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Introduction
There are many very serious
economic negatives of a central bank that supporters of central banks ignore.
Instead, they argue that the central bank is a good institution because it
helps to remedy recessions. That argument is highly misleading. The central
bank can and does stimulate economic activity at times, but in doing so, it
creates booms, bubbles, inflation, mal-investment, and the subsequent
depressions. It is as if a doctor gave amphetamines to a patient who wanted
to stay awake for the next 72 hours. The patient goes hyperactive for a while
before suddenly dropping dead.
The system of central banking
causes a boom-bust cycle. Austrian economists for a long time have emphasized
that the central bank creates a boom that lowers the interest rate and
creates mal-investment while capital is consumed. Robert P. Murphy provides
an excellent illustration here. In this article, I
will strengthen the Austrian theory by examining the financial side of the
boom-bust cycle. The central bank’s money creation has important and
prominent financial effects that propel the boom. I explain these effects,
relate them to money creation, and explain several channels by which the
economic actors in the economy are induced to consume capital and mal-invest:
(1) Central banks subsidize marginal loans that the loan markets have
previously rejected. (2) The central bank’s money creation causes
lenders to lower their standards of extending loans. (3) The price rises caused
by the central bank’s money creation cause borrowers to ramp up
speculative activity and increase financial leverage.
The overall financial effect is
a noticeable weakening of the structure of credits. Loan quality declines,
and this places the banking system at risk. When the production structure
fails to produce the appropriate mix of goods, borrowers cannot repay loans. Interest
rates rise as they attempt to secure financing. Failures begin to occur as
the depression sets in. Bad loans pile up in banks. Banks become insolvent
and fail. The credit system tends to grind to a halt.
These financial effects can
readily be observed in the booms that lead up to panics and depressions. What
is new in this article is that I emphasize these effects and that I explain
how these results connect logically to the activities of the central bank and
to the distortion in the structure of production.
In sum, the central bank’s
money creation does more than cause mal-investment through a lower interest
rate. It also causes lenders to make submarginal loans across the board and
to lower their lending standards, while inducing borrowers to speculate on
higher risk projects and to take out loans that are excessive in light of
their ability to produce income.
The general picture
The general picture is that the
central bank tends to pump up money and then, sometime later, slows down the
rate of money pumping or even makes it negative and drains money.
For example, the very first
money-pumping of the Federal Reserve came immediately after the Fed was
created. It occurred during and after World War I. The Fed controls
"high-powered money." That monetary aggregate doubled between 1914
and 1920, which was at a very high rate of 12 percent a year. Prices rose
steeply. The Fed could not continue this money-pumping without causing a
hyperinflation and destroying the dollar. It slowed down the rate of increase
of high-powered money to zero and then made the rate negative into 1921 and
1922. High-powered money fell by 14 percent. This caused a sharp recession
and many bank failures. The financial effects I speak of are described later
in much more detail.
In analyzing boom-bust cycles,
we are dealing with social, economic, and historical events that differ in
details but often have features in common. There will be many variations in
the types of central bank, the methods it uses, the reasons it inflates, the
kinds of booms that occur, the kinds of depressions that occur, the events
that trigger panics, and the political reactions to all these events. For
example, the reasons for the central bank’s money-pumping vary from
case to case. Among others, they might be to speed up an already-existing
expansion, to keep an expansion going, to enable government to float debt at
favorable rates, to enable a large quantity of government debt to be floated,
to provide banks with loanable funds, or to remedy a recession.
The details are not my concern
here. No matter what the reasons for an inflation are, the general story is
the same. The bank creates excessive money by buying assets and issuing
currency as the corresponding liability. It does not matter what assets it
buys. The result is the same. The deposits and reserves of the banks in the
economy rise.
