Sunday 12 December 2021

The Trouble with Wealth

Living in a World with too much capital

Inequality is usually pictured as the obscene contrast between grinding poverty and unmerited opulence, between mile-long queues at food banks and corporate CEOs buying gold wrapped steaks with their £5 million annual salaries. Hunger in the midst of unbelievable plenty.

Or, in economic terms, through the irrationality of a system that blocks the flow of money to the mass of people, thus creating a demand problem as the poor – or not wealthy – are far more likely to spend their income than the rich.

There is nothing wrong with viewing inequality in these ways but in my opinion they leave something important out. What they overlook is that great wealth is a problem in itself, not just in relation to poverty. This is because wealth is invariably transmuted into capital – money invested in order to make money which is then reinvested again in a never-ending process. And capital which is not directed to a palpable collective need, inevitably distorts society and makes solving urgent problems such as climate change all but impossible.

A Tale of Two Factors

Economists often refer to capital and labour as “factors” in production, i.e. inputs that enable goods or services to be produced and turn a profit. As shown by heterodox economist Harry Shutt, western economies hit a benign equilibrium during the post-war boom (1950-73) in that there was strong demand for both factors – capital and labour. The result was extremely low unemployment (around 3% in Britain) and buoyant growth in fixed investment (capital investment in physical assets such as factories, buildings, equipment, vehicles etc.) that actually exceeded GDP growth.

However, after stagnation set in the mid-70s, the rate of fixed investment fell below GDP and unemployment began to rise. The decline in fixed investment has continued over the ensuing decades, dropping from 20% of GDP in France, Germany, Britain, Japan and the US in 1980 to 14% in 2015. Unemployment spiked in the 1980s and ‘90s. Its subsequent official decline has much to do with compelling individuals to take any available work – Germany introduced ‘mini-jobs’, for example, and on-demand labour and self-employment have mushroomed everywhere. In Britain, if you work for one hour a week, you’re counted as employed. And in order to “make work pay” it is subsidised by the state in the form of tax credits.

In essence, intensified by technological advancement, the demand for both factors of production – capital and labour – waned significantly. However, the way they were treated could not have been more different. Labour, if organised, was denigrated as a pariah and a self-interested impediment to the production of goods and wealth. Unions were ensnared by legal restrictions and the unemployed compelled to retrain and make themselves attractive to employers.

Capital, by contrast, – despite facing, in Shutt’s words, “a demand-supply imbalance comparable to that of labour” – was fêted as the essential ingredient of wealth creation. Entrepreneurs were lauded, profitability seen as a desideratum that benefited all, and the rate of return demanded on capital was intensified. In addition, the “wall of money” at the top of society was augmented by an influx of pension funds into financial markets which naturally demanded a healthy return in order to pay their beneficiaries.

The result has been an immense surplus of capital which cannot be sated by purely physical innovation but is nonetheless perpetually in search of profitable opportunities. This state of affairs distorts society in multiple ways. One way has been a turn to debt-based speculation entirely unrelated to material assets. This path caused the 2008 financial crisis. But there are many other examples.

Gimme Shelter

The environment is one. Oil companies have responded to looming climate catastrophe by transforming their rhetoric but little else. They proclaim a commitment to a ‘green transition’ but still try to “optimise” their oil and gas portfolios and prioritise new exploration. Investment in renewable energy is so low it doesn’t warrant a distinct category in their accounts. Many institutional investors, such as pension funds, charities, and universities, under pressure from climate activists, are committed to divesting from such companies and investing in renewables. However, hedge funds – pooled investment funds patronised by extremely rich individuals that aim to beat average market returns – have stepped into the breach. They are buying large stakes in oil companies, pushing up their share price. “People don’t understand how much money you can make in things that people hate,” commented one manager.

Thus the surplus of capital is ensuring that any progress made on climate change is, under this economic system, instantly reversed.

The financialisation of housing is another way capital is perverting a basic social need. In countless cities around the world, rents have shot up after investors – invariably an unholy combination of hedge funds, private equity funds, and Real Estate Investment Funds (REITS) – have bought up whole blocks of rental properties, viewing them as lucrative income streams. Alternatively, housing is demolished to make way for luxury apartments. Berlin presents an extreme case. €42 billion was spent on large-scale real estate investment between 2007 and 2020.  According to one analyst, after the 2008 financial crisis, investors were looking for a place to put their money and set their sights on Berlin. In a city where 85% of the residents are renters, rents have increased by 70% in nine years. Despite the existence of a strong cooperative sector and state-owned housing companies, over four in 10 rental properties in the German capital are owned by either financial market investors or big, private landlords.

