
By Andy Xie, guest economist to Caijing and board member of Rosetta Stone Advisors
(Caijing Magazine)The global economy is sinking into the abyss. Exports have halved in big trading economies like
Amidst the carnage, analysts are singing a hopeful song over rising liquidity, in particular,
The faith in liquidity, however, is misplaced. Liquidity took on mythical power during the Greenspan Era. Financial professionals spend numerous hours talking about it. Few, however, know what it really is. When a central bank says it is injecting liquidity, it buys some financial securities, government bonds say, in exchange for cash. When it is done with the operation, its balance expands. On the liability side, it owes the financial system more money. On the asset side, it owns more securities.
The changes in the balance sheet of the financial system are exactly the opposite. It has more money and fewer securities. With additional money, the financial system may be inclined to lend more or buy more securities. The former increases the borrowers’ ability to spend. The later lifts asset prices. Economists usually focus on the former, while financial professionals the later.
Liquidity became respectful through Keynes’s writings. It was synonymous with speculation before. He was primarily concerned about how to stimulate demand during frequent recessions in early twentieth century. Liquidity was associated with fiscal stimulus, i.e., providing support for fiscal bonds to fund fiscal deficit. The main idea is that, when someone is unemployed, giving him something to do would be positive. Even if his work is totally useless, he would spend the income, which would lead to a chain reaction in creating useful economic activities. When an economy is unemployed, fiscal deficit will improve it.
In contrast, Joseph Schumpeter advocated recession as creative destruction – a cleansing process to weed out the weak and create room for new businesses. In this theory, boom-burst cycles are a sign of progress. Government interventions to ‘smooth’ the cycle may be counterproductive, suppressing innovation. The rising prosperity in the nineteenth century despite violent economic cycles seems to support this theory.
The world is not as black and white as Keynesians or Schumpeter’s theory suggest. When an economic downturn is severe, it could trigger social revolutions. The revolutions in the 1930s and ’40s had a lot to do with the Great Depression. Keynes is right that governments have a responsibility to stimulate in a severe recession. But stimulus doesn’t work in the long run. Governments must bear in mind that innovation is ultimately the source of economic growth. Dependency on stimulus may lead to stagnation. A recession could serve a useful purpose in shaking out the underperforming businesses.
During the stagnation of 1970s, liquidity was discredited as a tool for economic management. Workers anticipated correctly the inflationary impact of monetary growth and demanded wage increase to offset inflation. The wage inflation immediately led to CPI inflation. There was a direct link between monetary expansion and inflation. Hence, central banks were just causing inflation without stimulating demand. The era ended when Paul Volker became chairman of the Fed and increased interest rate massively to tame inflation. His action laid the foundation for the low inflation era afterwards.
When Alan Greenspan became the Fed Chairman, the inflation expectation was low. When he increased money supply, it flowed into asset markets first. The resulting asset inflation boosted demand. It made his liquidity pumping highly effective in stimulating demand. The low inflation era was prolonged by globalization, as over one billion workers from the developing world entered the global economy. As Greenspan kept up his effectiveness, financial markets grew used to his liquidity policy. Most financial professionals came to worship liquidity as the silver bullet for reviving economies.
When the current crisis began in August 2007, central banks again created liquidity to deal with it. The faith in liquidity boosted confidence and stabilized financial markets for a few months. But in 2008, it began to lose traction. Liquidity didn’t lead to rising asset prices or demand. Instead, the global economy and financial markets headed southward in a vicious spiral.
Why hasn’t it worked this time? Even though financial professionals often talk about liquidity like free money, it is actually short-term debt. It works when there are enough households or businesses that are willing to borrow to spend. When a debt bubble bursts, it leaves only a few entities that can borrow more regardless of how low interest rate is. Hence, liquidity doesn’t work in the aftermath of a debt bubble. All that liquidity does is to build up in the financial system. In the jargon of monetary economics, the money multiplier decreases with liquidity rising.
The lending, however, won’t turn into demand soon. Most industries, especially the capital intensive ones, face overcapacity. The steel industry, for example, may have 30 percent overcapacity. The ship building industry is seeing massive defaults in orders. Many shipbuilders, if not most, are facing bankruptcy. Most property developers are not selling and, if given money to build more, would dig a deeper hole for themselves.
Lending to government projects can support demand. It serves as a multiplier on the fiscal stimulus program. Bank lending may double its impact. The government has budgeted 1 trillion yuan of fiscal deficit, or 3 percent of GDP for 2009. The stimulus could stabilize the economy but not restart high growth. Exports and property were contributing 6 to 8 percentage points to GDP growth rate per annum in the last cycle and are now contributing a negative amount of similar magnitude. No amount of stimulus could completely offset the impact of their contraction. Further,
Export recession and the bursting of the property bubble are the sources of demand shortfall. The former is a consequence of the bursting of the global credit bubble. Globalization shifted production from developed to developing countries. The asset bubbles that Western central banks tolerated during globalization allowed Western consumers to defend their lifestyle with income extracted from asset bubbles despite the wage problem. As the bubbles bursts, their demand for exports from developing countries like
To solve the demand weakness,
In 1998, the government sold public housing flats to their tenants at notional prices, which laid the foundation for the housing boom afterwards. If
In terms of how to distribute the shares, the government can set up an account automatically for each Chinese citizen with his or her ID card number at one of
Some argue that poor people who get the shares may sell them cheap. This happened in
Others argue that the shares should be used to capitalize the social security fund. Lack of social security is a reason for the consumption weakness. But I doubt people would view the money in the social security fund the same way as money in their pockets. Some studies in developed economies suggest that people discount each dollar in a government-controlled social security fund by 60 percent.
To clear property inventory, the purchasing cost per square meter should be lowered to about a month-and-a-half of the average salary. This is not low by international standards. But as
Some hope liquidity would improve the economy through inflating asset markets, i.e., creating another bubble. This is what Greenspan achieved after the tech burst in 2000. Of course, his glory then has become today’s nightmare. Creating another bubble is irresponsible even if it can be done, and I doubt that it can be done in
Further, it is virtually impossible to inflate
From Article in Chinese: http://magazine.caijing.com.cn/2009-03-15/110121076.html