Over-expansion of loans
Let the central bank buy the
bonds of a sovereign government in the open market, which is its usual
practice. To do so, it outbids another buyer. It is not necessary to argue
that the central bank depresses the rate of interest. The amount by which the
central bank outbids other buyers need not be great and it need only cause a
temporary blip in the interest rate. At a very small increment to price
(which is a very small decrease in the interest rate), the central bank can
purchase a large amount of bonds. The reason for this is that the supply of
bonds for sale is highly elastic at the current price, there being many close
substitutes. (The very high negative elasticity of demand for financial
securities is a well-established fact in the finance literature.) Unless the
central bank is regarded by the market as possessing special information
about bond pricing, the price need not be much disturbed and any disturbance
will be short-lived. Meanwhile, the other buyers’ appetite for bonds
has not changed. They also buy the bonds they want. In the vast
multi-trillion dollar ocean of fixed-income securities that provide returns
to investors, even the central bank’s purchases are not large.
The central bank’s
purchases need not lower the bond interest rate by much or even anything at all
to have their well-known effects. When the central bank’s check is
deposited by the seller of bonds into his account, that bank finds its
deposits have increased. This happens throughout the banking system. A bank
is now encouraged to make more loans. Some borrowers who were previously
rationed out of the market will now be invited to borrow using these new
funds.
To understand what happens next,
one must understand the financial evaluation of investment projects. An
investment has expected future cash inflows and outflows. The net present
value of these cash flows is found by discounting them at a rate of return
commensurate with the project’s risk. If the present value of the
inflows exceeds that of the outflows, the project has positive net present
value and is acceptable. Negative net present value projects are rejected, as
the present value of the cash outflows exceed the worth of the cash inflows.
The bank with new funds to loan
had previously rejected projects with negative net present value. Banks find
themselves with new deposits and the capability of making new loans. There
are any number of possible reasons why this new money will be allocated to
the projects previously regarded as not credit-worthy and why these projects
are more likely to be projects with long durations, that is to say, why these
projects are the higher-order capital projects that appear prominently in the
Austrian story. (1) The new deposits may cause the banks to re-evaluate the
economic environment as more favorable. Thinking this, they may raise their
expectations of future cash inflows. This raises the net present value and
makes a marginal project acceptable. (2) They may regard the marginal
projects as now having lower risk. This lowers the discount rate. Lowering
the discount rate raises the project’s net present value. It is a fact
of financial arithmetic that the longer-term projects, which tend to be
capital projects, have a greater portion of their net present value that
traces to distant cash flows. If either these cash flows are raised in
expected value or their risk (and discount rate) lowered, their net present
values are raised more than projects with shorter durations. (3) The
increased deposits may lower the rate of interest paid on deposits. Seeing
lower capital costs, banks may lower the discount rates attaching to projects
and accept more of them. Projects that had been rejected as too risky or as
not having great enough future cash flows will be re-evaluated at the lower
costs of capital and found to be acceptable. Their net present values will
become more positive. The loans will look good. (4) Banks compete with one
another in making loans. Borrowers will now be able to shop among banks more
readily. There is uncertainty over the net present values of investment
projects because all the cash flows lie in the future, not to mention that
discount rates are unobservable and must be estimated. Loans rejected at one
bank have a higher chance of being accepted at another bank when all bank
have more funds and banks evaluate projects differently.
I have not yet mentioned
consumer loans. These too will be stimulated. Prior to the deposit influx,
there were consumers whose incomes were too low or too variable (risky) to
make them good risks. All of the above arguments equally well apply to them. If
banks are flush with deposits and interpret that as a sign of good times,
they will view jobs and incomes as more secure. The consumers who have been
turned away from capital investments like autos and homes are now relatively
more likely to be found acceptable. Competition will ensue and consumers find
it easier to shop from lender to lender.
All of this can happen without
any changes in the standards of making loans. The latter is an entirely
separate matter. Even without changing standards, the net result is that new
deposits engineered by the central bank are likely to be put to work by banks
among loans once thought to be of lower quality. The basic reasons for this
are three-fold. The new money may change the expectations of banks as to
future cash flows and their risks. The new money may lower capital costs
directly. The new money may lead the ordinary competitive process into the
direction of accepting previously marginal loans.
