02 January 2015

The Great Fallacy at the Heart of Modern Monetary Theory


As with all theories that miss the mark, Modern Monetary Theory presents some insights into the matter of course, but seems to hinge on one or two key assumptions that are more matters of assertion than historical or even practical experience. It is founded not so much an economic theory, but on a belief without a firm foundation.

This paragraph taken from Yves Smith's recent article about MMT

"The sovereign government cannot become insolvent in its own currency; it can always make all payments as they come due in its own currency because it is the ISSUER of the currency, not simply the USER (as a household or private business is).

This issuing capacity means that the government does not face the same kinds of constraints as a private sector user of money, which in turn exposes the fallacy of the household analogy, so beloved in popular economics discourse."

The finances of a sovereign are most assuredly NOT like those of a household. And those of a Bank are not like a household either.

In several ways they can be the inverse of a household in their motivations. For example, when household spending is slack because of an economic shock, the government may wish to engage in more spending to counteract this.  Some think it is the role of government to keep the economy out of what is called a liquidity trap or as I understand it a feedback loop of cutbacks that greatly exacerbate the problem of slack demand.

This is one of the points of having a government, that is, to do things that the individual cannot do well alone, no matter how powerful they may think that they are, and to protect the rights of the many from those who are more powerful, both foreign and domestic.

But here is the matter of disputation, emphasis in caps theirs, in italics mine. "The sovereign government cannot become insolvent in its own currency; it can always make all payments as they come due in its own currency because it is the ISSUER of the currency, not simply the USER."

Do you see what is missing here, and more importantly, what is implied?

What is missing is the acknowledgement that the users of a currency, call them 'the market,' can and will and have quite often throughout history questioned the valuation of a currency, and often to the point of practical worthlessness, if certain actions are taken by the sovereign in creating their currency.
 
This speaks to a principle that I spelled out some time ago, that the practical limit on a sovereign government in printing money is the willingness of the market to accept it at a certain value. And this applies to any sovereign, more readily perhaps if they are smaller and weaker, but always given time nonetheless.

If Russia, for example, were to merely start printing more rubles and set a target valuation for them, they could enforce this internally. And in fact, many sovereigns have done so throughout history. I remember visiting Moscow shortly after the fall of the Soviet Union, and marveling at the disconnect between the official stated valuations and the actions of the ordinary people in seeking alternatives like the US Dollar, gold, diamonds, and even Western style toilet paper, a more useful sort of paper than the ruble.

Technically Russia could not become insolvent in rubles, because they could always print more of them to pay all their debts, make purchases, and salary payments. The great caveat in this is that Russia had to maintain a measure of control and enforcement to make that principle 'stick.'

And this is what probably makes MMT inadvertently statist, and dangerous. That is because this belief only works within a domain in which the state exercises complete control over valuation.

In the case of the US dollar as a global reserve currency, if this theory is applied, and one of my great fears is that it will be, then there is an inherent need for the Dollar Cartel to continuing expanding their span of control over all of the producing and purchasing world, in order to enforce this belief.

I am sorry to have to disagree with people whom I like and enjoy reading, but as you can see I think there is an important point of disagreement here. And given the number of sovereigns who have defaulted, causing significant pain in their people and in the lives of others, it is not a trivial thing.

I suppose that there are many other things in MMT that are correct, as it seems to be quite the usual thing in many ways, but there is an important exception in the assertion that the state has no limit to its power to set value, because that is exactly what is implied in the canard that a sovereign cannot default in its own currency. Technically it cannot because it can always print more than enough pay off debts and make more purchases. But it can create money in such a way as to break the confidence of the market, and call its valuation into question. And this is a de facto default.

What happens when the people refuse to accept it at their stated value?  What happens to people who do not agree that the State can do no wrong?  Because if the State can never be at fault in creating and spending money, that makes it a problem and a source of great mischief.
 
In the historical examples the government always resorts to force of some sort in varying degrees, and official exchange rates, and other actions not only on their own people but on their neighboring sovereigns who refuse to submit to the valuation of a currency by official diktat.

