In an article posted earlier this
week, Mike "Mish" Shedlock weighed in on the TMS vs. M3
discussion. Mish's article supports our view that TMS (the "True Money
Supply" developed by Murray Rothbard and Joseph Salerno) is a more
appropriate measure of money supply than M3, although he prefers a measure
called "M Prime". The main difference between TMS and M Prime is
that TMS includes savings deposits whereas M Prime does not.
Our view is that savings deposits must be included in any measure
of the total money supply, for the reasons spelled out on pages 2 and 3 of
Joseph Salerno's article at http://www.mises.org/journals/aen/aen6_4_1.pdf.
According to Salerno:
"Savings
deposits, whether at commercial banks or thrift institutions are
economically indistinguishable from demand deposits and are therefore
included in the TMS. Both demand and savings deposits are federally insured
under the same conditions and, consequently, both represent instantly
cashable, par value claims to the general medium of exchange. The objection
that claims on dollars held in savings deposits typically do not circulate
in exchange (although certified or cashier's checks may be readily drawn
against such deposits and are certainly generally acceptable in exchange),
while not unimportant for some purposes of analysis, is here beside the
point. The essential, economic point is that some or all of the dollars
accumulated in, e.g., passbook savings accounts are effectively
withdrawable on demand by depositors in the form of spendable cash. In
addition, savings deposits are at all times transferable, dollar for
dollar, into "transactions" accounts such as demand deposits or
NOW accounts."
The other area of disagreement between
ourselves and Mish lies in the definition of inflation and deflation. Mish
asserts that inflation is an expansion in the total supply of money AND
credit, with deflation being the opposite (a contraction in the total
supply of money AND credit). Our view, however, is that credit should be
excluded from the definition. To be specific, we define inflation as an
increase in the total supply of money, with deflation being the opposite
condition.
There are many cases in which an increase in the
supply of credit will lead to an increase in the supply of money. For
example, most bank loans result in the creation of new deposit currency. To
be more specific, when a bank makes a loan it doesn't transfer part of its
existing deposit base to the borrower; rather, it creates new money
"out of thin air" and thus alters the value of all existing
currency units. However, not all increases in credit result in the creation
of new money. For example, when Bill lends money to his friend Bob there is
an increase in the total amount of credit in the economy, but the only
thing that has happened in this situation is that purchasing power has been
temporarily transferred from Bill to Bob. The Bill-Bob transaction affects
neither the supply nor the value of existing currency units and is
therefore not inflationary.
Similarly, a decrease in the supply
of credit could lead to a decrease in the supply of money, but credit
contraction is not, in and of itself, deflationary. For example, when a
bank suffers loan losses the immediate result is a contraction of credit,
but not a reduction in the supply of money. This is because the money that
was created when the loans were made still exists after the loans fail. In
this situation, however, the bank's ability to make FUTURE loans may be
impaired by the loan losses, meaning that there could be less money-supply
growth in the future.
Loan losses are, in effect, investment
losses, and investment losses are not deflationary per se. Investment
losses can LEAD to deflation by impairing the economy-wide ability to
lend/borrow new money into existence, but we shouldn't assume that large
investment losses within the banking system -- and the resultant credit
contraction -- will NECESSARILY lead to deflation. The main reason we
shouldn't make this assumption is that the government will ALWAYS be able
to borrow and the central bank will ALWAYS be able to lend. For example, if
it chose to do so the US Federal Government could borrow 10 trillion new
dollars into existence tomorrow by simply issuing $10 trillion of bonds to
the Fed.
By defining inflation/deflation in terms of only
money-supply changes we incorporate the changes in the supply of credit
that LEAD to changes in the supply of money, but not the many changes in
the supply of credit that have no effect on the supply of money and,
therefore, no long-term effect on money purchasing power.
Currently, TMS's year-over-year rate of increase is around 4.5%, so
SOMEONE is borrowing/lending enough new money into existence to offset the
effects of whatever credit contraction is occurring. There is currently
inflation in the , albeit at a much slower rate than occurred during the
first half of this decade.
Our view is that the inflation rate
(money-supply growth rate) is more likely to accelerate than decelerate
over the coming two years because the economic downturn will prompt the US
Government to increase the pace at which it borrows new money into
existence.
-- Posted Tuesday, 22 July 2008 |
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Source: GoldSeek.com
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