Unsurprisingly, given the city’s culture, there is resistance. In September, a referendum in favour of expropriating Berlin’s largest corporate landlords, who collectively own 11% of apartments in the city, was passed. Whether the result will be carried through, however, remains doubtful.

One way of looking at the frenzy for privatisation which has taken hold throughout the world since the 1980s is not just in terms of corporate capture or ideological monomania, but as an outlet for an ever-growing mass of surplus capital. Privatisation is a longing that can never be quenched. In the first stage of privatisation state-owned industries were hived off to the market in one-off sales. But that was just the appetizer. Now private capital is guaranteed an income stream by running, on a contract basis, public services funded by taxation. In Britain, railways and buses, even spy planes, are operated in this fashion, while the state-funded National Health Service is gradually being hollowed out by private provision. In 2010, the NHS spent £4.1 billion on private sector contracts. Nine years later, this figure had more than doubled.

‘Exiled’ former Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn posed a genuine threat to these vested interests – through for example a pledge to “renationalise” the NHS. He jeopardised an extremely fruitful, and necessary, income stream and thus had to be destroyed.

Globally, a kindred process has occurred. Where public services have not been gutted, the state serves as a convenient shield behind which public funds are directed into private hands. Under the guise of attaining universal health coverage, the Kenyan government has subsidised access to private care, given private providers higher reimbursement rates and formed public-private partnerships with international companies at great expense. All this has been done at the behest of international agencies such as the World Bank and billionaire charities like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

“More and more people have been priced out of health care because of their socioeconomic situation and inability to access private care either because of the expenses involved or because the type of help they are looking for is not available, because it's not profitable”, says an author of a report on the subject.

There are numerous other instances of the pernicious effects of surplus capital scouring the globe to meet its unquenchable appetites. A partial list must include the warping of democracy and the media, the money laundering role of football, and the targeting of children by consumer giants. The problem of inequality – and thus contemporary capitalism – is apparent not just in too little money at the bottom of society, but too much at the top.

Check Your Privilege

But curiously one could argue this is contrary to the original purpose of capitalism. Defenders of the system are fond of pointing out its modernizing character in contrast to atavistic socialism. However, the myriad anti-social effects of surplus capital serve to illustrate how we in the 21st century are living according to the dictates of a 19th century system. Modern capitalism and its attendant institutions were born at the height of the Victorian age. Stock markets and joint-stock companies (later known as corporations) were created to facilitate outside investment – capital – in economic enterprises and limited liability laws introduced to protect investors by ensuring that if their chosen enterprise failed, they would lose nothing more than the original sum they ventured. Shutt calls “the privilege of limited liability”– which still exists – “the bedrock of capitalism”.

In the description of Canadian law professor Joel Bakan, “the modern corporation was invented in the mid-nineteenth century to help create pools in investment capital needed to finance new and growing industrial ventures, like railways, steamship lines, and factories.” Corporate law, he says, was “designed to incentivize and thereby produce the fuel, capital, that the system needs to operate.” Without it, “the whole system, not just the corporation but capitalism itself, would grind to a halt.”

Arguably, at the time, incentivizing the “fuel” did produce immense dynamism and social benefit in the form of railways, steamship lines etc. Even Karl Marx was impressed, paying tribute to the “colossal productive forces” unleashed by the bourgeoisie. But now this “fuel” is primarily engaged in a compulsive and blind search for profit, no matter whether this adds to social welfare, or more likely, degrades it. To stretch Bakan’s metaphor, the van is now full but the pump is still spewing out more petrol which is spilling all over the station forecourt and running down the street.

The capital imperative is now not merely anachronistic and anti-social but positively deadly. We now know that order to stand some chance of staying within the limit of no more than 1.5 degrees of global warming by 2050 – and thus potentially dodging catastrophic climate tipping points – the vast majority of fossil fuel reserves must remain in the ground. However, such a philosophy of abstention is utterly alien to the nature of capital which is myopically impelled to exploit short-term profit. And in a world of boundless surplus capital – with each fragment on an eternal search for profitable opportunities – such an endeavour is doomed from the start.

