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        <title><![CDATA[Central Bank is the root of Current Crisis]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Central Bank is the root of Current Crisis</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We have been locked down for 
weeks. Classes have been canceled. Only essential activities are 
allowed. Although there is much to cover and analyze, I want to focus on
 the economics of the situation.</p><p>To understate it, the situation today is simply not good. The 
COVID-19 crisis has caused the world to lock down the population, which 
essentially ceased most commerce. While all businesses are affected in 
some way, a <a href="https://www.uschamber.com/report/special-report-coronavirus-and-small-business" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">report</a> by the US Chamber of Commerce shows that 24 percent of businesses are 
completely unable to conduct business in the emergency state, and 
further notes that 43 percent of all small businesses are less than six 
months away (and 10 percent less than one month away) from permanently 
closing their doors. From their highs in February, the DJIA is down 
approximately 20 percent and the NASDAQ is down about 15 percent. 
Initial claims for unemployment insurance since the US Department of 
Labor’s March 19 report exceed 22 million. A rough calculation places 
the current US unemployment rate above 17 percent. Yes, the situation is
 not good.</p><h4><strong>How Did We Get Here? </strong></h4><p>The obvious answer is that a virus has swept across the globe and 
caused all of our woes. Although this is the proximate cause of the 
current recession, it is not the only cause. In other words, our 
economic weakness didn’t start in February or March; it has been 
building for years.</p><p>The most recent recession was over a decade ago. Here is a quick 
history beginning with the 2007–08 recession. In the period that is now 
called “the housing bubble,” banks bought assets that were backed by 
mortgages. These mortgages were driven by politics and an expansionary 
monetary policy. People were loaned mortgages that were simply beyond 
their means. Eventually reality hit, and borrowers started to default on
 the loans. As the defaults piled up, the mortgage-backed assets lost 
value, resulting in the banks’ balance sheets showing that they were in 
the red. (The value of their assets fell but their liabilities didn’t, 
which caused their net equity to plummet and in some cases even turn 
negative.) This crisis generated a political response in the form of the
 Troubled Asset Relief Package (TARP), and the Federal Reserve’s 
secretive bank bailout was conducted through its facility accounts.</p><p>The lesson learned by the banking system was that even though profits
 are private, losses (if you are too big to fail) could be socialized 
(i.e., covered by the taxpayer). The consequence of this lesson was that
 banks continued to engage in riskier investments on larger margins, and
 to make themselves so large in the process that if anything happened 
they would be deemed essential and bailed out.</p><p>A banking bubble is precisely what has happened since the end of the 
last recession. In the years after 2009, the larger banks grew and 
acquired smaller banks. Meanwhile the economy grew at an anemic annual 
rate of 1.6 percent between 2009 and 2016.</p><p>It was against this backdrop that the political winds shifted in 
2016. After Trump was elected, Congress pushed through a cut in the 
corporate tax rate (from 35 to 21 percent). Although this repatriated 
some overseas profits and stimulated economic growth (averaging 2.5 
percent annual real GDP growth since January 2017), it was not enough to
 overcome the underlying fragility built up by the previous 
malinvestments. Over the summer and fall of 2017, corporate profits 
began to soften and lose steam. In nine of the ten quarters since 
QIII:17, nonfinancial corporate business profit returns fell. As a 
result, the value of the banks’ assets softened as well.</p><figure class="wp-block-image"><a href="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_1160/s3/cwik-chart1.png?itok=Oay8FnI5" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><noscript><img src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart1.png?itok=gk20BbSv" alt="Corporate Profits from Q1:2017"/></noscript><img class="lazyload" src='data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=%22http://www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E' data-src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart1.png?itok=gk20BbSv" alt="Corporate Profits from Q1:2017"/></a></figure><p>At
 this point, the profits weren’t negative in absolute terms, but they 
were shrinking from what they were just a year prior. In other words, 
the economy was still growing, but it was slowing down. As profits 
lessened, we saw year-to-year real private fixed investment fall from 
5.2 percent in QII:18 to 0.1 percent in QIV:19.</p><figure class="wp-block-image"><a href="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_1160/s3/cwik-chart2.png?itok=3MB6hXfv" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><noscript><img src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart2.png?itok=p1vAEngy" alt="Real Private Fixed Investment"/></noscript><img class="lazyload" src='data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=%22http://www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E' data-src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart2.png?itok=p1vAEngy" alt="Real Private Fixed Investment"/></a></figure><p>Making profits, retaining earnings, and reinvesting these funds into 
companies is a form of saving. This fund of savings supports the 
investments made in the structure of production. Without these savings, 
the economy falters. An alternative way to temporarily prop up 
investment and consumption (without a firm foundation of savings) is 
through credit expansion. However, the problem is that credit expansion 
creates the malinvestments which we have been building since the end of 
the previous recession. At some point, the expansion has to give way to a
 crunch. The economy was on the path towards this crunch long before 
COVID-19 became a reality.
