Deflation
Dollars and Sense magazine,
July / August 2003
Deflation-a general fall in the overall
level of prices-is a serious concern. Deflation is generally the
consequence-not the cause-of depressed economic growth and rising
unemployment. When growth slows and workers lose jobs, spending
declines and firms face depressed markets. They slash prices to
move merchandise and cut wages to reduce costs. Lower wages in
turn translate into less income out of which to buy goods, spurring
further price cuts. This occurred in the United States during
the 1930s-prices fell 20% over the decade-and is now happening
in Japan, where prices have declined nearly 10%. Hyper-inflation
... occurred only in Weimar Germany, from 1922 to 1923. Once a
"deflationary spiral" begins, the deflation itself can
become a source of economic weakness and depression.
Thanks to vigilant anti-inflation efforts
by the Fed and other central banks, inflation rates throughout
the world have been declining for a decade. Even at the peak of
the 1990s boom, inflation in the United States was running below
4%. Today, as the economy slows, inflation hovers between 1% and
2%, close enough to zero that falling prices are an imminent possibility.
Deflation inflicts substantial harm on
anyone with heavy debts-in the United States, most middle-class
households and non-financial businesses. Wages and prices fall
in money terms, but the nominal value of debt remains unchanged.
Thus, indebted firms and households must sell more or work longer
in order to obtain dollars for repaying mortgages, commercial
loans or credit card bills. Consequently, deflation redistributes
income upward from those who borrow heavily to those with money
to lend- mostly wealthy families and financial institutions. (Inflation,
or rising prices, has the opposite effect-it redistributes income
from lenders to borrowers.)
Once begun, deflation can weaken an already
tottering economy in three ways. First, because the wealthy save
more of their incomes than the middle classes, a redistribution
from borrowers to lenders in itself depresses spending. Second,
deflation encourages people to postpone large purchases in anticipation
of lower prices in the future. Third, when prices are falling,
money grows in value even when it sits around a shoebox or a zero
interest checking account. Hence, pools of saving are less likely
to find their way into the financial markets where they can be
borrowed and spent. All of this can exacerbate an economic downturn
and, in turn, generate greater deflationary pressures.
In theory, deflation is a boon for the
wealthy because it increases the purchasing power of money and
thus the real wealth of those who own money. In practice, however,
deflation can drive borrowers to default and push down asset prices
as strapped borrowers sell stock and real estate for cash with
which to service their debts. In the end, deflation can bankrupt
lenders as well as borrowers-just look at Japan's banking system.
Deflation also limits the scope of economic
policy. The financial industry and the upper classes in general
prefer that governments address economic instability with monetary
policy-raising and lowering interest rates in an effort to stimulate
private borrowing and spending-rather than with government spending.
Civil works or public employment programs are anathema to conservatives,
so in the current U.S. political climate, fiscal policy is a political
non-starter (outside of upper-income tax cuts, but that's another
story). This leaves the Federal Reserve as the primary source
of macroeconomic policy in the United States today. It is probably
thanks to the Fed and two years of very low interest rates-with
all the zero-rate auto loans, no-cost equity loans and cash-out
refinancings they have inspired-that unemployment hasn't risen
much above 6%.
But deflation renders monetary policy
impotent. Monetary policy affects the economy through the real
rate of interest, which equals the nominal (or stated) interest
rate minus the inflation rate. Deflation is equivalent to a negative
inflation rate, so when prices fall real interest rates rise,
even if the Fed holds the nominal interest rate at zero. The Bank
of Japan is now facing precisely this problem: the overnight lending
rate in Japan is 0.001%, but the real cost of borrowing keeps
rising. The equivalent Fed Funds rate in the United States now
stands at 1.25% and inflation at around 1.0%-a combined real interest
rate of 0.25%. If U.S. prices actually begin to fall, the Fed
will lose what little ability it has to counteract stagnation
by lowering interest rates.
Ellen Frank teaches economics at Emmanuel
College and is a member of the Dollars & Sense colIective.
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