Faced with intense regulatory pressures, banks in Europe have been deleveraging big time
BY STEVE HANKE
Well, it’s official, the economic talking head
establishment has declared war on Germany. The opening shots in this battle
were fired by none other than the United States Treasury Department, which had
the audacity to blame Germany for a weak Eurozone recovery in its semi-annual
foreign exchange report. The Treasury’s criticisms were echoed by IMF First
Deputy Managing Director David Lipton, in a recent speech in Berlin — a speech
so incendiary that the IMF opted to post the “original draft,” rather than his
actual comments, on its website. Things were kicked into a full blitzkrieg when
Paul Krugman penned his latest German-bashing New York Times column.
The claims being leveled against Germany revolve
around nebulous terms like “imbalances” and “deflationary biases.” But, what’s
really going on here? The primary complaint being leveled is that Germany’s
exports are too strong, and domestic consumption is too weak. In short, the
country is producing more than it consumes. Critics argue that “excess” German exports
are making it harder for other countries (including the U.S.) to recover in the
aftermath of the financial crisis.
While a review of international trade statistics is
all well and good, the ire against Germany actually comes down to one thing:
austerity. Despite Germany’s relatively strong recovery, the international
economic establishment is none too happy about the country’s tight fiscal ship.
If only Germany would crank up government spending, then Germans would buy more
goods, and all would be right in the Eurozone, and around the world - the
argument goes.
Yes, the anti-austerity crowd has found a convenient
way to both slam austerity and scapegoat one of the few countries to
successfully rebound from the crisis. I would
add that it is hardly a coincidence that this line of argument fits nicely into
the fiscalist message of Germany’s Social Democratic party, with whom
Chancellor Angela Merkel is currently trying to arrange a governing coalition.
In recent years, the fiscalist crowd has advanced the one-dimensional
argument that fiscal stimulus is the only way to save struggling economies in
the wake of the crisis. This follows the standard Keynesian line: to stimulate
the economy, expand the government’s deficit (or shrink its surplus); and to
rein in an overheated economy, shrink the government’s deficit (or expand its
surplus).
Unfortunately, this is nothing more than a factoid,
defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as
“an item of unreliable information that is reported and repeated so often that
it becomes accepted as fact.” Well, the fiscalists have been repeating this
line as fact, despite strong evidence to the contrary. Never mind the
lackluster results of fiscal stimulus efforts in the United States and Southern
Europe in the early years of the Great Recession; and never mind the relatively
robust German recovery, “despite” its austere fiscal policies. Surely, the
Keynesians tell themselves, if they say it (repeatedly), it must be true.
Now, having failed to find evidence at a national
level supporting the fiscal factoid, the establishment has turned to an
international explanation for the failure of standard Keynesian fiscalism, and
set their sights on their new German scapegoat.
Rather than diving into the weeds of this rather
convoluted argument, we ought to focus on what really matters – money. Yes,
when we look at the Eurozone’s money supply, more specifically the portion
created by the private banking sector, the German austerity scapegoat begins to
look more like a red herring.
To do this, we revert back to John Maynard Keynes at
his best. Specifically, we must look at his two-volume 1930 work, A Treatise on Money – a work that no less than
Milton Friedman wrote about approvingly in 1997. Indeed, Friedman concluded
that much of the Treatise “remains of value.” I
agree.
In particular, Keynes separates money into two
classes: state money and bank money. State money is the high-powered money (the
so-called monetary base) that is produced by central banks. Bank money is
produced by commercial banks through deposit creation.
Keynes spends many pages in the Treatise dealing with
bank money. This isn’t surprising because, as Keynes makes clear, bank money
was much larger than state money in 1930. Well, not much has changed since
then. Today, bank money accounts for 91% of the total Eurozone money supply,
while state money accounts for only 9%, measured by M3 (see the accompanying
chart).
A careful examination of the money supply, broadly measured, shows why the Eurozone economies have been on the brink of recession ever since Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008. From 2002 until Lehman, the money supply was growing at an 8.7% rate. Since then, it’s slowed to 1.07% (see the accompanying chart).
At first glance, this might seem rather surprising. After all, hasn’t the European Central Bank (ECB) been pumping out state money? Well, yes. But, state money is only a small part of the total money supply.
The big elephant in the room is bank money. And, banks have not been producing much bank money in Europe. This can be seen by looking at credit to the private sector, which is an important counterpart to bank money. As the accompanying chart shows, credit to the private sector in the Eurozone is actually lower now than it was when Lehman collapsed in September 2008.
Faced with intense regulatory pressures, banks in Europe have been deleveraging big time. Credit is the life-blood for business in Europe, and excessive bank regulations like Basel III have made it scarce.
Sadly, things are only going to get worse. Over the next year, the ECB will be scrutinizing the balance sheets of more than 120 Eurozone banks, through its so-called “stress tests.”
This promises more mandatory bank deleveraging, which will result in an even tighter squeeze on bank money and private credit in Europe. Indeed, this monetary austerity might just push Europe from anemic growth into a recession.
The fiscalists can point the finger at Germany and repeat the fiscal factoid till they’re blue in the face. But, it won’t change the cold hard economic facts of Europe’s bank money blues. Forget fiscal austerity, the real villain here is monetary austerity.
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