Ludwig von Mises was
snubbed by economists world-wide as he warned of a credit crisis in the 1920s.
We ignore the great Austrian at our peril today.
Mises's ideas on business
cycles were spelled out in his 1912 tome "Theorie des Geldes und der
Umlaufsmittel" ("The
Theory of Money and Credit"). Not surprisingly few people noticed, as it
was published only in German and wasn't exactly a beach read at that.
Taking his cue from David
Hume and David Ricardo, Mises explained how the banking system was endowed with
the singular ability to expand credit and with it the money supply, and how
this was magnified by government intervention. Left alone, interest rates would
adjust such that only the amount of credit would be used as is voluntarily
supplied and demanded. But when credit is force-fed beyond that (call it a
credit gavage), grotesque things start to happen.
Government-imposed
expansion of bank credit distorts our "time preferences," or our
desire for saving versus consumption. Government-imposed interest rates
artificially below rates demanded by savers leads to increased borrowing and
capital investment beyond what savers will provide. This causes temporarily
higher employment, wages and consumption.
Ordinarily, any random
spikes in credit would be quickly absorbed by the system—the pricing errors
corrected, the half-baked investments liquidated, like a supple tree yielding
to the wind and then returning. But when the government holds rates
artificially low in order to feed ever higher capital investment in otherwise
unsound, unsustainable businesses, it creates the conditions for a crash.
Everyone looks smart for a while, but eventually the whole monstrosity
collapses under its own weight through a credit contraction or, worse, a
banking collapse.
The system is dramatically
susceptible to errors, both on the policy side and on the entrepreneurial side.
Government expansion of credit takes a system otherwise capable of adjustment
and resilience and transforms it into one with tremendous cyclical volatility.
"Theorie des Geldes" did not become the playbook for policy makers. The 1920s were marked by the brave new era of the Federal Reserve system promoting inflationary credit expansion and with it permanent prosperity. The nerve of this Doubting-Thomas, perma-bear, crazy Kraut! Sadly, poor Ludwig was very nearly alone in warning of the collapse to come from this credit expansion. In mid-1929, he stubbornly turned down a lucrative job offer from the Viennese bank Kreditanstalt, much to the annoyance of his fiancée, proclaiming "A great crash is coming, and I don't want my name in any way connected with it."
We all know what happened
next. Pretty much right out of Mises's script, overleveraged banks (including
Kreditanstalt) collapsed, businesses collapsed, employment collapsed. The
brittle tree snapped. Following Mises's logic, was this a failure of
capitalism, or a failure of hubris?
Mises's solution follows
logically from his warnings. You can't fix what's broken by breaking it yet
again. Stop the credit gavage. Stop inflating. Don't encourage consumption, but
rather encourage saving and the repayment of debt. Let all the lame businesses
fail—no bailouts. (You see where I'm going with this.) The distortions must be
removed or else the precipice from which the system will inevitably fall will
simply grow higher and higher.
Mises started getting some
much-deserved respect once "Theorie des Geldes"
was finally published in English in 1934. It is unfortunate that it required
such a disaster for people to take heed of what was the one predictive,
scholarly explanation of what was happening.
But then, just Mises's bad
luck, along came John Maynard Keynes's tome "The General Theory of
Employment, Interest and Money" in 1936. Keynes was dapper, fresh and sophisticated.
He even wrote in English! And the guy had chutzpah, fearlessly fighting the
battle against unemployment by running the currency printing press and draining
the government's coffers.
He was the anti-Mises. So
what if Keynes had lost his shirt in the stock-market crash. His book was
peppered with fancy math (even Greek letters) and that meant rigor, modernity.
To add insult to injury, Mises wasn't even refuted by Keynes and his ilk. He was ignored.
Fast forward 70-some years,
during which we saw Keynesianism's repeated disappointments, the end of the
gold standard, persistent inflation with intermittent inflationary recessions
and banking crises, culminating in Alan Greenspan's "Great
Moderation" and a subsequent catastrophic collapse in housing and banking.
Where do we find ourselves? At a point of profound insight gained through
economic logic, trial and error, and objective empiricism? Or right back where
we started?
With interest rates at
zero, monetary engines humming as never before, and a self-proclaimed Keynesian
government, we are back again embracing the brave new era of
government-sponsored prosperity and debt. And, more than ever, the system is
piling uncertainties on top of uncertainties, turning an otherwise resilient
economy into a brittle one.
How curious it is that the
guy who wrote the script depicting our never ending story of government-induced
credit expansion, inflation and collapse has remained so persistently
forgotten. Must we sit through yet another performance of this tragic tale?
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