The classical formulation of the paradox
of interest is due to Böhm-Bawerk and
Schumpeter. Its modern formulation is due to Hausman
and Kirzner. I quote Kirzner:
Much - perhaps all - will turn out to
depend on the way in which the interest problem is formulated. For present
purposes we adopt a modern formulation of the problem, but wish to emphasize
that this formulation is very similar in spirit and character to classic
formulations… The modern formulation we cite is that of Hausman. Hausman points out
that an "individual's capital . . . enables that individual to earn
interest. If the capital is invested in a machine, the sum of the rentals the
machine earns over its lifetime is greater than the machine's cost.
Why?" Common observation, that is, tells us that possession of a given
stock or capital funds can, by judicious investment (say, in a machine) yield
a continuous flow of income (annual rentals net of depreciation) without
impairing the ability of the capital funds to serve indefinitely as a source
of income. The problem is, how this can occur. Why
is not the price of the machine (paid by the capitalist at the time he
invests in the machine) bid up (by the competition of others eagerly
seeking to capture the net surplus of rentals over cost) - to the point
where no such surplus remains? We are seeking, then, an explanation for
an observed phenomenon which is, in the absence of a theory of interest,
unable to be accounted for. Absent a theory of interest, no interest income
ought to be forthcoming, except as a transient phenomenon; competition ought
to squeeze it out of existence.
In this note I propose to solve the
paradox by suggesting that the exchange of wealth and income should be made
the cornerstone of the theory of interest, replacing the exchange of a
present and a future good.
To say that the capitalist
"invests" his wealth is too simplistic. Investing is bound to
confuse the issue. Moreover, possession of wealth does not automatically
guarantee access to income. There is an implicit exchange of wealth and
income interposed between the capitalist and entrepreneur that needs to be made explicit. Here is what happens.
The capitalist exchanges wealth for
income. Income is yielded by the entrepreneur, who converts wealth into
capital goods (such as a machine or a fruit tree) and hires a manager to tend
them (including the task of setting depreciation quotas in anticipation of
having to replace the capital goods at the end of their useful life without
further charges to the capitalist). The entrepreneur sets up three accounts
for the distribution of the yield after depreciation, namely, one for each
of:
(1) a fixed interest income payable to
the capitalist,
(2) wages payable to the manager,
(3) the remainder, or entrepreneurial profit, payable to himself.
In this way it is revealed that
"investing" involves an exchange of wealth for income, and it is no
longer a mystery that the sum total of income payments exceeds the wealth
subject to the exchange. If entrepreneurs were not prepared to pay the
capitalist an income in exchange for wealth at positive interest, then the
latter would simply withdraw his offer to make the exchange and fall back on
direct conversion of wealth into income through dishoarding (ideally,
dishoarding gold). From his point of view direct conversion is preferable to,
and less risky than, indirect conversion or exchange at zero interest. In
this light the modern formulation of the interest problem and the language of
"investing" appear rather naive, if not outright boorish. It
ignores the triple partnership of the capitalist, the entrepreneur, and the
manager underlying the enterprise. It bypasses the problem of managerial
compensation, and obscures the emergence of entrepreneurial profit. These,
plus the interest income, must come out of the gross yield of capital (after
depreciation). Only the last-named, profit, could
fall to zero in the process, and it is the task of the entrepreneur to
bolster it by looking for more promising production targets, possibly
involving the application of a different set of capital goods.
Thus the act of investing is ridden with
all sorts of specifics. Therefore it is eminently justifiable that we cut
through the maze of irrelevant details with our abstraction of exchanging
wealth and income. "Investing" is far too imprecise a term to be
useful in developing theory.
Even if the owner of wealth is prepared
to take the role of the entrepreneur, or that of the manager, or both upon
himself, we still have to assume that there is an underlying exchange of
wealth and income. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that
the capitalist is acting as his own manager and also as his own entrepreneur.
He must still break down his operation into that of three departments: (1)
the bondholding, (2) the managerial, and (3) the entrepreneurial departments.
