The second crisis of socialism
by DETLEV SCHLICHTER
The world is facing the worst financial crisis since at least the 1930s “if
not ever,” the Governor of the Bank of England said last week when he explained
to an increasingly sceptical and weary public the Bank’s decision to print yet
more fiat money and use it to buy yet more government bonds. I doubt that his
words or his actions will do much to restore confidence. And they will not mean
an end to this crisis.
What type of crisis is this?
This is a financial crisis for sure. Its root causes are firmly located in
money, credit, debt and banking. And I don’t think that the Governor was
exaggerating when he speculated about its magnitude. This is the Big One.
As we all agree that this is not just another business cycle, the question
is, what are we dealing with here? How should we define this crisis and in what
context can it best be understood?
This crisis is systemic, not cyclical. It is a crisis of institutions. It
is a crisis of policy. It is a crisis of our financial architecture.
When this crisis started in 2007 and intensified throughout 2008, it was
often labelled a “crisis of capitalism”. You don’t hear that so often anymore.
Granted, there are still the occasional lapses, sadly even by economists, but the
longer the crisis goes on and the longer the spotlight remains on money and
banking, the more it dawns on the public just how much the present financial
architecture is evidently defined not by the “invisible hand” of the market but
the controlling hand of the state. When yet another round of bank
“recapitalization” is announced, presumably at taxpayers’ expense and thus
driving home the point once more that the banks are above the fray of normal
and fallible capitalist enterprise, and when the salvation for our debt-laden
economy is declared for the umpteenth time to be sought in yet more debt-funded
government spending, or in yet another injection of more money created under
state monopoly by the central bank and handed to the public as an apparent
incentive to take on yet more debt, the public is beginning to wonder if policy
makers have not lost the plot, and if we should not fear the ‘stimulus’ more
than the unchecked market.
Why are we in this mess?
“Undercapitalized banks” is code for banks that lent too much. How can
banks have lent too much, and obviously have done so for years, decades even,
and have done so the world over in the most enduring and persistent credit
binge in history, when they are all under the control of the state central
bank, which in a paper money system has the monopoly of printing (unlimited)
bank reserves and administratively setting short-term interest rates, and thus
controlling lending conditions? Is this not properly called state failure,
rather than market failure?
Please remember, the switch from apolitical, inflexible, and hard commodity
money to limitless paper money under state control was a political decision,
not the result of market forces. And it only came into full bloom with the
closing of the gold window by the politician Richard Nixon in 1971. Our
financial system is the outcome of political design and popular macroeconomic
theory, both now revealed to have been self-serving and flawed, not the result
of spontaneous human cooperation on markets. The move to fully elastic fiat
money freed both the state and its protégés, the banks, from the golden fetters
of inelastic commodity money. Without the straightjacket of a gold standard,
the state obtained unrestricted control over the printing press and could
engage in “managing” the economy, saving the banks, avoiding or shortening
recessions, and determining borrowing conditions – and setting them more
generously, not least for itself.
After 40 years of government-controlled money, this is the result.
This crisis is the inevitable outcome of the dangerous belief that low interest
rates, and investment and lasting prosperity, can be had via the short cut of
money printing, and its twin sisters, artificially low lending rates and
never-ending bank credit creation, rather than the time-honoured hard way (and
capitalist way) of saving and true capital formation.
This is not a crisis of capitalism. My good friend Brian Micklethwait coined a much better phrase for it: This is the second crisis of
socialism. We are witnessing the demise of the paper money standard, 40 years
after the global fiat money system was freed of its last link to gold, and
money everywhere became simply an unchecked territorial monopoly of the state.
What we are now finding out is this: the state and the banks need a
straightjacket or they will sooner or later drag us all into a black hole.
Why is this system socialist?
There are two ways in which a monetary system can be organized: either the
market chooses what is money, or the state does.
The money of the free market, of capitalism, has always been commodity
money that is outside of political control. Wherever the trading public was
free to choose, it picked commodities of fairly inelastic supply as monetary
assets. Almost all societies, throughout all cultures and civilizations, have
come to use precious metals as money.
Commodity money is apolitical money. Nobody can create it at will and use
it to fund himself or to manipulate the economy. Crucially, human cooperation
via trade does not stop at political borders, and commodity money has always
transcended such borders. If gold was money this side of the border, it was
usually equally money on the other side, regardless of whose image was printed
on it.
