by Charles Smith
This chart of the modern
credit cycle, which examines the Cycle of Deflation through the lens of
financialization:
The key point is that the entire global economy is in the final stages of the "winter" cycle of credit destruction and collapse of phantom collateral.Let's start with the 14 points:
1. "Boost Phase" of Credit Expansion 2. Overextended Credit Expansion and Over Capacity 3. Financialization and Collateral 4. Era of Financialization 5. Growing Malinvestment 6. Phantom Collateral from Asset Bubbles 7. Bubble Implosions 8. Impaired Debt and Policy Decisions 9. Stalled Consumption 10. Cheap Money Offered 11. Shrinking Loans and Bank Speculation 12. Search for Yield from Shrinking Pool of Productive Assets 13. Increasingly Speculative Investments with high Risk 14. Stagnation: Over-indebted, overcapacity with limited growth
The key dynamics here are debt
saturation and diminishing returns:
piling on more debt (i.e. borrowing more money) to stimulate spending only leads to fantastic excesses of speculation and mal-investment: $70,000 biopsies, $200 million fighter aircraft, $200,000 bachelor's degrees, McMansions in the middle of nowhere, and so on.
The actual yield on all that
borrowed money keep falling: ever-larger sums are borrowed and spent, but there
are fewer jobs created and ever-diminishing returns of value created.
Even though central banks are
holding interest rates near zero to enable governments to borrow vast sums,
substituting debt expansion for actual value creation eventually leads to
debt-serfdom as interest payments start crowding out all other spending.
All too soon governments and
households alike are borrowing more just to pay the interest on the mountain of
existing debt. This is the inevitable result of incentivizing credit expansion
and speculation.
The central banks are
attempting to nullify the cycle of credit expansion and destruction by buying
much of the sovereign debt being issued by profligate, hopelessly insolvent
governments. Left to
the open market, interest rates would rise as the risk of massive debt
expansion becomes undeniable.
Eventually, higher rates would
pinch off borrowing or trigger default.
The central banks are playing
an unprecedented game: suppressing interest rates by expanding their balance
sheets, i.e. creating money, and buying vast quantities of government bonds.
This has given government
leaders a free hand to keep borrowing more to avoid any politically painful
limits on substituting debt for tax revenues. The expansion of central bank
balance sheets is apparently painless and apparently consequence-free. So what if
the Fed expands its balance sheet from $3 trillion to $30 trillion as it
enables the debt-junkies to keep borrowing without limits?
Is pushing consequence forward
the same as eliminating consequence? We will find out at some point in the near
future: perhaps 2015, perhaps 2021.
No comments:
Post a Comment