Central bank subsidy
It should be emphasized that the
additional borrowing caused by central bank money creation previously did not
qualify for loans because the rates of return on the projects failed to come
in high enough compared to capital costs. And if the borrowers were
consumers, the incomes of these consumers were too low to be able to service
the higher interest rates on the loans. The market for loanable funds, left
to its own devices, had intentionally rationed some borrowers out of the
market. Funds-suppliers and funds-borrowers met and made their bargains. Suppliers
who demanded too high a return could not extend loans, and demanders who
could only service loans at low interest rates were unable to make bargains
at the equilibrium rate of interest. A production structure ensued that was
consistent with the financial market equilibrium.
The central bank then stepped in
and provided new funds to banks. This disturbs the financial market
equilibrium and then the production structure. By subsidizing the banks,
providing them with money, the central bank indirectly subsidizes a set of
borrowers who previously could not borrow. The boom can be thought of as
induced by a subsidy to sub-marginal projects and loans that society has
previously rejected. The bust occurs when the central bank withdraws or
lessens this subsidy and the projects and loans fail.
I digress slightly to mention
briefly a very important issue because so many critics of central banking
mention it in the same breath as central banking and believe it to be a
critical fault of the current system. This is the issue of fractional
reserving. I intend to provide a separate and more complete treatment at a
later date, since my views are at odds with one wing of Austrian thinking on
this matter. I hope to persuade my friends to revise their views on this
matter and allow that in a free society, there can be depositors who may be
quite willing to accept fractional reserve banking because of its benefits to
them and who will not by any means regard it as inherently fraudulent.
The point being made here is
that central banking is the villain of the piece. In banking, there has been
fractional reserving for centuries. Therefore, fractional reserve banking is
one aspect of the boom-bust process. However, it is not the essential
part of it, which is the central bank. In a free banking system there may
well arise banks that make loans in excess of the gold or other backing they
might hold to service deposit accounts. But individual banks in a free
banking system cannot survive by overextending loans, for in a free banking
system there is no central bank to subsidize the banks by creating deposits. Furthermore,
in a free banking system, there are multiple bank notes, not a single Federal
Reserve note; and this competition makes a world of difference. The central
bank is the critical mover in the process of creating a boom that ends up in
a recession. I provided somewhat more detail here. See also here.
Prices increase
With their new funds, the
borrowers may now purchase goods and services.
New loans per se are not
necessarily inflationary in a free market and free banking system because
those who obtain them in open competition produce new product that is wanted.
But what of new central bank–induced loans in the existing non-free
banking system? What of new loans made to projects that are actually not
wanted at existing prices and interest rates? Here we have expenditures on
projects that were previously rationed out of the market at the old prices
and interest rates and would not have been produced without the central
bank’s stimulus. These new and sub-marginal projects draw resources and
labor into their production away from other desired projects that were
predicated on lower prices and on demands of consumers. New demand atop the
old will raise prices.
Rising costs cause other lines
of business to reduce production. The structure of production becomes
distorted. The economy that was set to produce shoes and shirts now is
producing fewer shoes and shirts and more rockets to Venus or lots of land in
remote stretches of the hinterlands. A boom takes hold. The banking system now
has a tiger by the tail. When the rocket and land businesses cannot sell
their product, prices fall. Loans are not repaid. If a portion of the economy
builds Venus rockets that no one wants, less product is made available to
exchange for the products that consumers actually desire. Further money
creation cannot solve this problem. The central bank is unable to maintain
this distorted production structure by injecting new funds. If it attempts
this, the money is likely to flow into desired goods. This will raise their
prices. It will borrow demand from the future because new loans will have
been made. But until production goes back into the goods that consumers want,
the economy will experience inflation and unemployment, that is, stagflation.
Deterioration of loan quality
I suggested at the outset that
there was a second effect of central bank money creation, namely, relaxation
of loan standards. When a central bank pumps up money, member banks become
all too willing to accept borrowers whom they previously regarded as bad
risks. They make more loans against real estate, more loans to weak
borrowers, and more loans to marginal borrowers such as foreign borrowers. Their
lending goes beyond making more loans. It goes into making worse
loans.