In 2014, geographer David Harvey estimated that capital had to find profitable opportunities worth $2 trillion in order to satisfy the requisite ‘return on investment’. By 2030, he gauges, that need will have increased to around $3 trillion. “Thereafter the numbers become astronomical,” he writes. “Imagined physically, the enormous expansions in physical infrastructures, in urbanisation, in workforces, in consumption and in production capacities that have occurred since the 1970s until now will have to be dwarfed into insignificance over the coming generation if the compound rate of capital accumulation is to be maintained.”

And we also have to imagine what non-physical – i.e. speculative – investment will do to the world in the coming years.

Bending the Knee

But, perversely, rather than face up to this literally unsustainable situation, the world’s governments have chosen to artificially turbo-charge capital creation. Through the central bank policy of Quantitative Easing, the quantity of money in the financial system has been massively expanded – by an estimated $13.9 million a minute since 2020. As a result, developed economies have largely weathered the Covid outbreak but at the cost of hugely increased inequality. The combined wealth of US billionaires has risen by 70% since the start of the pandemic, a period of a little more than 18 months. In Britain, the number of billionaires has jumped by a quarter while globally billionaire fortunes have increased by 27% in the context of an expected rise in extreme poverty for the first time this century. For reference a billion is a thousand million.

But those are merely the personal effects. QE has also instituted fake stock market booms, facilitated the lucrative practice of companies taking over their rivals (to no-one’s benefit bar senior executives and bankers), produced skyrocketing property prices in the UK, and swelled the resolutely short-termist venture capital industry. In short, rather than – heaven forbid – standing up to the immensely powerful vested interests around capital enrichment, governments have chosen to bend the knee and grant their every wish. Contrast this with the way defenceless benefit claimants are treated and you have an insight into the mentality of most politicians.

There is a current in left-wing thought that is indifferent to wealth inequality, viewing it as far less pernicious than income inequality despite the fact that it is more extreme. Before the pandemic, wealth inequality was rising in 49 countries. Its enormous increase in the brief time since Covid struck has prompted calls for a tax on wealth. But if wealth inequality has spiralled in such a short period, what will happen in the years to come when many of its causes will likely remain untouched? A wealth tax will be a mere drop in the ocean.

Great wealth is profoundly undemocratic, concentrating economic decision-making in fewer and fewer hands. But it also ensures that capital enrichment, a process which profoundly hurts and perverts society, is set in stone and will intensify year by year. The time is coming when we will find what it does intolerable.


Thursday 28 October 2021

The Horror, the Horror .... the Silence. Conservatives and unconditional income

 

The 20th century Polish economist Michał Kalecki noted an apparently perplexing trait of business leaders and their bought “experts”. One would expect such people to oppose public investment much more vehemently than subsidizing mass consumption because the former contains the possibility of competition from state enterprises. But such expectations are misplaced. “Indeed”, said Kalecki “subsidizing mass consumption is much more violently opposed by these experts than public investment. For here a moral principle of the highest importance is at stake. The fundamentals of capitalist ethics require that ‘you shall earn your bread in sweat’ – unless you happen to have private means”.

Kalecki was writing in the 1940s with an eye on the previous decade. But his observations are particularly apposite to our own era.

Boris Johnson revealed the lingering mind-set of conservatism when he justified ending the £20 uplift to Universal Credit by citing his “strong preference” that people see their wages rise “though their efforts” rather than by welfare.

The same mentality was at work in the pervasive uneasiness around the now defunct furlough scheme which was only introduced under pressure from lame duck Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and the unions. It can still be seen in the ‘get back to the office’ propaganda that conservatives and business executives – supported by the media – routinely dish out.

The anxiety – verging on horror – that these schemes provoke in conservatives stems from the fact that, in Kalecki’s words, “a moral principle of the highest importance is at stake”. That principle is the maintenance of work discipline. The sanctions regime at the heart of Universal Credit exemplifies the edict of conservatives – big C conservatives and those who go by other nomenclature – that no money be given to ordinary people without stringent conditions.  “Please keep on cracking the whip,” exhorted Good Morning Britain host Richard Madeley earlier this week in true conservative style.

But note Kalecki’s caveat – “unless you happen to have private means”. In which case, all qualms instantly vanish. In fact, regarding the lack of actual work undertaken by the ultra-rich, a veil of silence reigns.

