…with his eyes closed.
Recently Steve
Forbes interviewed John Mauldin on the occasion of Mauldin’s new book,
“Code Red.” Mauldin, while getting much
better at blaming the Fed, is getting no better at seeing the solution. (All emphasis added to cited passages.)
John Mauldin: Part of the reason we had this very crisis was because of central
bank policies and government regulations and the interweaving of large
investment banks and politicians and central bankers. I don't want to get into conspiracy theories; I think it's just
people's self-interest.
Steve Forbes: How about a stupidity
theory?
JM: Some of it was stupid, but some of it was just greed.
Central bank policies and government regulation weren’t
“part of the reason we had this very crisis”; these were precisely the reasons behind
the crisis.
Mauldin doesn’t want to “get into conspiracy theories,” but
without doing so he can never get to the right answers. As he is not a stupid man, I can assume he
doesn’t want to get to the right answers…publicly.
No part of it is a “stupidity theory.” Every part of it is doing what was intended –
support and bailout the money center banks; finance federal government
largesse; be one of the key tools in control by the elite. That, at times, the sausage making becomes
visible to the general public does not change the underlying success of the
endeavor.
This is the conspiracy – that stuff about controlling
inflation and reducing unemployment is only offered for public
consumption. Mauldin is looking for the
pea under the wrong walnut shell. In any
case, the
majority are now conspiracy theorists – come on in, John, the water is
warm!
JM: Nonetheless, we had a crisis.
The banking system froze up. We went to the edge of the abyss. We looked over
and it was a long way down. And I believe central banks appropriately provided
liquidity. That was their function, and I would argue that almost the sole true function of a central bank is
to be there when the stuff hits the fan.
SF: To be what Bagehot called the
lender of last resort.
JM: Yes, the lender of last resort.
This isn’t the “sole true function of a central bank.” Central banking is a good job if you can get
it – get paid to create a crisis, and get paid more to solve it; all the while,
have the wealthiest people in the world as your supporters. Behind those wealthy supporters will be found
the “sole true function.”
As to Bagehot, assuming one even buys into the idea of a
government-enabled monopolist “lender of last resort” (aka central banks),
Forbes and Mauldin whiz by Bagehot’s words – using his name while bastardizing
his concept:
First. That these loans should only be made at a very high rate of interest.
This will operate as a heavy fine on
unreasonable timidity, and will prevent the greatest number of applications by
persons who do not require it. The rate
should be raised early in the panic, so that the fine may be paid early;
that no one may borrow out of idle precaution without paying well for it; that
the Banking reserve may be protected as far as possible.
Secondly. That at this rate these advances should be made on all good banking
securities, and as largely as the public ask for them. The reason is plain.
The object is to stay alarm, and nothing therefore should be done to cause
alarm. But the way to cause alarm is to refuse some one who has good security
to offer...
A high rate of interest, raised early in the panic; a heavy
fine; advanced against good securities. None
of this applied to the actions taken by the Fed in the period 2007 – 2009. Yet Mauldin cheerleads the Fed’s initial
actions – none of which were influenced by Bagehot – as necessary, and then falsely
cites Bagehot for credibility.
JM: The problem is, when you want
to end that addiction, whether it's alcohol or drugs or quantitative easing,
withdrawal is not going to be pretty.
Mauldin rightly sees the Fed as a drug pusher, finding this
a more intellectually satisfying perspective than actually peeking behind the
curtain – avoiding any possibility of a conspiracy theory.
Next, Mauldin describes how Fed economists could not be wrong
more often – even if they actually tried to be wrong all the time on purpose:
JM: Now, as we discuss in several
chapters of the new book, Fed economists are particularly bad at predicting the
future. It's worse than if you and I just
flipped a coin. Okay? It's almost
statistically impossible to be as bad as central bankers are at predicting the
future.
This is worth considering: the best and brightest economists
in the world (such as they are) are either employed by central banks or are
advising them. The best and brightest. Nowhere
can better be found. Yet they are wrong
more often than a coin flip.
What if we allowed the same leeway to aerospace
engineers? Structural engineers? Doctors? Automotive engineers? To ask the question makes obvious the fallacy
of macro-economics and econometrics – it isn’t a numbers game, despite all of
the pretensions to the contrary.
Let’s see if Mauldin allows this to alter his thinking –
thinking about central banks predicting problems; central banks taking action
to mitigate the consequences of these predictions; and, why not John – at least
offer the possibility – even questioning the need for a central bank in the
first place.
JM: So it doesn't end well. We have
12 men and women sitting in a room thinking they can manipulate an economy with data
they don't truly understand and that they can't actually measure with tools
they're making up as they go along. Is that passionate enough, Steve? I get
wound up, but their actions have consequences.
“Manipulate an economy.”