We have just been through a
period (2001–2007) where worse loan quality was clearly evident. It was
encouraged by government. Friedman and Schwartz in their monetary history
mention that in the boom of the late 1920s there was "a reduction in the
average quality of credit outstanding, in the sense that the securities
issued and the loans made in the late twenties experienced a larger frequency
of default and foreclosure than those issued in the early twenties."
The following account, written
by Fred L. Garlock and published in the Journal of Land & Public
Utility Economics describes the deterioration of loan quality in yet
another boom, but they could apply to almost any boom. Garlock also presents
a theory of how this comes to pass:
"[The banks’]
increasing receipts, which were due to rising prices, had tended to
neutralize the drafts; and, similarly, deposits increased during the summers
to amounts which again upset their predictions. Banks which had been chronic
borrowers found the problem of liquidation solved by the unusually large
supply of loanable funds which came to them, while those which were
infrequent borrowers found it necessary, in order to employ their funds
profitably, to encourage borrowing by their customers.
"Rising prices affected
both banks and their customers with an optimism which swept aside the
conservative standards of experience and promoted extravagance and
speculation. Whatever the customers purchased, whether merchandise or land,
they were able to sell at an extraordinary profit; whatever was produced on
their farms brought unusual returns. Some few persons, uncertain of what
disposition should be made of the unexpected harvest, began reducing their
fixed indebtedness. It was not long, however, until the continuously rising
prices, the encouragement of the bankers, and the methods used by the
government in selling war securities, had convinced the majority that debt
was a blessing in disguise, as it became progressively easier to liquidate
and offered a means of extending profit-making activities. Under the urge of
these influences, industry expanded and thrived, promoters of all types came
into their own, and thrift gave way to extravagance. Bankers found their
accustomed standards of credit analysis growing obsolete, for values
increased automatically with the passing of time. Hence it was that, as the
speculative fever gained a foothold and grew and the demands for bank funds
enlarged, credit was extended to all manner of persons on – or without
– all kinds of security, excess lines became commonplace, customers'
notes given to promoters of questionable and fraudulent enterprises were
discounted for rich rewards, and large sums were advanced to land
speculators. Borrowing for the purpose of relending became an established
practice. Time and time again the banks were saved from the effects of their
ill-advised acts by the continuous growth of deposits."
The above words were written in 1926 in description of the boom of 1914 - 1920 as it affected banks in Iowa. The author writes:
"As the period drew to an
end, during late 1919 and early 1920, caution was thrown to the wind by both
bankers and their customers, speculation became rife, an enormous burden of
debt was contracted, and economy was lost in a swirl of extravagance."
Murray Rothbard’s account of
the Panic of 1819 includes material in passing
that describes the speculation based on low loan standards in the preceding
boom:
"Investment in real estate,
turnpikes, and farm improvement projects spurted, and prices in these fields
rose. Furthermore, the federal government facilitated large-scale speculation
in public lands by opening up for sale large tracts in the Southwest and
Northwest, and granting liberal credit terms to purchasers. Public land
sales, which had averaged $2 million to $4 million per annum in 1815 and
1816, rose to a peak of $13.6 million in 1818. Speculation in urban and rural
lands and real estate, using bank credit, was a common phenomenon which
sharply raised property values.
"In his argument for the
relief bill as a whole, Edwards went into great detail to excuse the actions
of the debtors. The debtors, like the rest of the country, had been
infatuated by the short-lived, ‘artificial and fictitious
prosperity.’ They thought that the prosperity would be permanent. Lured
by the cheap money of the banks, people were tempted to engage in a
‘multitude of the wildest projects and most visionary
speculations,’ as in the case of the Mississippi and South Sea bubbles of previous centuries. Edwards sternly reminded the Senate that the
government itself had encouraged public land purchases by making some of its
bonds and other claims upon it receivable in payment for the lands."