So what do you do?

The existence of huge swathes of people who receive large amounts of money without doing anything to earn it is capitalism’s dirty little secret. “What do capitalists actually do?” asks mathematician David Schweickart in his 2002 book After Capitalism. The answer is very little. They have an entirely passive role. “The capitalist” he says “engages in nothing that can be reasonably regarded as ‘productive activity’. Workers produce and distribute goods and services. Salaried managers coordinate production. Entrepreneurs and other creative personnel develop new products and techniques of production. The capitalist qua capitalist does none of these things.” In sum:

In a capitalist society, enormous sums are paid to people who do not engage in any entrepreneurial activity or take on any significant risk with their capital. Trillions flows to shareholders who make an entirely passive contribution to production.

Some have tried to quantify the enormity of these “enormous sums”. According to economists Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, around 30% of all income produced in the United States is paid out as “capital income”. These payments, in the form of interest, rents and share dividends, are “entirely passive”. They comprise “income divorced from work”.

But conservatives are, to borrow a phrase from Peter Mandelson, “intensely relaxed” about this form of unconditional basic income. In fact, they’d rather not talk about it if you don’t mind.

Capitalism, but not as we know it

However, this was the income distribution under capitalism. The past tense is not a typo. Because under the state capitalist system we’ve inhabited since the financial crisis – one vastly ramped up by the Covid pandemic – the passive income of the ultra-rich has been multiplied many times over by the actions of the state.

This process goes by the name of Quantitative Easing (QE) – so-called because it increases the quantity of money in, putatively the economy, but in reality swishing around the financial system.

QE is an extension of practices undertaken by central banks before the financial crisis over a decade ago – known as Open Market Operations – but one that vastly changes their nature. Central banks used to buy assets from commercial banks in order to ensure they had cash in order to settle their day to day transactions with each other, but these purchases were only very short-term. The assets would usually be sold back after a week.

However, under QE the central banks uses the money only it can create to buy assets – government bonds, corporate bonds or mortgage-backed securities usually – outright. Not temporarily. That why, under QE, the balance sheets of central banks have grown exponentially.

As a result of QE the bank or corporation that sells the assets suddenly has an enormous amount of cash to spend. The volume of financing under QE is astronomical, amounting to $834 million an hour by central banks worldwide. By buying the assets, the central bank causes their prices to rise and their yield to fall. The sellers – the banks and corporations – are therefore ‘incentivised’ to put their new money elsewhere, for example into shares or property or acquisitions. Thus, synthetic ‘asset booms’ are generated and the prices of assets rise. In theory, QE is meant to generate a ‘wealth effect’ in the ‘real economy’ by stimulating investment and lowering the borrowing costs for corporations. But there is no evidence this actually happens.

What there is evidence of is an immense, artificially induced, increase in the wealth of the ultra-rich. The combined wealth of US billionaires, for example, has risen by 70 per cent (!!)* since the beginning of the pandemic, a stretch of a little more than 18 months. That is, during a period of severe economic contraction – not to mention prolonged suffering endured by many people – billionaire wealth has leapt from just under $3 trillion to over $5 trillion. In addition, the number of billionaires in the US has risen from 614 in March 2020 to 745. According to Ruchir Sharma of Morgan Stanley Investment Management (and he should know) “the fundamental driver … of the billionaire boom” is “easy money [QE and ultra-low interest rates] pouring out of central banks.” For a sense of perspective here, a billion is a thousand million.

That’s capitalism folks. Except of course it isn’t just capitalism. Pure capitalism, inequality generating machine though it undoubtedly is, does not increase billionaire wealth by 70% in a year and a half all by itself. In essence, the passive wealth accruing nature of capitalism – the ‘normal’ workings of the market – has melded with the passive wealth accruing intervention of central banks – the abnormal workings of the state capitalist regime. But about both unconditional fountains of income for the rich conservatives are, almost universally, mute.

Drop the Pilot

However, the deafness is not limited to conservatives. Leftists also seem unable to grasp the nature of QE. Often the only problem they have with the “easy money” regime is that they think it should be redirected. The authorities, it is said, seem peculiarly oblivious to the unsuccessful nature of QE: that – despite the vast sums involved – it doesn’t actually seem to stimulate the economy.

