Posts Tagged ‘debt’

Is Deflation the Problem or the Solution?

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Over the past year the US government has taken large steps to ward off the destructive forces of deflation. Deflation takes much of the blame for the financial crisis during the depression of the 1930’s.

Instead of following in the monetary footsteps of the Federal Reserve during the depression, the current US Federal Reserve is attempting to monetize their way out of the problem by flooding the system with money.

One thing is for sure, the Federal Reserve of the 1930’s was successful in the long run. The United States emerged as the power house economy of the world. During the 1930’s prices came down and leverage was reduced through the process of deflation.

The current policy of the United States is to attempt to re inflate the US economy at all costs. This policy reflects a belief that deflation is worse than inflation. The Federal Reserve believes that they can control inflation through the control of the overnight bank rate.

If they can control inflation, than why has debt grown significantly (historically) faster than income over the last 30 years? Stable growth, in my opinion, should be complimented by salary growth and not expanded credit. Unfortunately complex financial instruments have fooled our Federal Reserve into believing we have had very tame inflation over the past 30 years. How do you bring debt back into balance with income? Deflation?

Couple relevant quotes:

“I place economy among the first and most important of republican virtues, and debt as the greatest of the dangers to be feared.” -Thomas Jefferson -1816

“I have sufficiently urged that all suggestions as to financial innovation be regarded with extreme skepticism” John Kenneth Galbraith from “A Short History of Financial Euphoria

Was it Real Growth or just Credit? The Last 30 Years

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

The following two charts are disturbingly similar side by side:


First is the Dow Industrial Average over the last from 1928 till 2006:

Dow Industrial Average 1928 till 2006

Dow Industrial Average 1928 till 2006

The second chart is total US debt as a percentage of GDP from 1923 till 2006:

Percentage of Total US debt to GDP

Percentage of Total US debt to GDP 1923 till 2006

In 1930 the total percentage of US debt to GDP was 270%. What this means that for every dollar of GDP there was $2.70 of debt. Notice the percentage soared as debt was accelerated and GDP was slowed in the early 30’s. This over expansion of credit was primarily responsible for the financial crisis of the 1930’s. It took many years for the population to forget about the dangers of too much credit.

In 2006 the total percentage of debt to US debt to GDP was 331%. So again this means that for every dollar of GDP there was $3.31 of debt. The overall consensus feels that we are again in process of deleveraging. The questions remains is where we stop.

The real question is what came first the credit or the growth? Was the United Sates at a standstill from the 1940’s till the mid to late 1970’s? If the country was not willing to assume more debt than about 150% (plus or minus say 10%) of GDP for some 30+ years and now we are assuming over 300%, was it that extra assumed risk what launched the economy over the past 30 years ?

I understand that over the past 30 years there has been great innovation, but let us not forget that in the previous 30+ years we went to the moon. It seems to me also that much of the technology over that past 30 years can greatly be attributed to the 30 years prior to that. Was the growth over that past 30 years attributed to Engineers and Scientists or some funny math created by financial institutions spurred by an increased appetite for risk?