The above material documents the
fact that booms are accompanied by a lowering of loan standards by lenders.
Why loan quality declines
The credit-induced boom leads
both to an over-expansion in the amount of credit and an accompanying decline
in the quality of that credit. The two go together because the excessive bank
deposits induce banks to reach lower in the barrel to loans previously
considered to be sub-marginal.
Why do banks make so many of
what later turn out to be unsound loans? Why does this process take hold so
ferociously? Why is caution replaced by irrational exuberance? And, in this
day and age of big government, why does big government do so little to stop
it? Indeed, why
does big government encourage it?
- Why does the structure of
credit tend to move toward weaker credits? The existence of the central
bank and a single currency is the main reason. In a system without a
central bank, individual banks issue their own bank notes convertible
into gold, say. If they make too many weak loans, their bank notes fall
below the conversion value into gold that has been promised. The bank
then experiences gold withdrawals and a reduction in its bank notes
outstanding. It
is forced to curtail its lending.
In the central banking system,
an individual bank gets no negative signal from its depositors. All
depositors everywhere are dealing in the same Federal Reserve notes, not
individual bank notes. They have less incentive to monitor the strength of an
individual bank (especially in these days of deposit insurance) and they
cannot as easily observe that strength (or weakness) because there are no
quotations on individual bank notes.
Central banking and a single
currency lead to the individual banks facing a much-reduced constraint on the
loans they make. They can take more chances on riskier loans, and they do.
- Optimism prevails because
optimism is what has been paying off. Optimism has been paying off
because prices have been rising. With prices rising, the tendency as the
boom progresses is to under-estimate the real risks of cash flow
shortfalls, or to apply too low a discount rate to the cash flows of
long-lived assets. Risk premiums become too low, which is another way of
saying that marginal investments are accepted and thought to be
profitable.
- In boom times, investors
think it more likely that the returns of assets will be realized in good
states of the economy. That is why they began to use more borrowing (or
financial leverage) in buying homes, stocks, and other assets. They
expected rather more returns to be realized in good states of the
economy, and returns are higher in these good states.
Garlock’s account mentions
the following reasons why loan standards deteriorate, and I have discussed
them in earlier articles:
- Rising prices. A rising
tide lifts all boats. A rising price level for a time makes even bad
projects looks good. Rising prices encourage the use of more debt.
- As the boom progresses, the
apparent prosperity makes standard methods of assessing credit quality
obsolete. The three C’s of credit are Character, Credit, and
Capital. The borrower’s history, his ability to handle credit, and
his assets all matter. But in a boom, they matter less.
- The encouragement of
government. Booms often are accompanied not only by central banking
stimulus but also by government actions. For example, Rothbard writes:
"The boom therefore
continued in 1818, with the Bank of the United States acting as an
expansionary, rather than as a limiting, force. The expansionist attitude of
the Bank was encouraged by the Treasury, which wanted the Bank to accept and
use the various state bank notes in which the Treasury received its revenue,
particularly its receipts from public land sales."
Prior to the Panic of 1873, the
government subsidized railroad construction. In modern times, home-owning has
been heavily subsidized in many ways. Legislation pushed banks to make
sub-standard loans. At present, government officials are encouraging banks to
make loans.
Bankrupt thought
If a driver presses the accelerator
to the floor, sending the car out of control and into an embankment, we do
not blame the gas pedal, the engine, and the transmission. We blame the
driver who revs up the engine. Today, we have had an economic crash. The
tendency is to blame the lenders, the investment bankers, the financial
engineers, the banks, the bond raters, and an array of financial institutions
manned by imperfect souls who did not withstand the forces surrounding them. The
tendency is to blame what is loosely called capitalism or free market
capitalism. The tendency is to blame the engine, not the driver. And it is
the driver who has survived it all who is blaming the engine and the car!
"I made a mistake,"
Greenspan said, "in presuming that the self-interest of organizations,
specifically banks and (other financial institutions), were such as that they
were best capable of protecting their own shareholders and their equity in
the firms."