As an alternative, many advocate cutting out the middleman and instituting so-called “helicopter money”. This involves the metaphorical ‘dropping’ (the term was coined by right-wing economist Milton Friedman in 1969) of large amounts of free money into ordinary citizens’ bank accounts. The theory is that this will actually stimulate the economy as poor (or not rich) people, unlike “high net worth” individuals, are liable to spend the money rather than save it. And it can achieve this at a fraction of the cost of QE.

The problem is that helicopter money flagrantly transgresses Kalecki’s “moral principle of the highest importance”. It doles out unconditional income to the multitude. Therefore, whatever its economic rationality, it won’t be allowed to happen. QE only appears unsuccessful. It wasn’t ever seriously intended to stimulate the economy. QE has served – and continues to serve – its real purpose. It preserves the existence of large corporations and banks and bolsters the wealth of the mega-wealthy.

For conservatives, that is justification enough. As for the rest of us the whip needs to keep being cracked, as it has been for centuries past.

*Elon Musk, CEO of electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla and potential coloniser of Mars, tops the list. He has seen his wealth grow from a mere $24.6 billion in March 2020 to $209.3 billion in October 2021, a rise of 750%. Indeed, he subsequently saw his fortune increase by another $36.2 billion in one day in October. You could argue that this latest alignment of cherries has something to do with the ‘natural workings’ of capitalism. Rental car firm Hertz placed an order for 100,000 Teslas. But even here the fingerprints of the QE regime are all over the deal. Last year Hertz declared bankruptcy but under the strange conditions of QE infinity its share price surged and it issued $1 billion worth of new shares. If the ‘laws’ of capitalism existed anymore, Hertz wouldn’t be around to wave a magic wand over Elon Musk’s wealth.

Wednesday 6 October 2021

'To every one who has, more will be given'. Can Quantitative Easing last?

Austerity and Quantitative Easing, the two signature economic policies of the second decade of the 21st century, possess an uncanny symmetry. The former was a brutal snatching away of funding from the poorest in society such that life expectancy was diminished, while the latter, despite the free market rhetoric, was – and is – a massive unconditional subsidy to the richest.

Both are profoundly ideological. Austerity was presented as a penance for the sin of previous overspending, a rooting out of waste and inefficiency and a long overdue imposition of “tough love” on the unemployed and disabled. Quantitative Easing (QE) was framed as a vital injection of liquidity into a flagging economy, technocratic medicine that, according to the BBC, encourages “people to save less and spend a bit more”.

Both conceptions are utterly misleading. The UK was never on the verge of becoming financially like Greece after the Eurozone debt crisis, and years of austerity failed to even make a dent on government debt. The huge rise in government borrowing precipitated by the Covid pandemic – more than £300 billion – and last year’s £16 billion hike in defence spending have both materialised without the gods of the market punishing us with financial ruin.

QE, meanwhile, was never about encouraging banks to make loans, companies to invest or consumers to spend money. Interest rates – the cost of borrowing money – are already so low as to provide adequate incentive for the taking out of loans or consumer spending in preference to saving. If people aren’t doing so, there must be other reasons for their reticence. “Think about it:” write the authors of Do Central Banks Serve the People? “if investors are reluctant to invest in the real economy with interest rates already at the zero lower bound, under what circumstances, if any, would extra liquidity be sufficient to change their mind?”

Thus the “extra liquidity” of QE, one must conclude, has remained within the financial system. The creation of $834 million dollars an hour by the world’s central banks has fuelled asset bubbles – in company shares, property and, after at first freezing in the wake of the pandemic, in corporate mergers and acquisitions. “Dealmakers”, it is comforting to know, “are having a record year”.

The classic explanation for inflation is too much money chasing too few goods. If the staggering amount of money created by central banks had really been “pumped into” the economy, as the bedtime story tells us, it would show up as inflation. Undeniably inflation is rising but not by anything like the level implied in the standard narrative of QE.

This indicates a crucial difference between austerity and QE. Both are ideological constructs but austerity has a placebo quality – its purpose lay entirely in the perception that it was necessary. QE – actual, real-world QE – by contrast really was, and is, necessary.