Furthermore, a general slowing of the economy also occurred as real GDP 
y-t-y growth fell from 3.2 percent in QII:18 to 2.3 percent in QIV:19.</p><figure class="wp-block-image"><a href="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_1160/s3/cwik-chart3.png?itok=5YYYw9aU" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><noscript><img src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart3.png?itok=KupDkZDw" alt="Real GDP"/></noscript><img class="lazyload" src='data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=%22http://www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E' data-src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart3.png?itok=KupDkZDw" alt="Real GDP"/></a></figure><p>With declining profits, a slowdown in investment for future growth, 
and a slowing economy, the banks’ asset values continued to decline, 
assets which were highly leveraged. By law, a large bank must maintain 
10 percent as required reserves. As the value of the assets depreciated,
 the banks had to make up that difference to maintain the balance on 
their balance sheets, resulting in borrowing from other banks. As we see
 in the figure below, the short-term rates started to climb in 2015 and 
2016 but accelerated their climb in 2017 and 2018. Part of this climb 
was due to Federal Reserve monetary tightening, but a large part of it 
was coming from the banks looking to shore up their crumbling accounts 
by borrowing funds.</p><figure class="wp-block-image"><a href="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_1160/s3/cwik-chart4.png?itok=136hlPBd" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><noscript><img src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart4.png?itok=ewQI_iRL" alt="Yield Rates, 2019–20"/></noscript><img class="lazyload" src='data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=%22http://www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E' data-src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart4.png?itok=ewQI_iRL" alt="Yield Rates, 2019–20"/></a></figure><p>The result of this scramble for funds results was a brief semi-inverted yield curve in the summer (June–September) of 2019.</p><figure class="wp-block-image"><a href="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_1160/s3/cwik-chart5.png?itok=WGcOxz24" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><noscript><img src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart5.png?itok=XGR7yZq0" alt="Yield Curve Spreads since 2017"/></noscript><img class="lazyload" src='data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=%22http://www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E' data-src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart5.png?itok=XGR7yZq0" alt="Yield Curve Spreads since 2017"/></a></figure><p>Today, an inverted yield curve is a financial sign of a forthcoming recession. As I have shown in my September 5 article “<a href="https://mises.org/wire/inverted-yield-curves-recessions-and-you">Inverted Yield Curves, Recessions and You</a>,” a recession was projected to take place between October 2020 and April 2021.