It is a dangerous statement that might be remedied by an acknowledgement that there are practical limitations on the power of the State in creating money, and that it is related to the willing acceptance and confidence of the people in its fairness and justice, and especially people who are not part of that same economic sphere of influence.   And if the adherents of a belief cannot agree with this, then it calls into question all the other aspects of a belief that is based on such an absurdity a priori principle. 
 
So it was with the 'efficient market hypothesis,' which believed that people acting in a group are naturally good and rational, and therefore needed little or no regulation.  It was widely accepted in economic circles, and those who did not accept it were dismissed as unsophisticated.  And it did not matter that this assumption was shown to be blatantly incorrect to anyone who is familiar with the reality of the marketplace, or has ever driven on a modern high speed motorway.

People on the whole are not naturally rational, good, and self-regulating to a degree sufficient to permit with the dispensation of the rule of law.  If only this were true!  And a persistent minority among them are so much not inclined to the good as to be sociopaths and inclined to be criminals.

And unfortunately politicians who act for the State are not angelically good and beneficent either. But this is what is implied in creating a system that allows for their acquiring and exercising almost unlimited power that is beyond question, in money or in anything else, but in particular something as important as the general means of exchange and valuation.


31 December 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - And the First Runner Up Is....


"...the burning roof and tower, and Agamemnon, dead."
There is certainly no doubt that 2014 was 'the Year of the Dollar,' as King Buck staged a rally, based on a comparison to some historically important currencies as embodied in the DX index.

I have shown this is the latest update of the US Dollar Very Long Term Chart here.

In fact, the greenback has hit levels not seen since the last financial crisis.  You know, the one in 2008 that everyone has already forgotten, and which seems just as likely to reoccur as if we had done little or nothing about what had caused it in the first place. 
 
I was amused to see a chart posted over at Zerohedge that shows that the next best performing currency in the world after the dollar was gold of all things.   That chart is shown below.  This presumes that one would count gold as a proper 'currency.' 
 
I would say not quite, since technically no sovereign will admit to it at this point.  There is a patina of official sanction about a proper money.  The central banks all hold it, and some are buying it quite vigorously especially since 2006.  So it does have the character of a natural currency and enduring store of value, despite the blatherings and propaganda campaigns of its official detractors. 

Perhaps propaganda is too strong a word for our polite society, all whitewash on the outside, with the bones of the brutally savaged carefully hidden within..  'Manufacturing consent' and 'molding perceptions' is what we call the persuasion campaigns in our genteel era.  Propaganda is an ugly word, so let's put some icing on it and call it something else.

In addition to being a 'store of value' a currency must be a 'money' and for now at least it is the ultimate foreign currency, being exchangeable around the world, but no where treated as a routine means of purchasing items directly with some sort of official nod to its role as a form of money.
 
That may change in the years ahead.  I don't wish for it too eagerly, because I would like to see gold run a bit in value, mostly making up for lost time as it were, before nations get involved and start trying to fix its prices officially.  For now they are doing it unofficially, or at least some of them are doing so, and they are probably doing a bad job of it, in the longer term scheme of things.

They'll never learn. Never.  It is in their very nature not to learn.  They are not learning people.  They are headstrong power people, always wanting to run the show according to their own fancies, and therefore consistently reaching for some combination of force and fraud to impose their wills and their ideas.  Because they know better.  They are the epitome of progress, thoroughly modern and the recipients of special knowledge that sets them above and beyond all others.
 

"Queens have died, young and fair.  Dust hath closed Helen's eye..."
 
But as we know, it's all rubbish.  They speak well, and learn to impress, but they don't know anything new.  They mostly practice the same old tricks with different names and fancier titles.  An object lesson will therefore most likely be required, to be administered by the back of the invisible hand when their schemes go off in a bad way, as they seem to do about every five or six years now.
 
Thank you for your patronage at Le Café for another year.  I am pleased to note that there have been 34,915,180 customers served since opening at this location in February, 2007.  
 
This is not bad for what is most like just a small village café, off the main roads and patronized largely by locals, travelers and the disposed.  The goal is to provide a warm and familiar refuge for those who have become weary of the often tasteless fare produced and served in volumes at the larger commercial establishments of the day.
 
