Hyperinflation or Deflation? Or, Rome vs. USA '24
Fiat currency crash bad for wealth and power...
This CONTRARIAN sees a strong consensus around the notion that
hyperinflation is the inevitable
end-game of nation-states/central banks issuing fiat currencies, writes Charles Hugh Smith in
Addison Wiggin's Daily Reckoning.
Fiat means currencies that are not restrained by being pegged to tangible assets such as gold reserves.
So the temptation to issue
more currency (via "printing" or borrowing new currency into existence by selling sovereign bonds)
becomes irresistible to politicians
and central bankers alike as the means to mollify every constituency, from elites to the military to
commoners dependent on
state-funded bread and circuses.
This unrestrained creation of new money far in
excess of the expansion of
goods and services (ie, the real economy) devalues the currency, as "all the new money chases too few
goods and services."
Gresham's law kicks in – bad money drives good money out of circulation – as precious
metals, fine art, gemstones, etc.
are hoarded and the depreciating currency is spent as fast as possible before its purchasing power
declines even further.
The Cantillon effect also kicks in: Those closest to the spigot of new money get first dibs
on converting the
depreciating currency into tangible goods, leaving the non-elites to sweep up the "trickle-down" shreds
left as the currency loses
purchasing power daily.
The consensus holds that there is no way to stop this
decay of purchasing power to
near-zero – ie, hyperinflation – once it starts. As in a Greek tragedy, the fatal flaw of the
protagonist – in this case, fiat
currency – leads inevitably to its destruction.
In the real world, things
having to do with money tend to
occur because they benefit powerful interests. This leads us to ask of hyperinflation cui bono, to whose
benefit? Exactly which
powerful interests benefit when a currency's purchasing power plummets to near-zero?
The idea here is that
there will be pushback if it doesn't benefit the wealthy and powerful. So either hyperinflation somehow
benefits the wealthy and
powerful, or it escapes their control and wipes them out along with the powerless commoners.
That raises the
question: Didn't the wealthy and powerful see what was coming and couldn't they have reversed the
policies generating hyperinflation?
If not, why not?
There are a couple of different threads to follow here. One is
that capital is what matters
to the wealthy and powerful because they own the vast majority of it while credit is what matters to the
poor, as credit is their only
way to acquire a bit of capital to invest in their own enterprise/household.
The poor owe debt, the wealthy
own debt: Debt (such as a home mortgage) is an asset to the wealthy, who buy the loan for its income
stream, while debt is a liability
to the commoners that must be serviced out of their earned income.
If wages
rise in parallel with high rates
of inflation, those who owe debt find their burdens lightened as their mortgage payment remains fixed
while their income rises with
inflation. Imagine how cheering it is when one finds a once-onerous $200,000 mortgage can now be paid
off with a month's salary due to
hyperinflation.
On the flip side, the wealthy and powerful who own the debt are
less delighted, as the
purchasing power of the currency used to pay off the mortgage has diminished, effectively robbing them
of most of the value of their
original purchase of the mortgage.
Where the $200,000 they paid for the
mortgage could have bought two nice
luxury vehicles, the $200,000 they now receive in full payment can barely buy a used
clunker.
This raises an
interesting question: Why on Earth would the wealthy and powerful let hyperinflation destroy the value
of all their debt-based assets
and income streams? Isn't that completely counter to their interests? If so, why would they let that
happen?
At this juncture it's important to draw a distinction between ancient examples of hyperinflation and the
present-day economy. In the
declining era of the Roman Empire, the government drastically reduced the silver content in the coinage
to generate the illusion that
everyone was still being paid in full with only a fraction of the silver contained in old
coinage.
This
artifice was quickly uncovered, and old coinage disappeared from circulation due to hoarding and
inflation caused prices and wages to
soar.
The difference is back then, the poor owned virtually nothing. Today, the
poor "own" debt service: They
owe interest and principal on the vast quantities of debt owned by the wealthy, who will lose out when
the values of their debt-based
assets crash to near-zero in hyperinflation.
Hyperinflation is incredibly
beneficial to debtors with earned
income and incredibly destructive to those who own the debt being wiped out.
This leads to a second thread:
The wealthy shift their wealth overseas as inflation picks up and wait for the hyperinflationary storm
to wipe out the value of
literally everything in their home economy, at which point they return, foreign cash in hand, to scoop
up all the best assets at
fire-sale prices.
This certainly works on small developing-world economies, but
it doesn't work in large
economies such as the US' with $156 trillion in assets to convert into other nation's currencies and
assets.
In large economies, the wealth of powerful elites is generated by a functioning economy that produces
goods and services and maintains
a stable currency. Buying a castle and some gold overseas is not a replacement for productive capital
that generates income and
capital gains.
Wiping out the value of the nation's currency also destroys its
value as a reserve currency
and in global trade, two additional disasters the wealthy and powerful would seek to avoid at all
costs.
If
we tot up the winners and losers of hyperinflation, the commoners who owe debt win as long as wages rise
with inflation, while the
wealthy and powerful lose out. Given the vast asymmetry of wealth and power, do you really think this is
going to happen?
What seems more likely because it serves the interests of the wealthy and powerful is
interest rates on sovereign bonds
soar, enabling the wealthy who sold off all their risk assets such as stocks and commercial real estate
to earn a healthy, low-risk
return in Treasuries.
The central bank is ordered to stop "printing money" and
the government cuts spending
across the board, leading to howls of outrage but since the interests of the wealthy and powerful are at
stake, too bad, suck it up,
kids, everyone takes a cut.
Risk assets deflate, the purchasing power of the
commoners' debt service
stabilizes and the ensuing deflation only hurts those who didn't bail out of speculative risk assets at
the top and stash the cash in
short-term Treasuries.
Then, when rates max out, the smart money shifts capital
into long-term sovereign
bonds and waits for the deflation to send risk asset prices to the basement. Then the long-term bonds
can be liquidated for cash, and
the deflated assets scooped up at fire-sale prices.
If we ask cui bono, which
scenario is more likely:
hyperinflation or a deflationary crushing of risk assets and soaring interest rates?
Yes, a bunch of
zombie/marginal borrowers will default, and those holding the debt will be wiped out, but all that is
foreseeable and can be remedied
by selling when everyone is bullish on real estate and risk assets.
As for the
commoners, deflating prices
increase the purchasing power of their wages. Those with little or no debt will benefit from deflation,
as their wages will go further
and they'll finally be able to afford risk assets once prices return to pre-bubble levels.
As for interest
rates, we all paid 12% mortgages in the early 1980s and life went on because the loans were modest in
size compared with today's
bloated Everything Bubble.
Other than China, it doesn't appear that global
money supply is going parabolic.
And as this chart indicates, inflation is tolerated as long as it's stretched over a century and wages
rise along with
prices.

When predicting the
future, we're best served by
following what benefits the wealthy and powerful, as that is the likeliest outcome. Is hyperinflation a
"solution"?
Not to the wealthy and powerful.











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