There is one country that is speaking out against this madness: Germany
by Patrick Barron
What the media calls a “currency war,” whereby nations
engage in competitive currency devaluations in order to increase exports, is
really “currency suicide.” National governments persist in the fallacious
belief that weakening one’s own currency will improve domestically-produced
products’ competitiveness in world markets and lead to an export driven
recovery. As it intervenes to give more of its own currency in exchange for the
currency of foreign buyers, a country expects that its export industries will
benefit with increased sales, which will stimulate the rest of the economy. So
we often read that a country is trying to “export its way to prosperity.”
Mainstream economists everywhere believe that this
tactic also exports unemployment to its trading partners by showering them with
cheap goods and destroying domestic production and jobs. Therefore, they call
for their own countries to engage in reciprocal measures. Recently Martin Wolfe
in the Financial Times of London and Paul Krugman of the New York Times both accuse their countries’
trading partners of engaging in this “beggar-thy-neighbor” policy and recommend
that England and the US respectively enter this so-called “currency war” with
full monetary ammunition to further weaken the pound and the dollar.
I am struck by the similarity of this currency-war
argument in favor of monetary inflation to that of the need for reciprocal
trade agreements. This argument supposes that trade barriers against foreign
goods are a boon to a country’s domestic manufacturers at the expense of
foreign manufacturers. Therefore, reciprocal trade barrier reductions need to
be negotiated, otherwise the country that refuses to lower them will benefit.
It will increase exports to countries that do lower their trade barriers
without accepting an increase in imports that could threaten domestic industries
and jobs. This fallacious mercantilist theory never dies because there are
always industries and workers who seek special favors from government at the
expense of the rest of society. Economists call this “rent seeking.”
A Transfer of Wealth and a Subsidy
to Foreigners
As I explained in Value in Devaluation?, inflating
one’s currency simply transfers wealth within the country from non-export
related sectors to export related sectors and gives subsidies to foreign
purchasers.
It is impossible to make foreigners pay against their
will for the economic recovery of another nation. On the contrary, devaluing
one’s currency gives a windfall to foreigners who buy goods cheaper. Foreigners
will get more of their trading partner’s money in exchange for their own
currency, making previously expensive goods a real bargain, at least until
prices rise.
Over time the nation which weakens its own currency
will find that it has “imported inflation” rather than exported unemployment,
the beggar-thy-neighbor claim of Wolfe and Krugman. At the inception of
monetary debasement the export sector will be able to purchase factors of
production at existing prices, so expect its members to favor cheapening the
currency. Eventually the increase in currency will work its way through the
economy and cause prices to rise. At that point the export sector will be
forced to raise its prices. Expect it to call for another round of monetary
intervention in foreign currency markets to drive money to another new low
against that of its trading partners.
Of course, if one country can intervene to lower its
currency’s value, other countries can do the same. So the European Central Bank
wants to drive the euro’s value lower against the dollar, since the US Fed has
engaged in multiple programs of quantitative easing. The self-reliant Swiss
succumbed to the monetary debasement Kool-Aid last
summer when its sound currency was in great demand, driving its value higher
and making exports more expensive. Lately the head of the Australian central
bank hinted that the country’s mining sector needs a cheaper Aussie dollar to
boost exports. Welcome to the modern version of currency wars, AKA currency
suicide.
There is one country that is speaking out against this
madness: Germany. But Germany does not have control of its own currency. It
gave up its beloved Deutsche Mark for the euro, supposedly a condition demanded
by the French to gain their approval for German reunification after the fall of
the Berlin Wall. German concerns over the
consequences of inflation are well justified. Germany’s great hyperinflation in
the early 1920’s destroyed the middle class and is seen as a major contributor
to the rise of fascism.
As a sovereign country Germany has every right to
leave the European Monetary Union and reinstate the Deutsche Mark. I would
prefer that it go one step further and tie the new DM to its very substantial
gold reserves. Should it do so, the monetary world would change very rapidly
for the better. Other EMU countries would likely adopt the Deutsche Mark as
legal tender, rather than reinstating their own currencies, thus increasing the
DM's appeal as a reserve currency.
As demand for the Deutsche Mark increased, demand for
the dollar and the euro as reserve currencies would decrease. The US Fed and
the ECB would be forced to abandon their inflationist policies in order to
prevent massive repatriation of the dollar and the euro, which would cause
unacceptable price increases.
In other words, a sound Deutsche Mark would start a
cascade of virtuous actions by all currency producers. This Golden Opportunity should not
be squandered. It may be the only non-coercive means to prevent the total
collapse of the world’s major currencies through competitive debasements called
a currency war, but which is better and more accurately named currency suicide.
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