The Long 2010s

Government cannot go bankrupt, the gurus of modern monetary theory assure us. But the private sector definitely can and ever since the demise of Lehman Brothers in 2008, governments around the world have strained every sinew to ensure the contagion of insolvency doesn’t spread. The initial bank bail-out was followed by successive batches of QE around the world. The US Federal Reserve increased its balance sheet in the first tranche of QE by $4.5 trillion. The Bank of England has resorted to QE every time the economy has hit turbulence – after the credit crunch, after the Brexit vote and now during the pandemic.

It is commonly accepted that QE works to ensure, artificially, a low effective interest rate (whilst increasing the price and reducing the yield on government bonds, incentivising investors to shift into other assets). So-called zombie companies – firms that do nothing more than survive by meeting the interest payments on their debt and paying wages – are permitted to live on thanks to rock bottom interest rates. It is estimated that a fifth of US and European companies are zombies.

The silent assassin

Interest rates are a potentially devastating tool of government policy. When she first gained office in Britain, Margaret Thatcher hiked interest rates. They peaked at 17% in late 1979 and didn’t drop below 10% until 1983. The ostensible aim was to bring down inflation but the side effect, many think consciously pursued side effect, was to send countless companies to the wall – the UK’s manufacturing sector, which contained many unionised firms, shrunk by a quarter in the first wave of Thatcherism and unemployment rose to more than four million.

This mirrored what was happening in the US where a doubling of the interest rate – dubbed the “Volker shock” after the head of the Federal Reserve, Paul Volker – also precipitated a wave of bankruptcies and send unemployment soaring. The Volker shock also caused international interest rates to spike, triggering many developing countries to default on their loans and sparking the so-called Third World Debt Crisis. Mexico was the first to default in 1982 and others followed. Countries were forced to go cap in hand to the IMF which imposed free market structural adjustment programmes as a condition of support. Thus the worldwide market fundamentalism of today can plausibly be traced back to a massive rise in interest rates four decades ago.

So, for a seemingly arcane financial instrument, interest rates can have shattering consequences. And as a general rule, high interest rates cause bankruptcies while low interest rates preserve companies that would, under free market conditions, go under.

The Janus Face of Interest Rates

It might seem therefore that today’s ultra-low interest rates are a good thing – the government’s bank rate is currently 0.1%, the lowest for hundreds of years – because they stave off suffering both personally and for the economy as a whole. But it’s not that simple. Low interest rates, because they make the cost of borrowing so low, encourage speculation which is exactly the flaw in the economy exposed by the financial crisis and which has only got worse since. They also make it easier to be indebted.  In late 2020 non-financial corporate debt hit $11 trillion and for the first time exceeded global GDP.

Near zero interest rates thus have to remain incredibly low in order to make the debt they encourage manageable. But if, for example, inflation takes hold, higher interest rates may become necessary to combat it by damping down demand the economy. And inflation, it should be stressed, doesn’t just affect creditors and the wealthy. By making basic goods and outlays like rent more expensive, inflation makes life harder for most people.  Thus policymakers are in a quandary.

Low interest rates also seem to require endless QE, a perpetual subsidy to the wealthiest, to remain low. Obviously there is more than one kind of interest rate. The official bank rate, set by the Bank of England, is augmented by countless other interest rates –for example, the rates given or charged by commercial banks or mortgage interest rates. They will usually roughly follow the bank rate.

According to economist Harry Shutt, if markets were “undistorted” (i.e. didn’t have QE), banks and others would refuse to hold the huge debt of corporations without demanding a much higher interest rate. “Rates would have rapidly risen to unaffordable levels, probably 10 per cent or more,” he writes, “thus precipitating mass bankruptcy in both public and private sectors.”

Destined to Repeat it?

Clearly markets, notwithstanding the propaganda, aren’t suddenly going to become undistorted.  Authorities will use every weapon in the arsenal – no matter how much they contradict free market doctrine – to ward off systemic market collapse. They have also, one would assume, learned the lessons of the recent past. The 2008 Financial Crisis had its proximate cause in the steady raising of interest rates by the Federal Reserve (mirrored by other central banks). They rose from 1 per cent in 2003 to 5.25% in 2007. As a result US mortgage interest rates increased and holders of sub-prime mortgages began to default, leading to a nationwide collapse of the housing market.

So central banks will not willingly hike interest rates or end QE unless compelled to do so. They can, it might be assumed, continue to follow the example of Japan, which pioneered QE and has taken it further than anyone else. This is a world of low growth, low interests rates and low inflation – unequal, rigged and immensely unfair – which nonetheless persists for fear of the alternative. Or the pain of the real economy, probably exacerbated by inflation, could compel the authorities to change tack.

