Categories
Economics

[2567] A tribute to Anna Schwartz

Anna Schwartz is not a name too familiar with too many Malaysians. That is a shame because her works as an economist wield great influence in this era of economic uncertainty. Read up major financial newspapers, magazines, financial news channels or leading economic blogs and one will come up an idea which she—together with the more famous Milton Friedman—advanced when they were alive: the roles of central bank in addressing economic fluctuation.

She died on June 21 this year.

Anna Schwartz collaborated with Friedman in writing A Monetary History of the United States, 1867 – 1960. The book, written in 1963, introduced the world to monetarism, the school of economics that eroded Keynesian dominance in economics and policymaking in the 1970s. The book is one of the most influential modern economic books. It belongs on the same shelf as John Maynard Keynes’ The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, and other great books that changed the course of human history.

Both Schwartz and Friedman pointed out that the Great Depression of the 1930s was a result of tight monetary policy. The Federal Reserve shrunk the money supply at a time when money demand increased tremendously as everybody hoarded cash in panic. The Fed should have increased the money supply instead.

This is an important revelation because the pre-1970s orthodoxy was that fiscal policy was the only real economic stabilization tool: only government spending could fight economic downturn. The first monetarists proved that was not so. Monetary policy is a credible and a better short-run alternative to fiscal policy: manage the money supply instead; expand it in times of crisis.

Fed chairman Ben Bernanke is a scholar of the Great Depression. As a member of the Fed’s Board of Governors before he became the chairman, he issued a mea culpa. “Let me end my talk by abusing slightly my status as an official representative of the Federal Reserve. I would like to say to Milton and Anna: Regarding the Great Depression. You’re right, we did it. We’re very sorry. But thanks to you, we won’t do it again,” he said.

Most central bankers have learned from the 1930s mistakes. Amid the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the Fed lowered its interest rate close to zero from above 5% in just slightly more than a year. The aggressive monetary policy, among others, is partly a lesson taught by Schwartz and Friedman.

Keynesianism was increasingly dominant especially after the Fed set its interest rate close to zero however. There is a theory called the liquidity trap: the central bank is unable to push the nominal interest rate below zero even as an even lower interest rate is warranted in a recession. That is a complicated way of saying that the central bank ran out of ammo once the interest rate had been pushed to zero.

As a matter of fact, interest rates in the US, Europe, Japan and UK were close to zero by 2009. Even so, the economy seemed to require more stimuli. The Keynesians were calling for more government spending. Indeed, governments all around the world embarked on massive stimulus spending to fight the 2008-2009 recession.

Friedman’s death in 2006 partly coincided with what now has been described as the Keynesian resurgence. As if the stars were aligned, the foremost Keynesian of our day, Paul Krugman, won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2008. The Keynesian school returned three decades later.

Whatever the successes of the recent Keynesian approach, the cost is painful especially judging from the European experience: Keynesianism exacerbated the problem of public finance. That has turned the table again.

While Friedman’s death coincided with the Keynesian resurgence, Schwartz’s death coincided with the monetarist resurgence.

The proof is for all to see. In the US, Europe, Japan and in the UK, central banks are now at the forefront of stabilization exercises despite liquidity trap. In contrast, it is the government that has run out of ammunition to do more. Governments in Europe are paralysed as far as the stabilization policy is concerned due to economic and political realities.

The resurgence of monetarism—market monetarism to be exact—is important to advocates of small government. It yet again counters the urge to resort to fiscal policy in times of crisis that will inevitably increase the roles of government. Market monetarism does so by arguing the Keynesian liquidity trap is irrelevant by pointing out the central bank can supply as much money as it is necessary without much adverse impacts as long as there is demand for it.

Monetarism, yet again, provides a credible alternative to fiscal policy. That will humble those who take the government as omnipotent.

Schwartz—and Friedman—deserved to be remembered because of that.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved
First published in The Sun on July 6 2012.

Categories
Liberty

[2566] We hold these truths to be self-evident…

…that all Men are created equal…

Categories
Economics

[2565] Do not judge Barclays too hastily

There were two big news over the past two days in the financial world. One was the EU Summit which yet again calmed the market for only the gypsies (Gypsies, get it? GIPSI? Maybe not) know how long. Another was the official fallout of Barclays’ rigging of LIBOR.

The rigging of LIBOR has been an on-going case but this is the first time it exploded in the open. Barclays is unlikely to be the only one guilty here. Everybody is likely to have some kind of involvement in rigging the LIBOR. It appears even the regulators in the UK are in it.

There are several issues with the LIBOR fiasco but the one I find most interesting is the understatement of cost of funds. This was the initial concern when the Wall Street Journal first reported of it in 2008. Banks were suspected of understating their cost of funds during the then credit crunch, hence falsely presenting themselves to the market as relatively healthier than they actually were.

While the wilful misreporting is regrettable, I cannot help but wonder would it be better at that time to report the truth? Would reporting the truthful higher rates have helped everybody in the market, especially in an environment where Blackrock and Lehman Brothers just went under? I could easily imaging contributing to further loss of confidence would not be the wisest thing to do then.

The underreporting of LIBOR might have provided some needed liquidity to the banks than truthful reporting otherwise would. That would relieve some stress off the banking system. In that way, the underreporting was the better way of doing things. It is not only better for the banks, it is good for the so-called main street. What the crisis of the past few years have shown, a sound banking system is terribly important to the short-run stability of the whole economy. That is sad, but it remains a fact.

