What is Deflation and What Causes it to Occur?
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Defining Inflation and Deflation
Webster's says, "Inflation is an increase in the
volume of money and credit relative to available goods,"
and "Deflation is a contraction in the volume of money
and credit relative to available goods." To understand
inflation and deflation, we have to understand the terms money
and credit.
Defining Money and Credit
Money is a socially accepted medium of exchange,
value storage and final payment. A specified amount of that
medium also serves as a unit of account.
According to its two financial definitions, credit
may be summarized as a right to access money. Credit
can be held by the owner of the money, in the form of a warehouse
receipt for a money deposit, which today is a checking account
at a bank. Credit can also be transferred by the
owner or by the owner's custodial institution to a borrower
in exchange for a fee or fees - called interest - as specified
in a repayment contract called a bond, note, bill or just
plain IOU, which is debt. In today's economy, most
credit is lent, so people often use the terms "credit"
and "debt" interchangeably, as money lent by one
entity is simultaneously money borrowed by another. |
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Price Effects of Inflation and Deflation
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When the volume of money and credit rises
relative to the volume of goods available, the relative value
of each unit of money falls, making prices for goods
generally rise. When the volume of money and credit falls
relative to the volume of goods available, the relative value
of each unit of money rises, making prices of goods generally
fall. Though many people find it difficult to do, the proper
way to conceive of these changes is that the value of units
of money are rising and falling, not the values of
goods.
The most common misunderstanding about inflation and deflation
- echoed even by some renowned economists - is the idea that
inflation is rising prices and deflation is falling prices.
General price changes, though, are simply effects
of inflation and deflation.
The price effects of inflation can occur in goods, which
most people recognize as relating to inflation, or in investment
assets, which people do not generally recognize as relating
to inflation. The inflation of the 1970s induced dramatic
price rises in gold, silver and commodities. The inflation
of the 1980s and 1990s induced dramatic price rises in stock
certificates and real estate. This difference in effect is
due to differences in the social psychology that accompanies
inflation and disinflation, respectively.
The price effects of deflation are simpler. They tend to
occur across the board, in goods and investment assets simultaneously. |
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The
Primary Precondition of Deflation |
Deflation requires a precondition: a major
societal buildup in the extension of credit (and its flip
side, the assumption of debt). Austrian economists Ludwig
von Mises and Friedrich Hayek warned of the consequences of
credit expansion, as have a handful of other economists, who
today are mostly ignored. Bank credit and Elliott wave expert
Hamilton Bolton, in a 1957 letter, summarized his observations
this way:
In reading a history of major depressions in the U.S. from
1830 on, I was impressed with the following:
(a) All were set off by a deflation of excess credit. This
was the one factor in common.
(b) Sometimes the excess-of-credit situation seemed to last
years before the bubble broke.
(c) Some outside event, such as a major failure, brought
the thing to a head, but the signs were visible many months,
and in some cases years, in advance.
(d) None was ever quite like the last, so that the public
was always fooled thereby.
(e) Some panics occurred under great government surpluses
of revenue (1837, for instance) and some under great government
deficits.
(f) Credit is credit, whether non-self-liquidating or self-liquidating.
(g) Deflation of non-self-liquidating credit usually produces
the greater slumps.
Self-liquidating credit is a loan that is paid back, with
interest, in a moderately short time from production. Production
facilitated by the loan - for business start-up or expansion,
for example - generates the financial return that makes repayment
possible. The full transaction adds value to the economy.
Non-self-liquidating credit is a loan that is not tied to
production and tends to stay in the system. When financial
institutions lend for consumer purchases such as cars, boats
or homes, or for speculations such as the purchase of stock
certificates, no production effort is tied to the loan. Interest
payments on such loans stress some other source of income.
Contrary to nearly ubiquitous belief, such lending is almost
always counter-productive; it adds costs to the economy,
not value. If someone needs a cheap car to get to
work, then a loan to buy it adds value to the economy; if
someone wants a new SUV to consume, then a loan to buy it
does not add value to the economy. Advocates claim that such
loans "stimulate production," but they ignore the
cost of the required debt service, which burdens production.
