http://lewrockwell.com/rozeff/rozeff354.html

 


Is Greece the Future of America?


by Michael S. Rozeff <mailto:[email protected]> 

 


 

        

 

 

Greece has a sovereign debt problem. The bonds of the Greek government have
been downgraded by a major rating service. Their prices have fallen sharply
in the market. This means that the risk is high that the government will
default on its sovereign debt.

The interest rates that the Greek government must pay in order to borrow
have risen sharply. This is worsening the government's solvency and budget
problems.

The government faces default. The government's various spending cutbacks
haven't solved the problem.

They cannot solve the problem. It's apparently too late. The government
would have to restructure its debt by renegotiating with its multiple
lenders. That's a difficult and time-consuming process. It would have to
work out repayment while simultaneously altering government policies so that
the country's private market economy could expand. This involves knotty
political and economic issues that take years to resolve. The government
doesn't have this time.

The problem traces back to the earlier fact that for some years the
government was able to borrow heavily at low interest rates. This means that
it was able to sell its bonds at high prices. The problem arose because
these market prices were too high.

The sovereign debt of Greece became overvalued due to central bank/banking
system money inflation. This inflation, it should be strongly emphasized,
originated in the fiat dollar system of the United States and the Federal
Reserve.

The central banks of the world and the world money supply are heavily
influenced by what the Federal Reserve does through a kind of multiplier
effect, because foreign central banks respond to Fed inflation with
inflation of their own. Ronald I. McKinnon explained this important process
in his June 1982 article in the American Economic Review. We see it
happening today when foreign banks have to inflate in reaction to QE2 in
order to prevent their currencies from strengthening too much against the
depreciating dollar.

The high bond prices encouraged the Greek government to borrow too heavily
and to raise government spending. But since its spending was not productive,
it didn't produce high enough tax revenues to service the debt. In time the
government faced the problem it now has, which is not enough tax cash flows
or income to service the debt.

Monetary inflation, in other words, causes overvalued sovereign debt. This
sets in motion larger government spending, higher debt loads, and an
eventual fiscal crisis when tax revenues fall short of what is required to
maintain government spending and service the debt.

This process goes on in addition to the business cycle effects, well-known
in Austrian economics, that inflation produces. In keeping with the
analogous finance literature on overvalued equity, I identify this process
as one that involves agency costs of overvalued sovereign debt. 

This process is only made worse when major lenders, such as large banks,
have reason to believe that they occupy a privileged position and that their
bond positions will be paid off by political means if necessary. These
lenders then all the more become willing to buy overvalued sovereign debt.

This effect of inflation is important because of its broad applicability in
an age of inflation. In particular, a number of other countries including
the U.S. have followed the Greek path.

Michael C. Jensen was the first to analyze the agency costs of overvalued
equity <http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=480421> .
Everything that he says about the dire effects on a company's behavior from
having an overpriced stock find a parallel when a government issues
overpriced debt. The parallels are not perfect, of course. In fact, every
bit of analysis suggests that the problem will be worse for overvalued
sovereign debt.

Intuition can be a misleading guide in these matters. We are taught that a
high stock price is a good thing, and it is a good thing when it accurately
reflects value creation in the enterprise. But not all high stock prices
arise from value creation. Central bank money inflation fosters speculation.
Speculation leads to asset price bubbles. Rising prices attract naive
investors.

We have twice seen in recent memory how government/central bank
inflation-produced speculation leads to a breakdown in critically important
internal market practices and institutions. First we had overvalued stocks
break down in 2000 amid hundreds of cases of overstated earnings.
Accompanying this were accounting and auditing scandals as well as law firm
and investment banking misbehavior. Second, starting in 2006 and continuing
to the present, we have the real estate bubble. We have seen similar
scandalous behavior pervading the mortgage and real estate businesses. This
has included all the major banks, all major investment bankers, the
government agencies like Fannie Mae, legislatures, law firms, bond rating
agencies, insurance companies, and auditors. The scandal went even more
deeply into the U.S. government and the Federal Reserve through their
multiple bailout activities.

This breakdown in institutions that are supposed to act as professional
agents finds its root cause in government that goes way beyond its
appropriate bounds.

In the case of overvalued equity, Jensen points to "earnings management"
that becomes lying about earnings as one means by which management becomes
corrupted in order to come through with earnings numbers that justify its
overvalued equity. The analogue is for governments to lie about the
beneficial effects of the programs and activities that they are promoting
and funding with their excessive debts. We hear politicians today justify
huge sales of overpriced government debt as worthwhile because they are
fighting recession, producing jobs and green shoots, kick-starting the
economy, and providing national security. Like phony accounting numbers for
earnings, these are all myths and lies. We hear Federal Reserve officials
peddling similar misinformation to justify their bond purchases that are
helping to keep sovereign debt overpriced.

