The Pound Gets Pounded
by
Peter Schiff
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by Peter Schiff: You
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As the global
currency war intensifies, the majority of attention has been paid
to the 17% fall of the Japanese yen against the U.S. dollar over
the past few months. The implosion has given cover to the sad performance
of another once mighty currency: the British pound sterling. But
in many ways the travails of the pound is far more instructive to
those pondering the fate of the U.S. currency.
Japan has a
unique economic and demographic profile which makes it a poor stalking
horse. Newly elected Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and the Bank of Japan
have clearly and forcefully committed Japan to a policy of inflation
at any cost. Even in a world of serial money printers their plans
stand out as exceptional. Britain, on the other hand, is charting
a more conventional course to the same destination.
The UK government,
under conservative Prime Minister David Cameron and Chancellor of
the Exchequer George Osborne, has succeeded in bringing marginal
discipline to their budgetary imbalances. From 2009 to 2012, British
government expenditures rose a total of just 1.6%, which was far
below the official pace of inflation. (In contrast, U.S. federal
spending grew by 7.9% over that time period). Since 2009 the British
have kept their debt-to-GDP ratio lower than America's and have
cut into that metric at a faster rate. But while the British are
conservative when compared to their American cousins, they are hardly
austere when compared to Germany (which continues to have a nearly
balanced budget and extremely low debt to GDP). Paul Krugman blames
Britain's lackluster economic performance on their misguided experiment
with austerity.
The monetary
side of the equation also puts the UK within the spectrum of its
peers. Ever since the Great Recession began in 2008 the Bank of
England, led by outgoing Governor Mervyn King, has been far more
stimulative than the European Central Bankers in Frankfort (but
not quite as much as the Federal Reserve or the Bank of Japan).
In contrast to the permanent and ongoing bond-buying quantitative
easing programs underway in the U.S. and Japan, the Bank of England
has engaged in such measures only selectively.
Given the relatively
moderate approach pursued by the British, the poor performance of
their currency may be hard to fathom. The deciding factor may be
that the Pound Sterling is not nearly as vital to investors, or
as integrated into the global economy, as the U.S. dollar or the
euro. The greenback, being the world's reserve currency, has always
benefited from demand that is independent of its economic fundamentals.
The euro benefits from the size of the euro zone and the legacy
of German banking discipline. The pound enjoys no such privileges
and as a result foreign central banks do not feel as pressured to
prop it up. As a result, over the past few years the pound has been...
pounded. Since July 2008, the currency is down 26.7% against the
U.S. dollar, and in recent months it has started falling faster
than all other developed currencies except for the Abe-pummeled
yen. Since October 1, 2012 the pound has fallen by 4% against the
dollar and 8% against the euro.
The pound's
health is made more suspect by the extreme challenges faced by the
Bank of England as it tries to stimulate the most admittedly inflation
prone economy among the major Western nations. Unlike the Federal
Reserve, which is tasked by statute to combat both inflation and
unemployment, the BofE has only a single mandate: to keep inflation
contained. On that score it has been failing habitually. Inflation
in the UK has been north of its 2% target for the past five years
(the current official rate is 2.7%). In its most recent inflation
projections, Mr. King admitted that it will stay that way for years
to come, and that it may exceed 3% this year and next. With its
currency weakening and inflation accelerating, the mandate of the
BofE would clearly indicate that the time has come for monetary
tightening.
However, like
all central bankers, Mr. King, and his successor, the Canadian Mark
Carney, will not be bound by such triflings as statutory mandates
and past promises. In his press conference last week, Mr. King spoke
of "looking past" current inflation figures to a time when he expects
inflation will moderate. When the choice is between inflation and
the political pain of economic contraction, bankers (at least those
who don't speak German) will choose inflation every time.
While the American
media has poked fun at the Bank of England's backtracking, they
somehow do not understand that the Federal Reserve would be doing
the same if not for the advantages given to us by the dollar's reserve
status. Our ability to monetize the vast majority of the annual
government deficit while exporting our inflation through half trillion
dollar trade deficits and the overseas sale of hundreds of billions
of Treasury bonds annually means that we do not yet face the pressures
bearing down on the Bank of England.
For now at
least Cameron is sticking to his guns and making the politically
difficult case to voters that today's hard choices will yield benefits
down the road. This puts all the pressure on the Bank of England
to satisfy the calls for stimulus. The Federal Reserve is fortunate
in that the Obama Administration shares none of Cameron's fiscal
determination.
But already
the Fed has done plenty of backing off from its prior promises.
Just a few months ago Ben Bernanke announced specific inflation
and unemployment triggers that would apparently put monetary policy
on automatic pilot. But just last week, Fed Vice Chairman Janet
Yellen announced that those goalposts (6.5% unemployment and 2.5%
inflation) should not be considered "triggers" but as thresholds
past which the Fed "may consider" tightening. When U.S. prices start
to rise in earnest, look for the denials and rationalizations to
come in torrents. The Fed will never acknowledge high inflation
no matter what the data, nor will it ever take any steps to combat
it. The simple reason is that it will be unable to do so without
bringing on the economic contraction that is so terrifying to the
British.
However, as
British inflation accelerates, the pressure on the Bank of England
to change course will intensify. As monetary stimulus continues
to take its toll on the pound, price pressures will mount, even
as the economy continues to stagnate. In other words, it is charting
a course to stagflation. Perversely, this will put even more pressure
on the BofE to ease. However, more cheap money will not stimulate
the economy but merely cripple it further by fueling the inflationary
fire.
At some point
the British will have to admit that stimulus doesn't work. To break
the inflationary spiral and rescue the ailing pound, the BofE will
be forced to aggressively raise rates, at which point the British
government will have no choice but to slash spending more deeply
than would have been the case had they taken their medicine sooner.
However, if the BofE refuses to tighten even in the face of much
higher official inflation, the pound may deteriorate further and
the UK might be left with the embarrassing choice of adopting the
euro.
As far as the
United States is concerned, the U.K. is the canary in the coal mine.
What they are going through now, and what they may be about to go
through, we will surely experience in the years ahead. The only
difference is that the leeway afforded to us by our special status
simply gives us more rope to hang ourselves. When the noose finally
tightens, the fall will be that much more painful.
February
20, 2013
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
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