By contrast, complete paper money systems that have no link to an
underlying commodity are always creations of politics. In such systems, money
can be “printed” at essentially no cost and thus practically without limit. But
not by everybody. Money printing is the privilege of the state and its central
bank. Money, in this system, is entirely elastic. But it is political money and
closely linked to political authority. In a paper money world, if you cross a
political border you have to swap your money for different money. All the
efficiency of today’s 24-hours-a-day, multi-trillion-dollar foreign exchange
market, which so easily impresses the untrained observer to whom it may
epitomize global capitalism itself, is nothing but the market’s attempt to cope
as best as possible with the inefficiency of monetary nationalism and monetary
segregation that is the result of every national government wanting its own
paper money under its own territorial political control.
To call this system capitalist means depriving the word capitalism of any
meaning.
In this brave new system of fully elastic fiat money we put our financial
affairs not in the hands of the unfettered market but in the hands of the
state, of politicians and central bankers. This system is properly called a
socialist one, not a capitalist one. And this system has failed.
Who are the beneficiaries?
For decades this system has benefitted the state, the banks, the wider
financial industry – all of which have grown relative to any other section of
society – and those who have assets to be used as collateral for leveraging the
balance sheet: real estate, equity portfolios, company stock options. The costs
of this system have been spread across the broader public via inflation and the
occasional taxpayer bailout. This has been socialism for the rich.
Just like the first crisis of socialism – the collapse of the planned
economies under Soviet guidance in 1989 – this crisis, the crisis of
government-controlled finance, will also see the overthrow of the present
establishment. Although the party leadership is still telling us that they have
things under control: Fear not, comrades, with some deficit spending and some
astute money printing tractor production will soon reach targets again.
And just like the collapsing socialist state, the state-paper-money
bureaucracy, too, has its true believers. People like Adam Posen, the Bank of
England’s quantitative-easing enthusiast, who maintains his childlike optimism
for and unwavering faith in the power of the printing press. If £200 billion of
newly printed money, cleverly placed by the apparatchiks into the coffers of
the banks and government, have not solved the crisis, surely the next £75
billion will. And why stop here? With another £175 billion, or £275 billion, or
£375 billion, everybody in the UK should find a nicely paying job again. To
people like Posen the problem with the planned economy is not that it is
planned but that the plan wasn’t bold enough.
Mervin King, on the other hand, strikes me as a more Gorbachev-like figure,
not a non-believer but too sceptical and too smart to be a fully signed-up
party member. There is a fascinating interview with him from September of last
year that got little attention in financial market circles, presumably because
it was part of a BBC history program on Chinese paper money rather than on
today’s monetary policy. Please check it out here, it is well
worth listening to. If you go to 11 min 58 secs, the question asked is this:
Are all paper money systems doomed to fail? King answers, no, he thinks, not
all of them (although every single one has indeed failed) but he admits that
the recent crisis has made him a bit more cautious in his assessment. Maybe the
jury on whether paper money could be made to work at all was still out.
Remarkable, for a central banker, I thought.
In my new book Paper Money Collapse – The Folly of Elastic Money and
the Coming Monetary Breakdown (John Wiley
& Sons, 2011) I show – conclusively, I believe – that systems of elastic
money are always inferior to systems of inelastic money, and that elastic money
systems cannot be made to be stable, that they must disrupt the market and lead
to the accumulation of imbalances over time. They must end in economic
disintegration and chaos. Paper money is not only suboptimal it is
unsustainable.
This crisis is simply the demise of the latest incarnation of a state fiat
money system. Like the first crisis of socialism, this crisis, too, will affect
the lives of many people, it will cause upheaval and it will dispossess an
elite of its entrenched position of power and privilege. Like the first crisis
of socialism, it is an opportunity for liberty.
But unlike the first crisis of socialism, there is, this time, no Berlin
Wall that we can tear down, nor some muddy patch in the Hungarian countryside
with a hole in the fence through which we can climb. Today’s monetary socialism
is global. And the collapse of this system will be global, too.
Obviously, the state has everything to lose, and state power has a habit of
not accepting a loss of power lightly. Who knows? Maybe the state will
nationalize the banks, introduce capital controls, confiscate private gold
ownership or tax it heavily, ban Bitcoin, and force every pension fund to buy
more government bonds.
In that case, some may argue that we are not in the summer of 1989 but in
the spring of 1968. It wouldn’t change the endgame, just the timeline. But I
still believe it is too late. We are closer to this system’s Berlin Wall moment
than many people think.
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