|
Washington Is Quietly Repudiating Its
Debts
Gerald P. O'Driscoll, Jr., The Wall
Street Journal, posted at
www.lemetropolecafe.com
08/22/08
Will the U.S. Treasury repudiate its
obligations to its creditors, be they
citizens or investors around the
world? Most observers would answer
"no" without hesitation. But
Congress, with the complicity of the
White House and the Fed, has arguably
embarked on a stealth repudiation.
In his famous treatise, "The Wealth
of Nations," Adam Smith noted there
had never been a "single instance" of
sovereign debts having been repaid
once "accumulated to a certain
degree." We may have reached Smith's
threshold.
The bond markets are certainly not
protecting creditors from the risk of
what Smith called "pretended payment"
through inflation. Nor did they do so
until far into the great inflation of
the 1970s. Not until late 1977 and
into 1978 did the bond market fully
incorporate the reality of the debased
dollar, by demanding higher long-term
interest rates.
How can this happen? Markets are
supposed to be forward-looking and
efficiently price in all relevant
risks. Yet monarchs have been
repudiating debt explicitly and
implicitly throughout recorded
history.
Many years ago, the Austrian economist
Ludwig von Mises offered an
explanation. He suggested that while
you can't, in Abraham Lincoln's words
"fool all of the people all of the
time," you can fool all of the people
at least some of the time. And this is
easier to do if a central bank has in
the past earned credibility in
fighting inflation.
In the 1980s, Ronald Reagan and Paul
Volcker worked together to get
inflation under control. They were
greatly assisted by the "bond
vigilantes," traders who were by then
exerting discipline in bond markets by
bidding up interest rates to
double-digit levels. The outcome of
the Reagan/Volcker policy of tight
money and low marginal tax rates was
not only a great economic expansion,
but also a great boost to the Fed's
credibility. The Fed proved it was
able and willing to withstand
political heat in the fight against
inflation.
Alan Greenspan built on the Volcker
legacy and, at least in the early
years of his long tenure, continued
the fight against inflation. In the
1990s, when Mr. Greenspan faced his
own banking crisis, he was able to
adopt a policy of comparatively low
short-term interest rates. Banks used
the opportunity to borrow cheaply and
lend profitably to grow their way out
of the crisis. Credibility allowed the
Fed to engineer a recovery without
stoking inflation fears.
After the collapse of the dot-com
bubble in 2000, and then 9/11 and its
aftermath, Mr. Greenspan again relied
on the Fed's credibility to drive down
the federal-funds rate to 1% and then
hold it there for a year. This time
there was a rumbling of doubts. But
eventually the Fed did reverse course
to preserve its inflation-fighting
credentials, and briefly hiked the
federal-funds rate to over 5%.
Now Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has
decided to try for a hat trick, and
spend the Fed's reputational capital
on an easy credit policy. He is doing
so under considerably more adverse
circumstances than his two
predecessors.
Thanks to Reagan and Volcker -- and
the credibility he built up on his own
early on -- Mr. Greenspan did not face
strong inflationary forces in the
1990s. But Mr. Bernanke began his easy
money policy with inflation already
picking up steam. Worse, we have the
accumulated effects of seven years of
loose fiscal policy.
Yes, we had the Bush tax cuts, but
their beneficial, growth-enhancing
effects have long since been swamped
by an explosion of government
spending. As Milton Friedman long ago
taught us, government spending is the
ultimate tax on the economy: It
extracts real resources from
productive, private use and puts them
to unproductive, public use. And there
is the rub.
Not even a President Obama and a
Congress controlled by House Speaker
Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Reid
is going to hike taxes enough to pay
for all their spending. Indeed, they
have shown themselves quite unwilling
to engage in honest budgeting. The
best example is saddling Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac with $500 million of
new (off-budget) obligations to fund
cheap housing at a time when the two
companies were already on the ropes.
Is it any wonder the stock prices of
these two companies are imploding?
The markets have long assessed the
debt of Fannie and Freddie at AAA
because of the Treasury's guarantee,
now explicit. But no one has ever
seriously assessed the Treasury's
creditworthiness with Fannie and
Freddie on its books. The public
guarantee is entirely open-ended and
unbounded. The appetite of the two
companies to balloon their balance
sheets and take on risk has not been
curtailed. Meanwhile, Congress spends
apace with new programs for
constituents in an election year.
We are at a Smithian moment, in
which the temptation for the Fed to
spend its last dime of credibility may
prove irresistible. Investors are
already being taxed by inflation and
can rationally expect that tax rate
(the inflation rate) to be raised
going forward. Wages are not keeping
up. Main Street is being taxed to fund
Wall Street excess. Anyone who
works, saves and invests is exposed to
confiscation of his capital and
earnings through inflation.
If the Fed maintained its independence
of action and said no to the
inflationary finance of Congress's
profligacy, we wouldn't have reached
this point. But the Fed has forsaken
that independence amid an absence of
leadership.
Perhaps, as rarely happens, Adam Smith
will be proven wrong. Let us hope so,
because hope appears to be all we
have.
|