Mauldin clearly sees the vile nature – what does it mean to “manipulate
an economy”? It means to put a central
planner in between two otherwise willing market participants from conducting a
transaction that they each find beneficial.
It means supporting transactions that would not otherwise occur in a
free market.
Central bankers don’t know what they are doing, and they are
making it up as they go along. This is pure
Hayek. Mauldin is on the right
track. He is getting passionate. He is wound up. He is trying to sell a book to an audience
that knows much more than he does (or that he is willing to state publicly) about
the reality of central banking. Will he
allow himself to get to the only logical conclusions based on his observations?
SF: Now, that leads into a quick,
interesting subject. Why are so many people intimidated by monetary policy?
Capitol Hill, for all the stupidity there, people do master, many of them,
complex subjects. What's the inhibition about monetary policy?
JM: Steve, it's magic. Okay? Economists would like to think that…
Forbes: So maybe David Copperfield
should be Fed?
Mauldin: David Copperfield might do
as good a job.
One
did master the subject. Those in
positions of power mocked him; however, he succeeded in changing the dialogue
permanently.
Magic. Voodoo. Witch doctors. At least Ambrose Evans-Pritchard was not too
shy to state
it publicly:
The question is whether the public
welfare is best served by popping the bubble and allowing Austro-liquidation to
purge the toxins, or whether this would be ruinously destructive. Many readers
think it is past time to dynamite this edifice. I have much sympathy with this
view. Yet in the end, I prefer magic.
This takes courage.
At least Ambrose confessed his faith, despite the faith being in a false
god.
Mauldin then gets close the edge regarding the fallacy of
econometrics and macro-economic models…close, but again purposely choosing not
to open his eyes:
JM: Economists like to think that
we can create models full of equations; we
have physics envy. But economics is art as much as it is science. It is not
something that is to the level yet – maybe in the future, with new systems and
new theories – but we are not yet able to truly model an economy and to
understand what the inputs are.
SF: Can't model one person, for
cryin' out loud.
JM: Well, I have trouble modeling
my seven kids. Just like you – we were talking about your daughters. Life is
amazingly complex.
It isn’t “physics envy”; it is power envy. It is difficult to imagine a more powerful
(visible) position than that of having control over the one economic good used
in every single transaction in a modern division-of-labor economy.
Forbes gets close enough to the truth – modeling the
behavior of even one person is not possible.
Yes, John, life is tremendously complex.
As human life is subject to human action, it cannot be modeled.
JM: And when we try to manage the
ups and downs by not allowing the system to correct in minor ways, then we
build up the potential for a very large correction.
SF: Sort of like suppressing forest
fires?
JM: Like suppressing forest fires. It's a great analogy. In fact, we
use it in our book.
Forest fires – another area of life managed by the
government, and another failure. But at
least the firefighters don’t deliberately cause the majority of fires they must
then fight (hey, maybe the police could learn a thing or two from this, but I
digress). I wonder if John mentions this
in his book….
JM: One of my questions to Janet
Yellen – we were talking about this earlier – if I was on the Senate committee,
I'd ask, "What's the theoretical limit? Is there a theoretical limit to
the Federal Reserve balance sheet?" Now, you and I and most right-thinking
human beings and economists would say, "Well, yes, there has to be a
theoretical limit." Well, what is that theoretical limit?
John, if Yellen answered your question would her answer even
be meaningful? You already said they are
wrong far more often than they are right – wrong more times than seems
statistically possible. If Bernanke told
you in 2007 that the theoretical limit was $4 trillion, you would have thought
him a fruitcake – yet we are there today with no significant visible ramifications
and no end in sight.
They will keep expanding until either inflation as expressed
in the CPI exceeds a politically acceptable threshold of pain, or the reduction
in the average standard of living causes the public to rebel. It is possible the second could happen before
the first – and either could be years, if not decades, from now.
Unlike the John Mauldin of old, who believed that it was
possible that wise policy makers would pull us through, he now believes
otherwise:
JM: This just doesn't end well at some point…. The Federal Reserve
doesn't have that. They're making it up as they go along.
John, John, John.
They are in charge of one side of every single transaction in the
division-of-labor economy. If they fail,
they run the risk of countless hundreds of millions dead. You know they are making it all up; you know
they don’t know what they are doing; you know that they can’t ever know what
they are doing. Will this knowledge lead
you to the only logical conclusion?
SF: What would you do? How would
you try to get us out of this mess?
Here is your chance, John.
Open your eyes and look into the abyss.
JM: I would become kind of like
Volcker was back in the '80s, when he was burned in effigy. If you remember…
Not quite the right answer.
In any case, are you ready for the consequences of this “Volcker” medicine? It will make the late 1970s and early 1980s
look like happy days – the dot com boom and real estate bubble all rolled into
one.