Accordingly, he would oversee three accounts: the interest account, the
managerial compensation account, and the entrepreneurial profit account. If
he wants to have sound financial controls, he must assume that an exchange of
wealth and income has taken place between the bondholding and the
entrepreneurial departments, and he must not blend the three accounts into
one. Only in this way can he be sure that the fixed income is not out of line
with the rate of interest prevailing in the market and that, similarly, his
managerial compensation is fixed at a level which is consonant with what he
could get in the competitive market. Any shortfall in gross income must then
hit the entrepreneurial profit account first - a penalty for the poor choice
of the line of production, or of capital stock employed. If profit is wiped
out, further shortfall would hit the managerial compensation account - a
penalty for setting depreciation quotas too low. In this way the interest
income is cushioned twice. Repairs must be made before further deterioration
could threaten it.
A different order of priorities would
make repair, indeed, economic survival, difficult if not impossible. For
example, if entrepreneurial profit and managerial compensation were allowed
to continue unabated while interest income was reduced to zero, then the
operation would no longer have economic justification. The owner-manager
would be better off if he sold his capital stock, bought the bonds of other
firms, forgot about his own entrepreneurship, and took a managerial job
elsewhere. Without such an internal accounting procedure assuming an
underlying exchange of wealth and income the investor would lose financial
control of his enterprise. He would be at a loss in trying to compare the
efficiency of his entrepreneurship and managerial talents with those of
others.
Triple-Entry Revenue-Accounting
I submit that the triple partnership of
the capitalist, entrepreneur, and manager is so important in the context of
the theory of interest that it ought to be formulated as an independent principle,
on a par with the Principle of Double-Entry Book-Keeping.
The Principle of Triple-Entry
Revenue-Accounting asserts that
the capitalist who goes into partnership with the entrepreneur and the
manager will succeed best if he adopts the following formula for the
distribution of revenue (after depreciation) from the enterprise. He sets up
three accounts, in order of seniority moving from the senior to the junior:
the interest account; the managerial compensation account; and the
entrepreneurial profit account. Whereas insufficient revenue affects the
junior before affecting the senior accounts, all surpluses accrue to the
junior (profit) account. Triple-entry revenue-accounting is applicable
par excellence in case the capitalist acts as his own entrepreneur or
manager. Rather than plowing the three accounts
into one, the successful capitalist-entrepreneur shall keep the exchange of
wealth and income that underlies his enterprise in evidence.
Triple-entry revenue-accounting is
necessary in order to keep the enterprise competitive and economically
healthy, to ensure that it is capable of self-correction and
self-improvement. Any different order of priority in revenue distribution
makes the enterprise economically vulnerable and less competitive.
Synthesis between the time preference
and productivity theories of interest
Re-setting the paradigm from exchanging
present and future goods to exchanging income and wealth has other important
consequences besides disposing of the paradox of interest. It is the point of
departure towards a synthesis between the time preference and productivity
theories of interest.
It is commonly assumed that an
irreconcilable conflict obtains between the two. But as we shall now see, the
time preference and the productivity theories are in fact complementary. The
instrument of exchanging income and wealth is the gold bond. By definition
the rate of interest is that rate which amortizes the market price of the
bond by maturity when the face value of the bond falls due. If the bond sells
at par, then the rate of interest coincides with the coupon rate. It is
higher or lower than the coupon rate according as the bond sells below or
above par (so that the rate of interest varies inversely with the bond
price).
However, following Carl Menger, we ought to consider not one but two
market prices: the higher asked price and the lower bid price.
The former determines the floor and the latter the ceiling of
the range to which the rate of interest is confined. These two rates are
regulated by two independent market processes with different protagonists in
charge, as we shall now spell out.
The floor for the rate of interest is
determined by the rate of marginal time preference. This is just the
rate at which the opportunity cost of holding the bond becomes critical to
the marginal bondholder. At the next down-tick in the rate of interest he
will sell the bond -- in view of his opportunity to carry wealth in the form
of a present good, gold, rather than a future good, the gold bond.