They also ignore the subtle deterioration in the quality of
spending choices due to the shift of buying power from people
who have demonstrated a superior ability to invest or produce
(creditors) to those who have demonstrated primarily a superior
ability to consume (debtors).
Near the end of a major expansion, few creditors expect default,
which is why they lend freely to weak borrowers. Few borrowers
expect their fortunes to change, which is why they borrow
freely. Deflation involves a substantial amount of involuntary
debt liquidation because almost no one expects deflation before
it starts. |
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What
Triggers the Change to Deflation?
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A trend of credit expansion has two components:
the general willingness to lend and borrow and the
general ability of borrowers to pay interest and
principal. These components depend respectively upon (1) the
trend of people’s confidence, i.e., whether both creditors
and debtors think that debtors will be able to pay,
and (2) the trend of production, which makes it either easier
or harder in actuality for debtors to pay. So as
long as confidence and production increase, the supply of
credit tends to expand. The expansion of credit ends when
the desire or ability to sustain the trend can no longer be
maintained. As confidence and production decrease, the supply
of credit contracts.
The psychological aspect of deflation and depression cannot
be overstated. When the social mood trend changes from optimism
to pessimism, creditors, debtors, producers and consumers
change their primary orientation from expansion to conservation.
As creditors become more conservative, they slow their lending.
As debtors and potential debtors become more conservative,
they borrow less or not at all. As producers become more conservative,
they reduce expansion plans. As consumers become more conservative,
they save more and spend less. These behaviors reduce the
"velocity" of money, i.e., the speed with which
it circulates to make purchases, thus putting downside pressure
on prices. These forces reverse the former trend.
The structural aspect of deflation and depression is also
crucial. The ability of the financial system to sustain increasing
levels of credit rests upon a vibrant economy. At some point,
a rising debt level requires so much energy to sustain - in
terms of meeting interest payments, monitoring credit ratings,
chasing delinquent borrowers and writing off bad loans - that
it slows overall economic performance. A high-debt situation
becomes unsustainable when the rate of economic growth falls
beneath the prevailing rate of interest on money owed and
creditors refuse to underwrite the interest payments with
more credit.
When the burden becomes too great for the economy to support
and the trend reverses, reductions in lending, spending and
production cause debtors to earn less money with which to
pay off their debts, so defaults rise. Default and fear of
default exacerbate the new trend in psychology, which in turn
causes creditors to reduce lending further. A downward "spiral"
begins, feeding on pessimism just as the previous boom fed
on optimism. The resulting cascade of debt liquidation is
a deflationary crash. Debts are retired by paying them off,
"restructuring" or default. In the first case, no
value is lost; in the second, some value; in the third, all
value. In desperately trying to raise cash to pay off loans,
borrowers bring all kinds of assets to market, including stocks,
bonds, commodities and real estate, causing their prices to
plummet. The process ends only after the supply of credit
falls to a level at which it is collateralized acceptably
to the surviving creditors. |
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Why
Deflationary Crashes and Depressions Go Together |
A deflationary crash is characterized in part
by a persistent, sustained, deep, general decline in people's
desire and ability to lend and borrow. A depression is characterized
in part by a persistent, sustained, deep, general decline
in production. Since a decline in production reduces debtors'
means to repay and service debt, a depression supports deflation.
Since a decline in credit reduces new investment in economic
activity, deflation supports depression. Because both credit
and production support prices for investment assets, their
prices fall in a deflationary depression. As asset prices
fall, people lose wealth, which reduces their ability to offer
credit, service debt and support production. This mix of forces
is self-reinforcing.
The U.S. has experienced two major deflationary depressions,
which lasted from 1835 to 1842 and from 1929 to 1932 respectively.
Each one followed a period of substantial credit expansion.
