments to account. The last thing you
want is gold to be concentrated in the hands of the government, who then say we
have a gold standard; worst possible thing. You want gold to be completely
free.
AEP is more right here than most gold defenders might give
him credit for. A government-managed
gold standard might be slightly better in some ways than the current system,
but still offers no market functionality.
Better for individuals to be able to buy and sell gold freely than have
it controlled by the state in such a manner.
It was precisely because gold backed the currency that FDR
confiscated the gold. Absent the
gold-backed currency, he would have had no reason to do this (which is one
reason why I don’t believe such a thing will happen today). Better to be able to hold gold without this
additional issue hanging over the gold like a black cloud – gold, waiting to be
confiscated when the government’s mismanagement of the currency demands such an
action.
I will suggest reading the entire interview. AEP is a well-informed and well-spoken
(written?) commentator, despite his failures in pointing out many of the true
roots and therefor the true solutions to the current economic catastrophe.
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