Jensen suggests that "manning the helm of an overvalued company feels great
at first." Among other things, the management bonuses rise steeply.
Politicians likewise score among voters and secure campaign contributions
when inflation stimulates some economic activity initially. They can point
to housing projects going up or a falling unemployment rate or the numbers
of people who are first-time homeowners. The financial and housing
industries shower money on them. The Federal Reserve can build up its image
by broadcasting how it prevented the financial system from collapsing.

But, when there is overvalued equity, Jensen says "massive pain lies ahead".
A company cannot produce real earnings to justify its overpriced stock. It
turns to earnings manipulation and fraud. It turns to wasteful acquisitions.
Nortel acquired 19 companies between 1997 and 2001.When Nortel stock fell by
95 percent, not only was its value destroyed but also that of these
acquisitions. Companies seek out unworkable products and build up unusable
capacity.

The same massive pain goes for governments that overextend themselves with
excessive borrowing at then-low rates of interest. This is evident in
Greece. It threatens to become evident elsewhere, including the U.S. When
the nation does not produce enough income to service the government debt,
some manner of default is bound to occur.

The U.S. is finding it extremely difficult to find a way out of the looming
pain that its overvalued sovereign debt has caused. The U.S. has over-issued
debt. Its "acquisitions" lie in every area of government spending, in
particular, popular social spending programs and a huge military
establishment. Huge numbers of Americans have been "acquired" and linked
into programs like food stamps.

Huge numbers of Americans expect a future retirement safety net courtesy of
Uncle Sam. This is looking less and less likely as time passes. As in the
case of overvalued equity that eventually crashes and burns up phantom
value, U.S. sovereign debt will crash and burn as the private market economy
increasingly cannot produce sufficient revenues to pay the taxes required to
service the debts.

The proximate cause of this likelihood is agency costs of overvalued
sovereign debt.

That itself traces back to a faulty political system that has destroyed
proper constraints on the funding of government and therefore on government
size. This has three main aspects. (1) The central bank is able to enter the
sovereign debt market at will and keep the price overvalued. (2) The
government is able to impose a wide range of taxes in order to fund its
programs and debts.(3) There are no limits to government spending and the
demand for such spending is infinite.

Let's look at each of these briefly.

The constraint on money creation has disappeared Government no longer
competes with markets for privately-produced and costly money in the form of
gold and silver. When government debt promised and paid gold, government had
no recourse but to tax its citizens in gold. Without that constraint,
government can pay off debt by issuing more debt and more promises to pay
off in paper.

The debt is supported in price by government's powers to tax. As long as the
people are able to produce enough income to pay these taxes and are willing
to pay them, the system of debt expansion goes on because debts are
serviced. The system is dynamically unstable, however. The larger that
government becomes, the lower the ability of the private sector to produce
real income becomes because government spending is unproductive and prevents
capital formation This undermines the ability of people to pay the required
taxes. Debt grows but economic growth falls short of debt growth due to low
growth in capital formation. Taxes then fall short of spending and deficits
rise. The government and the country's economy then get into an untenable
position.

The third aspect is that the U.S. Constitution, as interpreted by the
Supreme Court, does not limit government spending or government activities
and size, and this lack of limitation is combined with an infinite demand
for receipt of government funds among the population. In other words, almost
everyone stands ready to rob his neighbor via government taxes and get the
proceeds for himself through redistribution in government spending; and
there are no limits on how large this thievery can become.

http://lewrockwell.com/rozeff/rozeff2.jpgThis system is dynamically unstable
too. It eventually must run into a wall or limit because the parasitic
activities will overwhelm the productive activities. This limit is now in
view. The government's unfunded liabilities ($200 trillion by some
estimates) vastly exceed its capacity to tax at current levels. Only by
outright expropriation of wealth in the form of saved assets (seizing
pensions) or by high levels of taxation that sap human wealth can the
promises be kept. Those routes spell massive pain.

If a society does not impose limits on its own parasitic activities, it will
eventually destroy itself. If it crushes its productive activities, it will
destroy itself. If the society's people do not impose the proper limits on
their own behavior, individually and collectively, then they are setting a
course for massive pain.

At this time, Greece does look like the future of America. Is it too late
for America? Just about. When I see this society impose some limits on its
parasitic behavior and encourage productive behavior, I will become more
optimistic. However, I've been waiting for that for 40 years and I've yet to
see it. 

May 28, 2011

Michael S. Rozeff [send him mail <mailto:[email protected]> ] is a retired
Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York. He is the author of
the free e-book Essays on American Empire: Liberty vs. Domination
<http://mises.org/resources/6042>  and the free e-book The U.S. Constitution
and Money: Corruption and Decline <http://mises.org/resources/6041> .

 



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