To counteract and stop the yield curve from fully inverting, the Fed 
took an unusual step and did something it had not done since October 8, 
2008. In September 2019, it injected massive amounts of liquidity into 
the repo market. These injections continue today.</p><figure class="wp-block-image"><a href="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_1160/s3/cwik-chart6.png?itok=7iZbjiA3" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"><noscript><img src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart6.png?itok=eELm31Fs" alt="Overnight Repurchase Agreements"/></noscript><img class="lazyload" src='data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns=%22http://www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E' data-src="https://cdn.mises.org/styles/max_full/s3/cwik-chart6.png?itok=eELm31Fs" alt="Overnight Repurchase Agreements"/></a></figure><p>Furthermore, on March 26 the <a href="https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20200315b.htm" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Fed declared</a> that banks no longer needed to maintain a 10 percent reserve ratio. The
 reserve ratio was waived entirely and set to zero. The intention of 
this combination was to make the banks financially sound. Instead these 
actions signal an underlying fragility in the fractional reserve system 
based upon a fiat money. The bottom line is that in this crisis the 
banks are being bailed out yet again. What is wrong with the current 
policy is that banks have not learned the correct lesson—that investment
 contains risk—because they continue to be bailed out. If the risks are 
transferred to the taxpayer, the banks will simply continue to build up 
malinvestments as they get new cash infusions.</p><h4><strong>The Current Path Is Wrong</strong></h4><p>Austrian business cycle theory explains that for the economy to 
establish a sound foundation, it must get rid of the malinvestments 
which have built up in the market. If there are a lot of malinvestments 
to be liquidated, then collectively that process is known as a 
recession. In an economic downturn, companies go out of business. This 
step is unfortunate, painful, and sadly necessary. A person with a 
cavity needs to have the bad parts of the tooth drilled away before the 
tooth can be filled and made strong again. No one likes to have their 
teeth drilled into, but if they don’t go through the short-term pain, 
the long-term problems fester and grow.</p><p>The road from recession to recovery is the liquidation process. 
Imagine a store that is unable to sustain itself. What happens? It 
closes, of course, but the story doesn’t end there. What happens next is
 the liquidation process, best illustrated through an example.</p><p>Imagine a boutique cupcake shop that has a weekly shortfall of $1,000. <a href="https://mises.org/library/liquidation-phase-and-profit-margins">(</a>I am just using $1,000 as an example; <a href="https://mises.org/library/liquidation-phase-and-profit-margins">the real number would be much larger</a>.)&nbsp;If
 the company has a gross margin of 25 percent, the store would have to 
make an additional $4,000 in total sales to make up the shortfall. If 
the government wanted to stimulate demand by giving money to consumers, 
it would have to give these customers $4,000 per week to prevent the 
store from closing. As we can see, demand-side stimulus is expensive. If
 instead the government cut the store’s taxes by $1,000 per week, it 
could achieve the same result. Thus, tax cuts are better policy than 
demand-side stimulus.</p><p>However, let us suppose that this cupcake company still fails. The 
next step for the bank (and other creditors) to foreclose on the shop. 
The company has a liquidation sale. The ovens, tables, chairs, and even 
the curtains are sold to whomever might purchase them. The money is 
allocated to the claimants (creditors and equity holders) in accordance 
with Chapter 7 of the Federal Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978. The 
claimants are paid according to the absolute priority rule, where the 
common stockholders are the last in line. (It should come as no surprise
 that the lawyers always get paid first.)</p><p>Notice that the equipment—the ovens, tables, and the chairs—don’t 
simply disappear. They are sold to other users. In these liquidation 
sales, the buyers are not paying top prices. In fact, during the 
economic downturn, prices tend to fall (deflation). When these new 
buyers purchase this liquidated capital equipment, they are converting 
malinvestments into proper investments. The more flexible the capital 
is, the faster it can be added to other parts of the economy, and the 
quicker the economy can recover. If, however, the capital equipment is 
very specialized, then those tools might simply be thrown away and their
 total value lost. To simplify our cupcake store example, suppose that a
 single buyer purchases the whole store. Since this buyer has purchased 
this store for a fraction of the original price, the new owner can make 
the very same products, sell them at the previously listed prices, but 
instead of losing $1,000 per week could very well make a profit, because
 its cost structure is much lower.</p><p>In this liquidation process, the banks lose a part of the value of 
their loans. Through these liquidation sales, they will only recover a 
fraction of the value loaned out. These losses <em>should</em> be 
painful to the banks due to their miscalculations. However, the Federal 
Reserve’s recent actions have protected the banks from these painful 
lessons.</p><h4><strong>A New Path</strong></h4><p>The takeaway points are these: the bubble was caused by massive 
credit expansion. The recession was inevitable, and the proximate cause 
was the forced closures due to COVID-19. As the economy falls into 
recession, a continual inflating of the money supply bubble will not 
create a foundation for future economic growth. Expanding the money 
supply will only delay the inevitable and ultimately make the situation 
even worse. Furthermore, demand-side stimulus will not produce the 
“V-shaped” recovery. Economic growth is generated by saving, investment,
 and capital formation.</p><p>A three-pronged recipe emerges to quicken a solid and sustainable 
recovery. The first ingredient is to build up savings relative to 
spending. Savings are the cushion for a falling economy. It is savings 
that bidders use to buy the liquidating businesses. Without buyers for 
the liquidating capital, the recession cannot be converted into a 
recovery. Thus, policies that can quicken a recovery are those that 
stimulate saving (not spending).</p><p>It is troubling how little Americans save. In February 2020, the personal savings rate in the US was <a href="https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PSAVERT" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">8.2 percent</a> of disposable personal income. One of the most prominent features of 
the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020 
was the personal cash injections directly into people’s accounts. The 
argument was that people needed that money to pay for rent, food, and 
other basic necessities. In contrast, the 2000–01 tax rebate, as 
President Bush argued, was for consumer spending. In fact, the Bush 
stimulus was considered a failure, because so <a href="https://taxfoundation.org/did-2001-tax-rebate-checks-stimulate-consumption-economic-evidence-stimulus/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">few people spent the money on consumption</a>.
