- The Quirky Nature of Credit / Sehr interess. Artikel / @Schlaufuchs.... - JÜKÜ, 19.06.2002, 15:06
The Quirky Nature of Credit / Sehr interess. Artikel / @Schlaufuchs....
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<font face="Arial" size="2">http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=981</font>
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<font face="Arial" size="2"><font face="Verdana" color="#002864" size="5"><strong>The Quirky Nature of Credit</strong></font>
<font size="4">by Christopher Mayer</font>
<font size="2">[Posted June 19, 2002]</font>
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<font face="Arial" size="3">[img][/img] One
change in the fabric of American finance that is particularly striking over
the years is the proliferation of credit and the growth of nonbank financing.
The primary creditors of the nation’s debtors are not banks, but are
so-called nontraditional lenders--such as GE Capital, the financial services
arm of General Electric (which, interestingly enough, provides 40 percent of
GE’s total earnings. And you thought GE made money selling stuff!).</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">This was highlighted in a recent Wall Street
Journal piece, where it was pointed out that GE Capital’s total assets
of $425 billion exceed all but three banking conglomerates. According to the
article, banks and thrifts contribute a proportionately smaller share of
financing to the nation’s credit market today compared to years past. The Journal
comments,"Twenty years ago, banks and thrifts supplied 40 percent of the
nation’s credit. Ten years ago, it was 26 percent. Today, its down to 19
percent."</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Credit and finance have become the business of
America, no longer dominated by banks, thrifts, and their ilk. <em>The Wall
Street Journal </em>notes that approximately 40 percent of the earnings from
the companies in the S&P 500 came from lending or other financial
activities. Many retailers issue credit cards through banks that they own.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Naturally, the question arises as to what the
consequences of such a trend might be, particularly given the quirky nature of
credit, soaked as it is in a paper-based monetary system.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3"><em>The Wall Street Journal</em> reporter
opines,"The benefits of this change in the financial underpinning of the
economy were evident during the recession. As banks tightened lending
standards, alternative lending and capital markets took up the slack."</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">He points to the well-publicized
zero-percent-financing offers by auto manufacturers and to companies like
Boeing Capital, which lent UAL $700 million to buy planes when the capital
markets shunned them. The old guard of easy credit also helped grease the
axles, as Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac’s assets have risen 21 percent and 35
percent, respectively, since the end of 2000. These two behemoths alone hold
as much mortgage debt as all commercial banks combined.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Bank assets, in contrast, rose"just 8
percent," the reporter ruefully tells readers.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">So here, the unwritten assumption is that
keeping the spigot of credit open is better than the alternative. Credit is
the fuel that feeds spending, and spending, so the conventional thinking goes,
is the key to economic growth. The more companies offering credit, the more
readily available it becomes, making everybody better off. Easy credit means
easy money, ergo prosperity.</font>
<strong><font face="Arial" size="3">For every creditor there is a debtor</font></strong>
<font face="Arial" size="3">One has to wonder if more credit is a good
thing. After all, every dollar extended in credit creates a corresponding
liability or debt. In theory, at least, debts must be repaid. The risks of
debt and leverage become muted under the sunny optimism of boom-time economics.
However, the realities of leverage do not change because they are ignored;
like the fundamental forces of nature, suspension of belief does not diminish
their power. Leverage in finance is similarly unrelenting.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">The economist Benjamin Anderson explained the
Great Depression in terms of a great excess of credit. He called cheap money
the"most dangerous intoxicant known to economic life."</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">"Artificially cheap money," Anderson
wrote,"…created a vast fabric of debt, internal and international. As
the volume of this debt grew, its quality greatly deteriorated." He noted
that"the period 1931 to March 1933 saw the progressive collapse of the
unsound portions of this vast fabric of debt."</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">To take on a lot of debt is to exhibit a great
deal of confidence about what lies ahead and in your ability to pay it back.