Credit expansion schemes have always ended in bust. The credit
expansion scheme fostered by worldwide central banking (see
Chapter 10) is the greatest ever. The bust, however long it
takes, will be commensurate. If my outlook is correct, the
deflationary crash that lies ahead will be even bigger than
the two largest such episodes of the past 200 years. |
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Financial
Values Can Disappear In Deflation
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| People seem to take for granted that financial
values can be created endlessly seemingly out of nowhere and
pile up to the moon. Turn the direction around and mention that
financial values can disappear into nowhere, and they insist
that it is not possible. "The money has to go somewhere...It
just moves from stocks to bonds to money funds...It never goes
away...For every buyer, there is a seller, so the money just
changes hands." That is true of the money, just
as it was all the way up, but it's not true of the values,
which changed all the way up.
Asset prices rise not because of "buying" per
se, because indeed for every buyer, there is a seller.
They rise because those transacting agree that their prices
should be higher. All that everyone else - including those
who own some of that asset and those who do not - need do
is nothing. Conversely, for prices of assets to fall,
it takes only one seller and one buyer who
agree that the former value of an asset was too high. If no
other bids are competing with that buyer's, then the value
of the asset falls, and it falls for everyone who owns
it. If a million other people own it, then their net
worth goes down even though they did nothing. Two investors
made it happen by transacting, and the rest of the investors
made it happen by choosing not to disagree with their price.
Financial values can disappear through a decrease in prices
for any type of investment asset, including bonds, stocks
and land.
Anyone who watches the stock or commodity markets closely
has seen this phenomenon on a small scale many times. Whenever
a market "gaps" up or down on an opening, it simply
registers a new value on the first trade, which can
be conducted by as few as two people. It did not take everyone's
action to make it happen, just most people's inaction on the
other side. In financial market "explosions" and
panics, there are prices at which assets do not trade at all
as they cascade from one trade to the next in great leaps.
A similar dynamic holds in the creation and destruction
of credit. Let's suppose that a lender starts with a million
dollars and the borrower starts with zero. Upon extending
the loan, the borrower possesses the million dollars, yet
the lender feels that he still owns the million dollars that
he lent out. If anyone asks the lender what he is worth, he
says, "a million dollars," and shows the note to
prove it. Because of this conviction, there is, in the minds
of the debtor and the creditor combined, two million dollars
worth of value where before there was only one. When the lender
calls in the debt and the borrower pays it, he gets back his
million dollars. If the borrower can't pay it, the value of
the note goes to zero. Either way, the extra value disappears.
If the original lender sold his note for cash, then someone
else down the line loses. In an actively traded bond market,
the result of a sudden default is like a game of "hot
potato": whoever holds it last loses. When the volume
of credit is large, investors can perceive vast sums of money
and value where in fact there are only repayment contracts,
which are financial assets dependent upon consensus valuation
and the ability of debtors to pay. IOUs can be issued indefinitely,
but they have value only as long as their debtors can live
up to them and only to the extent that people believe that
they will.
The dynamics of value expansion and contraction explain why
a bear market can bankrupt millions of people. At the peak
of a credit expansion or a bull market, assets have been valued
upward, and all participants are wealthy - both the people
who sold the assets and the people who hold the assets. The
latter group is far larger than the former, because the total
supply of money has been relatively stable while the total
value of financial assets has ballooned. When the market turns
down, the dynamic goes into reverse. Only a very few owners
of a collapsing financial asset trade it for money at 90 percent
of peak value. Some others may get out at 80 percent, 50 percent
or 30 percent of peak value. In each case, sellers are simply
transforming the remaining future value losses to someone
else. In a bear market, the vast, vast majority does nothing
and gets stuck holding assets with low or non-existent valuations.
The "million dollars" that a wealthy investor might
have thought he had in his bond portfolio or at a stock's
peak value can quite rapidly become $50,000 or $5000 or $50.
The rest of it just disappears. You see, he never
really had a million dollars; all he had was IOUs or stock
certificates. The idea that it had a certain financial
value was in his head and the heads of others who agreed.
When the point of agreement changed, so did the value. Poof!
Gone in a flash of aggregated neurons. This is exactly what
happens to most investment assets in a period of deflation. |
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Adapted from Robert Prechter's Bestseller,
Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary
Depression |
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