 Unfortunately, neither the 2000–01 nor the 2020 policies help build up 
our savings fund. The better approach is for the government to reverse 
its spend-and-inflate policies. Cutting taxes on activities that defer 
consumption will ultimately lead us out of the recession more quickly.</p><p>The second ingredient is deflation. Economists have correctly 
associated deflation with recessions, but they have wrongly concluded 
that if we avoid deflation we will avoid recessions. If deflation is 
artificially created by a government, then yes, a recession will be the 
result. However, deflation is the natural way in which an economy 
repairs itself. It works from two fronts. The first is the liquidation 
process. In our example, the store had an oven. Suppose that it was 
originally purchased for $5,000. If the new buyer acquires it for 
$3,000, he is left with $2,000 that he can allocate to other factors of 
production. Thus, as capital equipment prices fall, it becomes easier 
for new entrepreneurs to get started in the recovery process. Deflation 
also aids recovery from the consumer end. As prices fall, consumers’ 
purchasing power grows. This increase in purchasing power is especially 
important for those who are newly unemployed. For example, if the weekly
 grocery budget was $300 per week, deflation means that the same amount 
of food can be purchased for less.</p><p>The third ingredient is anything that can expedite the liquidation 
process. Laws should be reformed to make the bankruptcy process easier, 
as well as mergers and acquisitions.</p><p>It is unfortunate that many people are using this crisis as an 
opportunity to advocate for socialism, nationalization, and the adoption
 of modern monetary policy. Every time socialism has been tried it has 
failed to produce enough wealth for its people. The nationalization of 
industries has failed because bureaucracies simply cannot engage in 
economic calculation. And although modern monetary theory may seem new 
and novel, it is nothing more than a repackaging of the ideas of the 
“monetary cranks” of the nineteenth century. It is now more critical 
than ever to return to what we know works—free markets. History has 
shown us time and time again that free markets generate sustained 
economic growth. <a href="https://oll.libertyfund.org/quote/436" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Adam Smith found the formula as early as 1755.</a></p><blockquote class="wp-block-quote"><p>Little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest 
degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism, but peace, easy taxes, and
 a tolerable administration of justice; all the rest being brought about
 by the natural course of things. All governments which thwart this 
natural course, which force things into another channel, or which 
endeavour to arrest the progress of society at a particular point, are 
unnatural, and to support themselves are obliged to be oppressive and 
tyrannical.</p></blockquote><p>It is not a coincidence that when nations liberalized trade and opened markets there was an explosion of wealth for <em>all</em>—the  rich, the poor, and everyone in between. This simple insight spurred a  surge of growth that has had a greater impact on humanity than any  virus, natural disaster, or war. It is time to simply let individuals be  free.</p><p><em>Author:  Paul  Cwik, the Professor of Economics and Finance at the University of Mount  Olive and Teaching Professor of the BB&amp;T courses in Free Market  Economics at North Carolina State University.</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[GAGmen]]></dc:creator>
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