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.
Next, learn What
Triggers the Change to Deflation
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The text on this page is excerpted from Chapter 9
from Bob Prechter's Best Seller Conquer the Crash:
You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression.
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