It is also a matter of belief on behalf of the creditor. Debt, in essence, is
a bet on a rosy future.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">While no one can predict the future, it is safe
to say that no one can borrow indefinitely, either, for the simple reason that
there will be a limit to what a consumer--or business, or government--can
borrow and yet still remain solvent. It is sort of a natural law of credit
that as the volume of credit expands to more and more debtors, the quality of
such credits deteriorate. Not everyone is creditworthy, and as the pool of
credit widens, the fringes are shallower than the deeper center in terms of
financial resources.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">As Greenspan talks positively about the health
of the U.S. banking system, one also has to wonder whether a strong banking
system matters, given its diminished role in providing credit (and letting
pass, uncontested, the idea that the U.S. banking system is healthy--a highly
debatable point). Consensus opinion holds that the Fed has some control over
the money supply through its traditional means of manipulating bank reserves
and interest rates. How much of that is cast into doubt, since nonbanks are
doing the bulk of the lending?</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">To his credit, the Journal reporter also
notes that all this credit has a downside. Steve Galbraith, an investment
strategist with Morgan Stanley, is quoted as saying,"Banks are not the
place to be looking for the next blowup... because of the greater
importance of these nonbank financial companies, odds are you’ll get a
hiccup in this area."</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Which begs the question: What would the impact
be if a GE Capital or Fannie Mae started to have financial difficulties? Would
the effect be as deleterious as a failing banking behemoth? And would the Feds
bail them out, too? In the span of less than a year, the government has, in
one way or another,"saved" airlines, domestic steel manufacturers,
domestic lumber producers, and, most recently, American farmers. How likely is
it that the government will be able to resist saving Fannie Mae?</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Some will advocate increased regulation of
these nonbanks to conform with, or exceed, existing banking standards. But
these are superficial remedies for a problem that lies much deeper. We’ve
had banking regulations and numerous oversight bodies for a long time, and
that has not stopped financial crises from developing. The problem is the
money itself.</font>
<strong><font face="Arial" size="3">The Satanism of money and credit</font></strong>
<font face="Arial" size="3">The quirky nature of credit is that it is not
necessarily better in abundance. It’s not like beer, butter, and
bananas--where more means cheaper, and cheaper is good. Credit is like money;
it represents buying power. Garet Garret called money's paradoxical quality
the"Satanism of money." When it is plentiful enough, it is not
worth enough, but when it is worth enough, it is not plentiful enough. The
same sort of thinking applies to credit. More credit means more buying power,
which means a bidding up of assets and a spark for an unsustainable boom.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Murray Rothbard wrote that"credit
expansion always generates the business cycle process, even when other
tendencies cloak its workings." Many economists and commentators point to
the relatively low inflation rate during the boom years and the
low-interest-rate environment of those years."But prices may not rise
because of some counteracting force," Rothbard notes. Indeed,
productivity growth, an increase in the supply of goods, and an increase in
the demand for dollars can absorb the increase in money, temporarily masking
its inflationary effect.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">The great merit of gold as money lies in the
fact that the quantity of gold is limited by nature and by the amount of human
energy and capital dedicated to mining it. As a result, gold holds its value.
Wilhelm Ropke once wrote,"In the course of the centuries, no wager has
been more of a certainty than that a piece of gold, inaccessible to the
inflationary policies of governments, would keep its purchasing power better
than a bank note." Gold acts as a natural limit to money, and for that it
will always be the enemy of inflationists and governments.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">The flaw in today’s financial system is that
these limits do not exist. Doug Noland, writing for PrudentBear.com,
observed that the"…character of money and the contemporary
credit-based system’s ability to create uncontrolled quantities is a crucial
ingredient in precarious financial excess." According to Noland,"the
explosion of nonbank entities easily explains the relatively slow growth of
bank assets (loans) in the midst of historic credit excess."</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">The fact is that you can’t look just at banks
or the Fed anymore. There are many more purveyors of credit than banks. All of
this growth in credit has put in motion the boom-bust sequence predicted by
Austrian theory.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">The state of American credit is already
weakening. There are only eight AAA-rated companies left in America (General
Electric, UPS, AIG, ExxonMobil, Johnson & Johnson, Berkshire-Hathaway,
Pfizer, and Merck), compared to 27 in 1990 and 58 in 1979. The first quarter
of 2002 was one of the worst quarters on record for corporate bonds. Some 47
issuers defaulted on their debts, for a total of $34 billion in bad debt.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Personal bankruptcies are at record highs. More
consumers filed for bankruptcy in 2001 than in any other year. Savings are low,
and an increasing percentage of disposable income is being used to service
debt.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">Of course, these concerns also extend to
government--the worst offender of all. The U.S. government cannot control its
appetite for spending, and year after year, it spends more than it takes in,
going ever deeper into debt. Many will probably be surprised to learn that
government debt continued to grow even during the Clinton years, despite the
administration’s claims that the budget was balanced each year. Government
borrowing continues to reach new highs with each passing year.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">As <em>The Wall Street Journal </em>reported,
in March of 2002, total federal debt stood at $5.924 trillion, and the Bush
administration was seeking to raise the limit to $6.7 trillion. As
Representative Ron Paul observed,"the federal budget is essentially a
credit card with no spending limit, billed to somebody else." Moreover,
as Paul observes, politicians come and go, but"the benefits of deficit
spending are enjoyed immediately by the politicians, who trade pork for votes
and enjoy adulation for promising to cure every social ill."</font>
<font face="Arial" size="3">The only solution to these problems--the
explosion of credit and debt, the gradual destruction of the currency, the
boom-bust sequences--is to wrest control of money from government hands and
back into the market. Let the market decide what should be money. For
centuries, gold was the money of choice, and there is a growing suspicion that
it will be again.</font>
<font face="Arial" size="2">
<hr align="left" width="33%" SIZE="1">
<font size="2">Christopher Mayer is a commercial lender for Provident Bank
in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. Send him <font color="navy"><font color="#000080" size="2">MAIL</font></font></font><font color="#000000" size="2">
and see his Mises.org </font><font color="navy" size="2"><font color="#000080" size="2">Articles
Archive</font></font><font color="#000000" size="2">.</font>
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