And there is often entertainment, and pleasant diversions from the day!  lol
 
If you have obtained any benefits from this establishment during this year past, as always, please pay it forward.  There is a decided lack of love in the world, and unrewarded kindness often works wonders for both the recipient and the one who gives, not for advantage, but out of a recognition of our own obligations, and at its best, love.
 
Have a very Happy New Year.
 
 
 
 




SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Not with a Bang, But a Whimper


Having served its purpose, the paint was peeling off the tape with some vigor today.

Mr. Market shed some of its recent water weight, from the watering of its stocks indices, for the purposes of improving the bonuses of the financial class for the end of the year.

The first week of January may have an upward bias, depending on what happens. We may see some follow through selling on Friday, but the markets will be abnormally quiet most likely.

It is the whole of January that may likely set the tone for the new year, and not the first week. So we should watch this next month rather closely, so see what the themes might be, and how speculators, I would not dignify what they do by calling them investors, take the economic news as 'good' or 'bad' for certain classes of financial instruments.

Have a Happy New Year.






US Dollar Very Long Term Chart for Year End 2014


The US dollar has ended this year on a high note not seen in some time, not since the time of the financial crisis and collapse in 2008.

Dollar strength, at least in this index, is largely a reciprocal function of weakness in the euro, and to a lesser extent the yen, the pound, and the loon.

I have not worked the data yet, and may not do so for some time, but I would imagine that this spike in dollar strength will see the same sort of demand coming out of Europe as we saw in the two prior instances labeled Eurodollar Squeeze I & II.

This time it is most likely helped by the ongoing crisis in the yen and the ruble, the first being the objective of Abenomics, and the latter being the target of the West, through the actions of their sanctions and the currency action of their Banks, in this phase of the ongoing currency war.

In general, a stronger currency helps the financial and foreign investment sectors of a nation, and is much less helpful for the manufacturing and producing sectors.  It tends to make exports more expensive, and imports more affordable. And it gives purchasing power for those of a mind to acquire and privatize major foreign assets.

This is not a prescription for a recovery in a real producing economy, but it is a boost to the moneyed class of financiers.  This is in keeping with the financialization of the economy that came to fruition during the 1990's, and has continued to dominate the economy and the political process ever since.

Let's see how things develop in 2015.
 
 
 
 
 

30 December 2014

The Japanese Economic Dilemma in a Nutshell


Here is a note from a friend in Japan:
In today's Nikkei (Japanese version), on page 5, tucked behind all the hype about the government's decision to lower corporate taxes, in hopes that major companies will raise wages, was a short article on "three miscalculations about the economy" this year.
1. Tax revenues increased with the increase in the sales tax but consumer spending fell. Tax revenues expected to increase by about 5 trillion yen.
2. Weaker yen and higher stock market improved family assets for some I would say, but exports did not improve, and were about 8% lower than 4 years ago.
3. CPI (excluding fresh food) increased, resulting in a real wage decline. Rreal wages have been falling since mid 2013 and are now around 4% lower year over year.
Over the past few days I have been reading about the so-called lost decade of the 1990s and the government's policy decisions to try to kick-start the economy.

In 1990 the government had about 60 trillion in tax revenues and 69 trillion in general account total expenditures.

Now, the government estimates 52 trillion in tax revenues for fiscal 2014 but has more than 95 trillion in expenditures.

Even a second grade student can see that something is not working.

As you know, I think that there are three things that must be done.

Reform, reform, reform.

The Japanese economy is burdened with an unusually bad demographic problem, made much worse by the burdens of insider dealing, crony capitalism, and zombie banks and their corporations.

And its greatest burden of all is an elite that serves itself and its friends first and foremost, and that finds a greater kinship with its global counterparts than with the people whose interests it purports to represent.
 
"The conflict between the East and West was designed to scare the people of the world into accepting a convergence of these two monopoly systems of authoritarian power. The end result was to be a new Imperial Order and a New World Empire run by an elite self-perpetuating oligarchies from the leading nations of the earth."

Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope, p. 860
 


Comex Gold Futures Contracts and Options Calendar 2015