What Goes Up . . . → Washingtons Blog
What Goes Up . . . - Washingtons Blog

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

What Goes Up . . .

Everyone knows that the Great Depression followed the "Roaring Twenties".

But how many Americans know that the easy credit and loose lending of the Twenties was what caused the Great Depression?

Japan's "lost decade" of deflation was also mainly caused by a credit bubble.

And the greatest financial crash of all time - the crash of 1340 in Venice, Italy, which brought on a new dark age - was similarly caused by too much credit. For example, Jesús Huerta De Soto’s book Money, Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles, shows that:

Real estate prices fell by 50 percent by 1349 in Florence when boom became bust. That boom was fed by bank money creation:

"Evidence shows that from the beginning of the fourteenth century bankers gradually began to make fraudulent use of a portion of the money on demand deposit, creating out of nowhere a significant amount of expansionary credit. Therefore, it is not surprising that an increase in the money supply (in the form of credit expansion) caused an artificial economic boom followed by a profound, inevitable recession."

Indeed, even some Keynesians - those spendthrifts that brought us the New Deal - now acknowledge that "reaction to phases of excessive boom" was one of the primary causes of major recessions.

The fact that crashes follow too-easy expansion of credit is so predictable that those in the know - like the Austrian school of economics - use it to predict upcoming crashes.

And that is why, in June 2007, the BIS - the "central banks' central bank" - "warn[ed] of Great Depression dangers from [the] credit spree":

The Bank for International Settlements, the world's most prestigious financial body, has warned that years of loose monetary policy has fueled a dangerous credit bubble, leaving the global economy more vulnerable to another 1930s-style slump than generally understood.

"Virtually nobody foresaw the Great Depression of the 1930s, or the crises which affected Japan and southeast Asia in the early and late 1990s. In fact, each downturn was preceded by a period of non-inflationary growth exuberant enough to lead many commentators to suggest that a 'new era' had arrived".
Will we ever learn? There can never be a "new era" where a horrible crash does not follow limitless credit expansion like night follows day.

But no one in Congress (other than a handful of members) understand this. Bush and Obama's economic advisors either don't know about our economic history or pretend they don't know.

Mark my words . . . if the politicos try to "kick the can down the road" by creating some new bubble, it will end the same way.

The law of booms and busts should be taught to every kid in school. Unless we learn - as a culture - to moderate our booms, we will always be subject to cruel busts.

And since the Fed has become the chief bubble creator in modern times, we should abolish the Fed.

Note: W
hile some writers have blamed the plague, famine and other problems which came after the 1340 crash on that financial crash, others have blamed climate or other factors. So the crash might not have been as bad as suggested.

2 comments:

  1. Pumping up the money supply should melt a credit freeze. The Fed chairman faces huge obstacles
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    us on a course toward inflation. Inflation happens when prices rise. Deflation happens when
    they fall. In this December's dark economy, falling prices for gasoline, cars, and clothes and
    just about anything would seem like a silver lining.

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