The ceiling for the rate of interest is
determined by the rate of marginal productivity of capital, that is,
the rate at which the opportunity cost of carrying capital stock becomes
critical to the marginal entrepreneur. At the next up-tick in the rate of
interest he will sell the stock -- in view of his opportunity to carry his
earning assets in the form of a higher-yielding gold bond. Thus the rate of
interest is regulated from below by the arbitrage operations of bondholders
between the bond market and the gold market, and from above by the arbitrage
operations of entrepreneurs between the bond market and the market for
capital stock.
In more details, bondholders will not
let the rate of interest go through the floor. In selling their overvalued
bonds they will take profit and put the proceeds into gold -- until bond
prices fall and the rate of interest bounces back to the rate of marginal
time preference. At that time they will buy back their bond.
Likewise, entrepreneurs will not let the
rate of interest go through the ceiling. They will stop production,
discontinue maintenance of capital stock, abolish depreciation quotas, and
put their savings into the undervalued bond -- until bond prices rise and the
rate of interest falls back to the rate of marginal productivity of capital.
At that time they sell the bond at a profit and put the proceeds back into
capital stock. The persistent selling of bonds at the floor, and the
persistent buying of the same at the ceiling, will confine the rate of
interest to a range and keep it on an even keel.
Note that the arbitrage of the marginal
bondholder between the bond and the gold market lends teeth to time
preference as it forces the banks and the government to yield to the wishes
of the savers. Without it time preference would remain a mere prayer, just a
cry in the wilderness.
Gold withdrawal by bondholders, and also
by holders of bank notes or deposits, is not a drawback of the gold standard.
Rather, it is its main excellence placing as it does the ability to install
or to retire capital, and the power to create or to extinguish money,
squarely where they belong: into the hands of the people. It is precisely
these spontaneous gold flows that prevent the government from usurping the
power to create money, and the banks, to form capital. The idea that the
government can organize debt into currency, and that the banks can organize
credit into capital, is pernicious and will ultimately lead to the
self-destruction of the monetary system and the economy.
References:
Israel M. Kirzner,
The Pure Time-Preference Theory of Interest: An attempt at clarification,
in the volume: The Meaning of Ludwig von Mises,
Norwell (Mass.): Kluwer, 1993, p 166 ff.
E. Fekete, Gold and Interest, A
Synthesis between Time Preference and Productivity Theories of Interest,
Memorial University of Newfoundland, St.John's,
Newfoundland, 1998, p 14, 52-54, 58-59.
Notes:
My 1998 treatise Gold and Interest
is out of print. Photocopies of the 120 page book can be obtained for €
75 per copy (€ 50 per copy on multiple-copy orders), postage included.
Send your order and check to: A. E. Fekete, H-1025 Budapest, Ali utca 9/B, Hungary.
While my theory of interest is
applicable to the regime of the gold standard, this does not mean that no
lesson can be extracted from it in studying the problem of interest under the
regime of irredeemable currency. For example, Gibson's paradox can be
considered as a corruption of it, just as irredeemable currency is a
corruption of the redeemable variety. I shall deal with this issue in a
forthcoming article.
Antal E. Fekete
Gold Standard University
aefekete@hotmail.com
DISCLAIMER AND CONFLICTS
THE PUBLICATION OF THIS LETTER IS FOR YOUR INFORMATION AND AMUSEMENT ONLY.
THE AUTHOR IS NOT SOLICITING ANY ACTION BASED UPON IT, NOR IS HE SUGGESTING
THAT IT REPRESENTS, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL
ANY SECURITY. THE CONTENT OF THIS LETTER IS DERIVED FROM INFORMATION AND
SOURCES BELIEVED TO BE RELIABLE, BUT THE AUTHOR MAKES NO REPRESENTATION THAT
IT IS COMPLETE OR ERROR-FREE, AND IT SHOULD NOT BE RELIED UPON AS SUCH. IT IS
TO BE TAKEN AS THE AUTHORS OPINION AS SHAPED BY HIS EXPERIENCE, RATHER THAN A
STATEMENT OF FACTS. THE AUTHOR MAY HAVE INVESTMENT POSITIONS, LONG OR SHORT,
IN ANY SECURITIES MENTIONED, WHICH MAY BE CHANGED AT ANY TIME FOR ANY REASON.
|