The
Monetary Tsunami Is Coming
by Frank Shostak
Recently
by Frank Shostak: A
Visible Fall in US Money M3 Worries Some Analysts
In his speech at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on August 26, 2011, the
Fed chairman disappointed most pundits. He did not promise another
massive infusion of fake money, i.e., QE3. I suspect that a strengthening
in bank lending is an important factor behind the Fed's decision
to postpone the pushing of more money into the economy.
The yearly rate of growth of our measure for banks' inflationary
credit jumped to 8.2 percent so far in August from 4.3 percent in
July. A visible strengthening in commercial bank inflationary credit,
i.e., credit "out of thin air," will provide the "necessary"
monetary stimulus. This means that the massive amount of money pumped
by the Fed since 2008 (over $2 trillion) is starting to be funneled
into to the economy by the banks.

This has long been the hope of the Fed, and the goal of the huge
increases in bank reserves that have been created during the downturn.
Until recently, these reserves have been stuck in the system
unable to find lenders and borrowers willing to make a deal. This
has been a good thing because prices have been held somewhat in
check.
That is now changing. As the pace of lending picks up, and the
fractional-reserve system of loan pyramids kicks in, we could see
new floods of money pouring through our economic life and causing
untold damage.
For the time being, the pace of pumping by the Fed remains buoyant.
The yearly rate of growth of the central bank's balance sheet stood
at 23.6 percent so far in August against 23.1 percent in July. The
growth momentum of our monetary measure for the United States (AMS)
jumped to 13.1 percent this month from 11.8 percent in July.

Now, according to most experts, massive monetary pumping is going
to ignite inflationary expectations, which in turn will give the
necessary push to consumer outlays.
Once consumers start spending more, via the famous Keynesian multiplier,
this will reinvigorate general economic activity and will put the
economy onto a path of self-sustaining economic growth. The key
in this way of thinking is that currently there is a problem with
consumer outlays that, for various reasons, are not strong enough
to revive the economy.
For instance, rising unemployment causes people to be cautious
in their spending, which, according to popular thinking, is bad
news. Hence policies aimed at lifting employment must be introduced
in order to get the economy going. Digging ditches or introducing
various public projects, such as building roads, is strongly recommended.
According to this way of thinking, if the private sector is reluctant
to boost spending then it is the duty of the government and the
central bank to do so in order to bring the economy onto a self-sustaining
economic-growth path.
This means that government and central-bank policies must err on
the loose side, implying that the Fed should aggressively push money,
which together with very low interest rates and loose fiscal policies,
is expected to revive consumer confidence and push economic activity
forward.
This is a good summary of the views of Bernanke, who believes that
the key cause behind the Great Depression of the 1930s was inadequate
pumping by the then-Fed. This time around Bernanke is determined
not to repeat the same error.
Note again that, according to popular thinking, boosting the overall
demand for goods and services is the key for the strengthening of
US economic growth.
It's true that a strengthening in the demand for goods and services
is required for an economic revival. However, any increase in demand
must be fully backed up by an increase in the prior production of
final goods and services. This increase in demand must be supported
by the prior increase in saving and not by loose fiscal and monetary
policies.
Neither monetary pumping nor any form of stimulatory policy can
generate more real funding; rather they lead to the diversion of
funding from wealth-generating activities to non-wealth-generating
activities. These types of policies reduce the amount of available
real funding to wealth generators and thus undermine the process
of real wealth generation economic growth comes under pressure
on account of these policies. (It leads to capital consumption.
Instead of planting the seeds in order to reap a crop in the future
these policies cause people to consume the seeds. Obviously one
shouldn't be surprised that no future crop could emerge as a result.
Yet policy makers are trying to convince us that one can eat the
seeds and also have a crop.)
Contrary to most experts including Bernanke the more
aggressive the Fed's policies are, the worse the economy is going
to be. If all that is required to revive the economy is pushing
more money, then all third-world economies would be very wealthy
by now.
The latest trends in banking foretell the possibility of very dangerous
times ahead where developed economies go the way of such undeveloped
economies and destroy wealth through inflation in the name of stimulating
production. As we may soon discover yet again, printing money is
no substitute for real wealth creation.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
September
2, 2011
Frank
Shostak [send him
mail] is an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute and a frequent
contributor to Mises.org. He is chief
economist of M.F. Global.
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