Because of how lower rates might have helped with liquidity in the market, however unreflective it were to reality of the banks’ situation, I am a little sympathetic of banks found guilty of committing that.

The same sympathy however cannot be extended to the rate setters whom collaborated with the traders, granting those traders with the unfair advantage of inside information. Those are just, plainly wrong.

Categories
Economics

[2564] Anti-dumping duty on wire rods has little to do with predatory pricing, more to do with protectionism

It appears that protectionist sentiment within the steel industry just will not just die down. Earlier last year, Megasteel unsuccessfully lobbied for a levy on steel imports. That was shot down because users of steel protested. Megasteel, being the sole domestic producer of flat steel (used mainly for vehicles and major appliances), in its eagerness to protect itself from competition, wanted not only protectionism for domestic flat steel, but lobbied for across the board protectionism. That stepped on a lot of toes and it was good that the protest stopped the protectionist petition dead in its tracks.

In the news today however, the government is considering anti-dumping duty on foreign-produced steel wire rods. Wire rod is considered long steel product and most Malaysian steel manufacturers produce long steel. Contrast the fact about long steel with flat steel, which is only produced by Megasteel: one can immediately understand why the anti-dumping proposal may be more popular than Megasteel’s earlier protectionist proposal. The anti-dumping duty will benefit a lot more manufacturers (if not most in the industry) than Megasteel’s earlier proposal.

According to The Star, the government is mulling anti-dumping duty after an unnamed domestic manufacturer filed a complaint about how foreign steel manufacturers are dumping wire rods in Malaysia.

First, for laypersons’ benefits, what is dumping?

The typical definition of dumping is when a foreign manufacturer priced its products aboard at a price cheaper than the price its sell at its home country. The logic behind this is that foreign firm is flooding the market on purpose to kill off domestic competitor so that it will be a monopoly later. It is predatory pricing. The real concern is predatory pricing and the prices differential is just a proxy to that concern.

The problem is that not all of such pricing is predatory but regulators rely solely on the proxy to decide while disregarding the main concern, which is again, predatory pricing. This is flawed way of looking at the case.

It is all too possible for foreign firms to price their goods at home more expensive than aboard without engaging in predatory pricing.

One reason can be that a foreign firm has monopoly power over its home market while its export market is exposed to fierce competition.

Now, add another factor, which is likely the case for Malaysia since Malaysia steel manufacturers do not have the scale required to make it efficient: foreign steel manufacturers from large economies like China has the economies of scale to be efficient. In a world of pure free market with initial position as it is in the real world, Malaysian manufacturers would not be able to compete with the foreign manufacturers’ price.

Given both factors, efficient but monopolistic foreign firm can engage in such price discrimination across economies. So, a firm pricing its good in its export market lower than its home market is not embarking on predatory pricing at all. Rather, it is only responding to market reality. Under this scenario, anti-dumping measure by any government is highly inappropriate and in fact, protectionist.

The reality is the anti-dumping measure is aimed at protecting inefficient Malaysian steel industry.

This is not just an economic and ideological concern.

Long steel products are used for construction. An anti-dumping duty on long steel, for instance, will eliminate downward pressure on prices of raw material used for construction of houses and offices, even the MRT.

When prices of properties go up unreasonably, you know which policy to blame.

Categories
Economics Politics & government

[2563] Why I do not want to see a Eurozone break-up

I understand the case for the breaking up of the Eurozone. I do appreciate the virtue behind a flexible exchange rate, especially for cases like Greece. There is a need for rebalancing that a monetary union cannot provide. Yet, I am uneasy at the suggestion of a break-up, of Grexit, because deep inside of me, I am more or less an internationalist.

The internationalist sentiment is derived from my libertarian belief. It is about freedom of movement. Free flow of labor. Free flow of capital. All around the world.

I dream of a world where I would not have to present identification whenever I land in some foreign airports. I dream that I would be free to be anyway I choose without the need to ask permission from the state.

Unleash the ideal world and what I call the crazy me would come out as an anarchist. Specifically, an anarcho-capitalist. Freedom unbounded.

But I am not an anarchist because I understand anarchism is inherently unstable. I settle for the second best option available and that is free-market libertarianism.

Just as anarchism is the ideal but unattainable and thus the second-best solution is libertarianism, internationalism is the ideal but the second best approach is regionalism, for now.

This fuels my sympathy for the Eurozone. I want the Eurozone to be intact because of my bias. It has nothing to do about being western or Europe-centric.

I want it intact so that in the future, the Asean version can emerge. An Eurozone failure will likely inform decision on a more integrated Asean. Already the Indonesian President warned Asean of repeating the European mistake. The warning is appropriate but as I have argued, there are appropriate lessons to learn from the European crisis without jettisoning a closer Asean idea.

And I do think Europe will succeed, if recent history is of value.

The end of World War II saw closer cooperation between European countries: observe the Marshall Plan. Not all and definitely it was easy to cooperation when your opponent is dead, but the cooperation happened and that is the point.

The Cold War saw closer integration: observe the European Coal and Steel Community and the European Economic Community.

Post-Cold War saw even more: observe the European Union and its expansion.

The European Exchange Rate Mechanism crisis brought closer cooperation: observe the introduction of the Eurozone.

Now, the latest Eurozone crisis may bring in closer cooperation: observe the fiscal union proposal.

So, do not ring the bell yet. The regionalist game is not over yet and the outcome of death is not certain.

As a libertarian, the issue is the creation of a stronger state but I think, this can be a largely enlightened state, with a federal structure is can be a counterforce to the central government.