The current Secretary of the
Treasury, Henry M. Paulson, Jr., is quoted as saying that the subprime crisis
"came about because of some bad lending practices."
These officials are blaming the
car that they were driving for the ensuing smash-up. Their thought is
bankrupt. Their thought is a negative net-present-value project. Followed out
in practice, their thought destroys wealth.
We must ask why panics occur
when they do and why they are preceded by booms. There is deterioration in
credit quality that occurs in booms. Why does it occur then? Why does it not
occur at other times? Bad lending practices and banks that seem to be
incapable of watching out for their own interests do not suddenly spring out
of nowhere.
Greenspan and Paulson have no
rationale for their statements. They have no business cycle theory. And
therefore they have no sensible remedy. Their public statements are
utterly stupid. It is no wonder that security prices decline whenever they
open their mouths, since they reinforce the correct conclusion that our
government officials are totally clueless.
Bernanke is the same in
espousing the false theory that the automobile is responsible for its own
crash.
Here is Bernanke: "‘I do believe the latter [a
new supervisory and regulatory structure] does have a significant role to
play in constraining excessive leverage, excessive risk taking and the other
elements that lead to bubbles,’ Bernanke said, laying blame for today's
crisis squarely on Wall Street investment banks that were allowed to borrow
huge amounts to make risky investments with scant supervision."
Bernanke is wrong. Excessive
leverage and risk-taking do not lead to bubbles. They are manifestations of
bubbles. They are caused by the central banks and other government actions
that create the booms and bubbles. Bernanke is mistaking correlation for
causation.
On October 15, 2008, Bernanke
said in a prepared speech:
"As in all past crises, at
the root of the problem is a loss of confidence by investors and the public
in the strength of key financial institutions and markets. The crisis will
end when comprehensive responses by political and financial leaders restore
that trust, bringing investors back into the market and allowing the normal
business of extending credit to households and firms to resume."
More bankrupt statements. He
blames the Panic of 2008 on a loss of confidence in banks and markets and
believes that the remedy is a restoration of trust. This is like saying the
car sped up and crashed because the passengers didn’t trust the car and
now we must restore their trust in this crashed car.
The most casual reader of the
history of panics and crashes can only be impressed by the regularity with
which they are preceded by excessive money creation by central bankers. Argentina crashed in 1890. Excessive speculation was involved, but was it the culprit? As
usual, government and monetary policies engineered the boom and caused the
crash. In this case, the government created a set of National land banks to
finance the purchase of lands that it had opened up. The setup was such that
land rose steadily in price and banks could make unlimited issues of bonds. This
led to a widespread boom and speculation with European participation. In
addition, Argentina adopted a system patterned after the national banking
system of the United States, a system that led to periodic booms and busts. It
was not long before their system led to excessive creation of money that
lacked convertibility into gold. The national government had illegally used
the gold reserves of member banks to pay off its own obligations, leaving the
currency with no backing!
Bernanke espouses one fallacy after
another. He and his government colleagues, who are in reality know-nothings,
are standing in the way of proper remedies by posing as thoughtful and
well-read intellectuals with well-thought out theories. They are nothing of
the sort. Their bankruptcy of thought will lead to America’s
bankruptcy. Obama and the leading Democrats are similarly bankrupt.
The central bank system is at
the root of the problem. The problem is worldwide. Like Argentina in the 1880s, the rest of the world has copied the western central banking
blueprint in order to entrench excessive government power. Government power
and central banking are now closely linked. One cannot be dislodged without
dislodging both. One cannot be against one without being against both.
To take up the cause of monetary
freedom is to take up the cause of liberty. The cause of liberty is the cause
of monetary freedom.
November 3, 2008
Michael S. Rozeff
Michael S. Rozeff is a retired Professor of Finance living in East
Amherst, New York. He publishes regularly his ideas and analysis on www.LewRockwell.com .
Copyright © 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in
whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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