Waste is not growth, and
neither are the unlimited expansion of debt and speculative bubbles.
The financial punditry is whipping itself into a
frenzy about a Federal Reserve "policy error," which is
code for "if the music finally stops, we're doomed!" In
other words, any policy which reduces the flow of juice sluicing
through the sewage pipes of the financial system (credit, leverage
and liquidity--the essential mechanisms of financialization and
globalization) endangers the entire rickety, rotten structure of
phantom wealth that's enriched the few at the expense of the
many.
The entire notion that central bank policy makes or
breaks the economy is the original Policy Error #1. That is to
say, whatever policy a central bank pursues is a policy error
because every policy is an attempt to manipulate the self-organizing
cycle of credit / economic expansion and contraction.
The
history of central banking is actually quite simple:
1.
Central banks act to protect the wealth and power of those who own /
control most of the wealth. This is their core unstated reason to
exist.
2. To justify this absurdly transparent protection of
the elite in the eyes of the public, central banks go through the
motions of trying to extinguish the business / credit cycle, that is,
trying to eliminate defaults and credit crunches which are the
frequent but low-intensity fires that burn up the financial deadwood.
This destruction of excessive credit, leverage and
liquidity is necessary to protect the forest--the entire economy--
from a much larger, out-of-control conflagration.
Central
banks sell this endless expansion of financialization to the public
as "we're getting rid of those horrible nasty recessions that
hurt all you little folk," but in letting the deadwood pile
up ever higher, central banks are only guaranteeing the eventual
conflagration will consume the entire forest.
This is
basically what happened in 2008-09: the deadwood caught fire despite
the best efforts of central banks and almost burned down the entire
forest.
Anything that constricts the expansion of
financialization (credit, leverage and liquidity) constricts the
expansion of the phantom wealth of elites, and
so central banks are loathe to limit credit expansion. Central
banks and economists need a cover story for this dynamic, and so they
purposefully call debt expansion "growth": hey, look, the
economy is expanding, everybody's getting richer, our policies are
working!
Nice, but this isn't reality. The reality is the
top few get much, much richer than the little folk. That's the
only possible output of financialization, which generates
hyper-rewards for those few with the most expansive access to credit,
leverage and liquidity: corporations, financiers and the
super-wealthy.
Every policy that protects the deadwood is
a policy error, which means every policy of central banks is a policy
error. The one and only useful role of central banks is to be a
short-term lender of last resort in financial crunches in which the
deadwood catches fire and excessive credit, leverage and liquidity is
consumed.
The deadwood burning greatly reduces the risk of
the forest being destroyed, but some enterprises that are not
overleveraged find that they're no longer able to roll over their
short-term debt due to lenders cutting off lines of credit. A credit
crunch can burn down otherwise prudent enterprises, and so central
banks can protect well-managed businesses that need short-term credit
by being the lender of last resort.
Credit panics don't last
long. Loans of 90 days are typically enough to tide over those firms
who need credit lines to function.
But instead of this
limited role, central banks are always trying to expand credit,
leverage and liquidity under the guise of "promoting growth".
All that they're really doing is expanding financial deadwood by
enabling the expansion of excessive waste and fraud. Thanks to
central banks, the frivolous conspicuous consumption of the
central-bank funded elite is glorified as "growth," along
with the complete waste of planned obsolescence and
speculative bubbles that generate the illusion of capital expansion.
Waste is not growth, and neither are the unlimited
expansion of debt and speculative bubbles. Every policy of
central banks is a policy error with the sole exception of short-term
lending in standard business-credit cycles in which credit crunches
cleanse the system of the deadwood of excessive credit, leverage and
liquidity as a means of protecting the entire forest from
destruction.
When $100 trillion in global deadwood-debt
burns to the ground, that merely returns global debt to the levels of
2012. Central bank policies guarantee the forest will be consumed
by an uncontrolled conflagration. That's the cost of claiming waste
and debt are "growth" and protecting the phantom wealth of
the few at the expense of the many.
by Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com on July 18, 2022
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.