JM: …I would not immediately end
quantitative easing because God knows that could be terrible. But I would begin
to taper. I would probably, contrary to some of my more aggressive fellow
analysts, I would just say, "Ah, the Fed's got a $4 trillion balance
sheet. Leave it alone."
First, let’s deal with a seeming contradiction. Mauldin would not immediately end QE; he
would only begin to taper. Then he
speaks as if the balance sheet would remain at $4 trillion. My math doesn’t work the same as his, I
guess.
Second, how is Mauldin going to know any better than the
best-trained economists in the world when the right time is to taper, and how
fast? What makes him so smart – after spending
so much time describing how terrible the central planners have been at this.
Third, what does he think tapering would do? We saw a taste – and only a taste – of this a
few months ago, when there was only a rumor of tapering. Austrians make clear – slow down on spiking
the punch and the party will come crashing down (although, given the excess
reserves, there
could be a different path ahead – at least for a time).
Does he have any better answers than purposely crashing the economy?
JM: And you allow rates to rise to
a somewhat more natural rate. We don't have enough time here now, but there is this concept of the natural rate of
interest.
Ahhh…another “concept.”
I am sure there is some formula used to arrive at this “natural rate of interest.”
Another example of economists having “physics envy.”
There is a scene from “My Fair Lady,” in which Eliza Doolittle sings
to Freddy, her wanna-be beau:
Words, words, words
I'm so sick of words
I get words all day through
First from him now from you
Is that all you blighters can
do?
This is what we get – words, words, words. Every economist and pretend economist (but I
repeat myself) has an opinion about what should be done next by the central
planning policy makers. They talk on and
on, for hours and hours, trying to explain the reasons behind their wisdom –
while all-the-while fewer
and fewer are paying attention.
John, please say you are going to move beyond such shallow words. To quote Eliza, “If you’re in love, show
me!” (Well, not me…wow, that didn’t come
out right…well, you know what I mean.)
I’m still waiting, is Mauldin going to move beyond the same
old words – just one more centrally planned solution?
JM: We're talking eight years of
artificially low, financially repressed interest rates? That is theft. And what it is is a theft of time. Because we have a
generation of people who have played the game by the rules. They've saved their
money. They've done what they were supposed to do…. What we need is to
understand that we have stolen time from
people when that was the only thing they had.
John, even you describe it as theft. Doesn’t this lead you to some better
conclusion…finally? Even if you cannot
conclude the right answer from a pragmatic viewpoint, don’t you see the immorality
of the institution?
JM: And when you take it from them,
you're taking away their lifestyle. You're taking away their ability to enjoy
what should have been a golden time.
The theft isn’t just from those who have saved – it is a
theft from the productive to the non-productive; from the
independent to the dependent. It is
the entire meaning and purpose of government.
SF: Now, well, we'll get to what
you recommend in the book.
Finally! Do it John –
Forbes is giving you another chance.
JM: The reigning theoretical
economic paradigm is one of, let's call it neo-Keynesianism. I don't really
think Keynes would be completely on board with it today. And it has a fetish
for consumption. They want to drive
consumer spending. And the way you drive consumer spending is to make money
cheap so that people can buy cars and other stuff at lower prices.
But consumption debt is what
leverages what the Keynesian economic guys seem to be wanting to produce. And
it does spur income and investment today, just like the housing bubble did.
The state values increased economic activity – it drives
increased tax revenue. This is one
reason the state desires cheap credit. Then,
when default occurs – for example, when a homeowner defaults on his mortgage
after the housing bubble – the amount defaulted becomes taxable income! What a scam!
But John, we are still waiting for a solution – and please,
not just another version of central planning:
JM: It would be more appropriate, I
think, to target income. That's the
important part of what an economy should be doing. How can we produce more
income? How can we produce more profit?
That’s it. Target
income. This is the new-age argument, exemplified
by Michael Woodford. My centrally
planned solution is better than your centrally planned solution.
Words, words, words; I'm so sick of words….
Mauldin keeps his eyes closed, despite all of the evidence
he presents as to the problems of central planning money, credit and the
economy. He is walking to the edge, but doesn’t
want to open his eyes – at least not publicly.
And Forbes advice?
SF: Well, buy Code Red, damn it.
I guess Forbes is also getting “passionate” and “wound up.” But I guess this is the point. Try to convince those who know better about
the roots of the problem that you are one of them, but keep your good name with
your mainstream friends by not calling for the only obvious solution.
Central planning has failed everywhere it has been
tried. In this, the evidence is
overwhelming – far more than a coin flip or a statistical probability. Money and credit cannot be successfully
centrally planned any better than any other economic good – if success is to be
defined by what is best for the overall health of the economy. There is only one solution to this problem,
if John cares to ever open his eyes:
End the Fed.
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