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Six Current Economic Myths And Realities

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/30/2014 11:16 -0400


Submitted by Patrick Barron via Mises Canada,
The following are six of the most prevalent economic myths that appear time and again in
the mainstream media. I will give a brief description of each and a brief description of the
economic reality, as seen from an Austrian perspective.
Myth #1: Increased money leads to economic prosperity.
This Keynesian myth postulates that increasing aggregate demand through increasing the
money supply will lead to more spending, higher employment, increased production, and a
higher overall standard of living.
The reality is that an increase in money leads to malinvestment. The time structure of
production is thrown into disequilibrium by encouraging investment in projects more
remotely removed in time from final consumption. There are insufficient resources in the
economy for the profitable completion of all projects, since individual time preference is
unchanged, meaning that there is no increase in savings. When prices rise, due to this
unchanged time preference, these projects will be liquidated, revealing the loss of capital.
Production will be lower than otherwise. Unemployment will increase while workers adapt to
economic reality.
Myth #2: Manipulating interest rates leads to economic prosperity.
This is a corollary of Myth #1 but deserves its own discussion. In the Keynesian view lower
interest rates always are beneficial; therefore, it is the proper role of the monetary
authorities to drive down the interest rate via open market operations.
The reality is that interest rates are a product of the market, reflecting the interplay of the
demand for loanable funds and the availability of loanable funds. Historically high or low
interest rates can have multiple causes, none of which are prima facie good or bad. For
example, rates can be high because entrepreneurs have highly profitable opportunities due
to reduced regulation or a breakthrough in technology. If time preference is unchanged and,
therefore, savings is unchanged, the interest rate rises and allocates the scarce savings to
the most highly desired ends. Or, interest rates can be low due to a change in time
preference that leads to increased savings. If entrepreneurial opportunities are unchanged,
interest rates will fall. Likewise, demand for loans can be high while savings is high or vice
versa. Manipulating the interest rate truly is an act of fantasy by the monetary authorities,
who believe that they can know the impact of billions of ever changing decisions affecting
the supply of money and demand for money.
Myth #3: Lowering the foreign exchange rate of the currency, to give more local
currency in exchange for foreign currency, will lead to an export driven economic
recovery.
The reality is that no country can force another to subsidize its economy by manipulating its
exchange rate. Giving more local currency subsidizes foreign buyers in the near term, but it
creates higher prices in the domestic economy later. Early receivers of the new money
exporters, their employees, their suppliers, etc.benefit by a transfer of wealth from later
receivers of the new money. But as the price level rises from the increase in the domestic
money supply, the benefit to foreign buyers evaporates. Then the exporters demand that
the monetary authorities conduct another round of exchange rate interventions. The big
winners are foreign buyers. Intermediate winners are exporters, but their advantage ends
eventually. The losers are non-exporters, especially retired people.
Myth #4: Money expansion will not cause higher prices.
Currently the U.S. government is engaged in a propaganda campaign to convince us that it
can both monetize the governments debt and engage in quantitative easing without causing
a rising price level.
The reality is that there is no escaping the fundamentals of economic law in the monetary
sphere. Ludwig von Mises and many excellent Austrian economists since, such as Murray N.
Rothbard, have explained that the relationship between an increase in money and an
increase in the price level is not a mechanical one. Nevertheless, even Mises explained that
the basis of all monetary theory is the Quantity Theory of Money, that states that there is
a positive relationship between the money supply and the price level. In other words, more
money eventually leads to higher prices and vice versa. What causes all the confusion is
that the price level actually can fall even when the money supply expands, if all of the new
money plus some of the existing money stock are hoarded. Mises call this the first stage of
the three stages of inflation. The public expects prices to remain the same or even fall, so
they do not increase their spending even when the money supply expands. Eventually,
though, the public comes to understand that the money supply will keep increasing and that
prices will not return to some previous golden age. At this point the public will begin to
increase spending to buy at lower prices today rather than higher prices tomorrow. The
price level will rise even if the money supply shrinks, because the public spends previously
hoarded money faster. This is Mises phase two of inflation. In the final stage money loses
its value, as the public spends it as fast as possible. This is Mises stage three, the crackup
boom.
Myth #5: More, better, and more vigorously enforced regulations can prevent loan
and investment losses.
The politicians and their regulatory agencies believe that prior monetary crises were caused
by a combination of stupidity, greed, and criminality by bankers and sellers of investments.
The reality is that no army of regulators armed with the most modern analytical tools and
the most powerful means of regulatory enforcement can prevent malinvestment from
money supply expansion. The monetary expansion encourages longer term projects for
which the cost of money is a major factor in forecasting success. But without an increase in
real savings, insufficient resources will ensure that many of these projects will never earn a
profit and must be liquidated. Bank and investor losses are inescapable.
Myth #6: Government can prevent hyperinflation.
This is a corollary of Myth #4. If our monetary masters believe that money expansion will
not cause higher prices, then they believe that they can prevent hyperinflation; i.e., the
total destruction of the monetary unit as a universal medium of exchange.
The reality is that hyperinflation is cause by a loss of confidence in the money unit, which
the monetary authorities may be incapable of preventing. Once the panic starts, the
demand by the public to hold money falls to zero. Prices skyrocket. Even if the monetary
authorities got religion at this point and froze the money supply, the panic will run its
course. No one will want to be the last holding worthless paper. More likely, though, the
monetary authorities will aid and abet the panic, even if unwittingly, due to political
pressure to increase payments to powerful domestic constituencies, such as retirees, the
military, the public safety sector, government contractors, etc. This was the case in
Revolutionary France, Weimar Germany, and modern day Zimbabwe. The mindset of
todays money masters seems little more advanced.
Conclusion
I encourage Austrian economists to point out these common myths whenever encountered.
I have had success writing letters-to-the-editor of major newspapers. Their editors often
seem genuinely pleased to receive a polite letter pointing out the Austrian view. Perhaps it
is simply a case of controversy selling newspapers. Furthermore, much business writing
often has imbedded Keynesian assumptions that drive the narrative toward government
intervention. Most business reporters have no economic training, so Austrians should
politely point out these errors, too.

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