Deflation is Always Bad

by Bill Watkins on November 12th, 2009
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After the kids went to bed last night, I checked the web to see if there was anything new. The Wall Street Journal posts the next day’s op-eds the evening before print publication. So, I checked those out. I started reading a piece by Judy Shelton provocatively titled The Fed’s Woody Allen Policy. Hey, I like Fed bashing as much as anyone, and I haven’t been real happy with Fed for the past year.

I think Fed policy has been too tight. Instead of paying interest on excess deposit, they should be charging a fee. Of course, many disagree and worry about inflation, and that is what I thought I was reading as Shelton proceeds with her thesis that the Fed’s policy may be fueling a new asset bubble. This is pretty standard stuff, boringly standard in fact. I was about to quit reading and go on to something else when I came to a paragraph that stopped me cold:

“Deflation is seen as the bugaboo of Keynesian economics. But it can actually serve to spur economic activity as lower prices enable struggling consumers to get back in the game, and enterprising individuals can build businesses using tangible assets that yield valid profits.”

That paragraph is breathtaking, so wrong on so many levels, so counter to what we know to be true. I couldn’t believe that an economist would say that. So, I looked for her tag line. Sure enough, it says she’s an economist. I did a web search. She’s got at least one book out. She’s in the WSJ frequently. She’s all for a gold standard.

Shelton received her Ph.D. in Business Administration at the University of Utah, and she’s a professor at the Duxx Graduate School of Business at Monterrey, Mexico. One observer—goes by Federalist on the web, but I couldn’t find a name—described her as having few credentials. I don’t think that is exactly true. She has impressive credentials, just not as an economist.

Let’s correct her paragraph:

No one is going to mistake me for a Keynesian, but I’m certain that deflation is bad. Economists in general, not just Keynesian, know deflation is bad. I don’t know of one credible economist, from a top 50 school, with a Ph.D. in economics, who believes that deflation is not bad.

Shelton goes beyond saying deflation is not bad. She claims deflation is good, stimulative, spurring economic activity, “enabling struggling consumers to get back in the game.” Amazing.

Here’s the story on deflation: As prices fall, no one has an incentive to purchase anything, the cost will be less tomorrow; consumption and investment decline. Borrowers pay with deflated dollars, making real interest rates very high, again leading to less investment and consumption. Wages don’t adjust quickly, leading to unemployment, 25 percent in the depression. Asset values decline, but debts become more burdensome, leading to credit defaults and over-leveraged banks, businesses, and consumers. Lending, borrowing, consumption, investment, and economic activity decline.

One problem of smart people pontificating outside their field is that they come up with ideas that sound good, don’t hold up to serious analysis. Economists have performed a huge amount of research on inflation and deflation, empirical research and theoretical research. The profession has rejected the thesis that deflation is good. The risk is that someone with authority listens to someone like Shelton and tries to implement her recommendations. That would be tragic. Bad policy leads to a bad economy, and the costs of a bad economy are immense and not just financial. Serious recessions change lives, usually for the worse. Careers, families, and lives are destroyed. It is a shame that Shelton has a mouthpiece as big as the Wall Street Journal.

3 Comments
  1. Joe Schmoe permalink

    Spoken with such confidence. Are you sure you are not a Keynesian?

    http://www.minneapolisfed.org/research/sr/sr331.pdf

  2. Bill Watkins permalink

    Joe Schoe,

    Thanks for the link. From the title, it looks interesting, and the authors are top notch. The link is not working this afternoon. It gets me the title page, then it collapses. I’ll try again in the morning.

    Bill

  3. It seems like deflation is a natural consequence of getting fiscal and regulatory policy wrong.

    There is such desperation now to keep credit expanding it is perplexing to me. There was this massive credit bubble, the largest in human history, and nobody did a thing about it and now they are doing everything in the world to keep this bubble that is full of holes from deflating. I can’t even begin to pretend to understand it. If we were back in the tulip bubble days the Fed would be propping up tulip prices and have a balance sheet full of tulip bulbs.

    With my limited mental capacity I try to figure it all out and have it make some sense but I have failed miserably. I can’t understand why it is such a great idea for people to be spending such a large part of their paychecks on homes. It seems to me if you have a consumption based economy you want people spending their money on everything else but the mortgage. You would think you would want all these overleveraged people, each a singular zombie bank, to shed their debt and do it right the next time. You would think you would want the lenders underwriting to real market based guidelines instead of the, clearly, uber-loose government sponsored guidelines. But no, credit must only expand and asset prices must be maintained.

    I understand the Fed trying to recapitalize banks but I don’t understand why they are doing it the way they are doing it. Banks are reporting profits engineered by a combination of reducing their building loan loss reserves (!) and the free money which they get to lend out or just plow back into Treasuries.

    I read in the paper the other day China was giving us criticism for interfering in the markets. China!

    Like I said, I don’t understand any of it. Every new day brings something new I get to shake my head in disbelief at.

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