Japan
Is Not A Good Example Of How Deflation Typically Plays Out
Nicole
Foss ('Stoneleigh)
23
October, 2012
Japan
is not a good example of how deflation typically plays out. As Ilargi
points out,
they were an exporting powerhouse exporting into the biggest
consumption boom the world has ever seen. They also had a very large
pile of money to burn through building their four lane highways from
nowhere to nowhere, since they were the world's largest creditor when
their bubble burst in 1989. This is clearly not our situation.
No
one will be exporting their way out of a global economic depression.
In contrast, exporters are going to feel the pain big time as their
markets dry up. We can expect trade wars and protectionism to abound.
Take note Germany, Scandinavia, Australia, New Zealand etc etc.
We
have had the inflation, only instead of a currency hyperinflation, we
experienced a 30 year credit hyper-expansion. Either one amounts to
an expansion of money plus credit compared to available goods and
services, and is therefore inflation. Credit is equivalent to money
on the way up, but not on the way down. Credit loses 'moneyness' and
credit instruments are massively devalued in a great deleveraging.
This is deflation by definition and it is already underway. Debt
monetization is nothing in comparison with the scale of the excess
claims to underlying real wealth that stand to be eliminated.
I
agree that the currency of a deflating nation strengthens. This is
exactly why we have been writing about the value of the US dollar
increasing, which it has done. The bottom came in a long time ago,
and despite the set backs that are an integral part of a fractal
market, the trend is up, and will be for some time. That's not to say
it will be for the long term - far from it in fact - but for now that
is the case. We have made it clear that cash is a short term bet (of
the order of a few years), and that the longer term strategy is to
move into hard goods at the point when one can reasonably afford to
do so with no debt.
Some
could do so now, while others would have to wait for prices to fall,
as they inevitably do in a deflation, but not immediately. Price
movements follow changes in the money supply. We have been in a
counter-trend reflation since 2009, and prices have risen as a
result. They may continue to do so for a while after the reflation is
clearly over, but then the trend will reverse.
Prices
will fall, but purchasing power will fall faster, meaning that prices
will rise in real terms for most people. Those who have preserved
capital as liquidity will find their purchasing power enormously
increased, but most others will lose purchasing power because they
will have no access to credit, highly unfavourable employment
circumstances, rising property taxes and very little actual money.
The
fiat currency regime will eventually descend into chaos as
beggar-thy-neighbour devaluations become the norm, but not everyone
can devalue at will or at once. The market will decide relative
values for the next while.
Money
will go from where the fear is to where the fear is not. It will be
leaving the European periphery, and increasingly the entire eurozone,
and flooding into currencies like the USD, the Swiss franc, the
Swedish krona, and temporarily the British pound. It doesn't matter
if the US is downgraded. Market participants will ignore the ratings
agencies and vote with their feet on a kneejerk flight to safety.
You
might think that the US indicators are much closer to the
hyperinflation set-up than to deflation. I would disagree of course,
for reasons Ilargi
has explained (plummeting
velocity of money for instance). I would also point out that people
extrapolate the trend of the last three years forward, but fail to
anticipate trend changes. We are in one. Many markets have topped
already (gold, silver, commodities, oil etc), and the rolling top of
the last year or so is about to claim the American stock market as
well.
The
rollover in the markets will drag the real economy down with it, with
a time lag, since the time constant for changes in the real economy
is much longer than for the financial world where value is virtual.
We are headed into the teeth of the Greatest Depression, or at least
the most significant one since the fourteenth century.
Hyperinflation
is simply not on the cards any time soon. The depression will proceed
for many years before that becomes a serious risk, unless you live in
the European periphery that is, where currency reissue is a very real
risk in the relatively short term.
In
those currencies, loss of faith in New Drachmas, New Pesetas or New
Lira is very likely, and the periphery countries will be cut off from
international debt financing, with hyperinflationary results. That is
not the situation in the US at all, and won't be for quite a long
time. Eventually, when international debt financing is dead and
buried, then printing will be a risk and a loss of faith in the
erstwhile reserve currency could be expected.
In
the meantime, debts defaults are going to skyrocket, each one doing
its bit to destroy the value of credit instruments, and subtract from
the effective money supply. This is already underway, and the great
asset grab has begun as a result. Witness the asset stripping of
Greece for instance.
In
Europe, endless bailouts of sovereigns and the well-connected are
doing nothing to increase the money supply or the velocity of money.
In contrast, the ineffectuality of governments is doing nothing more
than feeding the cycle of fear by demonstrating their impotence time
after time. They are trying to overcome contraction, but are fighting
an irresistible headwind. It is not going to work. Europe is already
in contraction, and as fear will be increasingly in the ascendancy,
that will only get worse.
Government
obligations will be shed right, left and centre (by governments of
the right, left and centre) because they will have no choice. Yes,
this will lead to anarchical unrest, and yes, this will be met with a
heavy-handed repressive response. Social polarization is very much on
the cards - governments vs people, haves vs have-nots, natives vs
immigrants, employers vs workers, unionized vs non-unionized, Us vs
Them in general terms. This will not be pretty, to say the least.
Just because it is a bad thing does not mean that it cannot happen,
or that government, by their actions, can make any difference to the
outcome.
Bailouts
are never for the little guy. The creditors hold the political power
and write the rules. They will not allow debtors off the hook.
Instead of repayment in money, they will take people's freedom
instead, making debt slavery much more real than it is today. Debts
will not be forgiven, but sold on to more aggressive debt collectors.
This is already happening in the US, where debt collection is
becoming increasingly unconscionable.
Debts
will only be effectively forgiven when people have nothing useful to
repay, not even their labour. By then the middle classes will
probably be living in latter day Hoovervilles, like the Villas
Miserias populated by the formerly middle class Argentines.
Savers
will have all the buying power, IF they have managed to get their
savings away from dependence on the solvency of middle men. Otherwise
they will likely disappear in a giant black hole of credit
destruction, as yet more excess claims to underlying real wealth.
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