At present, the financial system and the economy most people actually inhabit seem to exist in near total isolation from each other. The former prospers while the latter suffers. If their fates realign, things could get very interesting.

You can read part one of this article here

 

 

 

 

 

Monday 13 September 2021

Corporate Socialism and the Capitalist Underclass

 

Politics now – witness Keir Starmer’s neo-Blairite recapturing of the UK Labour party seems to inhabit a mental universe of its own creation rather than trying to deal with the inconvenience of reality. And occasionally the dissonance reaches comical heights of absurdity.

Boris Johnson, for example, when asked recently to justify the ending of the £20 uplift for Universal Credit recipients in October – which the government’s own internal modelling concedes will have a “catastrophic” effect – replied that it was his “strong preference” that people saw their wages rise “though their efforts” rather than through the taxation of other people.

Effort you say. Leaving aside that most people on Universal Credit are actually in work – and thus already are making an effort – the preferences of conservatives don’t seem to stretch to the most glaring welfare dependence affecting society today – the mammoth no strings giveaways to corporations and the immensely wealthy. Which curiously aren’t ending next month and necessitate about as much effort as turning a computer on.

Austerity in reverse

In the aftermath of the Great Financial Crisis of 2008, the world’s central banks (state banks like the Bank of England or the US Federal Reserve) literally created $10 trillion. In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, they created a further $9 trillion. For the past 18 months, central banks have generated $834 million an hour. This goes by the innocent sounding name of Quantitative Easing (QE for short).

QE is initiated by the central bank bringing into being a batch of new money (often called ‘fiat money’ i.e. money without the backing of gold – from the Latin meaning ‘let there be money’. Don’t picture a Fiat 500, that doesn’t capture its size). This is used to buy assets, usually government but also occasionally corporate bonds (debt), from banks, insurance companies or pension funds.

This has two main effects. One is to force interest rates down to very low levels, thus enabling heavily indebted institutions to survive. And the second is to create – by the buying of the assets – a huge mass of money ($13.9 million each minute) seeking investment opportunities and which is incentivised by the low interest on government bonds to go into other assets such as shares, property or commodities. As a result of this influx, their price increases.

QE is invariably presented as “pumping” money into the economy. In reality it involves pumping huge amounts of money into the financial system. Banks are not inclined to lend to the ‘real’ economy, which is the official story behind QE, if returns from buying and selling other assets (such as company shares) are higher. Corporations are not motivated to invest in plant or equipment if they can make more money from buying back their own shares, whose value is guaranteed by QE. Mergers and acquisitions – buying a company, asset-stripping it and selling it on – are also fuelled by the vast funds created by QE.

In theory, QE can be an emergency measure, helping the economy through a rough patch, and then being reversed so that ultimately no new money is created. But this is not how it turns out in practice. The Bank of Japan is still engaging in QE 20 years after it pioneered the policy. In 2018, the Federal Reserve started ‘quantitative tightening’ – the selling or retiring of assets on its balance sheet – but had to call a halt to the process less than a year later because of a negative reaction from markets. This was, it should be stressed, before the pandemic.

Rich bono

Unsurprisingly given how it works, QE has a hugely regressive effect on inequality. It’s not rocket science to understand that if the value of shares goes up, the prime beneficiaries are rich people because they are most likely to own shares. Additionally, banks and corporations benefit because they own shares in each other. “Owners of property have made out like bandits,” said hedge fund owner Paul Marshall in 2015. “In fact, anyone with assets has grown much richer. All of us who work in financial markets owe a huge debt to QE”.

The latest, Covid-inspired, rush to QE has massively exacerbated this inequality. Five million more millionaires were created during the pandemic, while the number of people worth more than $50 million increased by a quarter. Stock markets have hit record highs despite precipitous drops in GDP. In Britain, contrary to all previous recessions, property prices have continued their upwards trajectory. The world is awash with central bank money,” says economist Grace Blakeley, “and it’s all flowing up rather than trickling down”.

Take from the poor and give to the rich

The QE reflex exposes just how right-wing – across the political ‘divide’ – our politics is, notwithstanding ephemeral lapses like Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party. In 2019 the China-based economist Michael Pettis mused over two different ways to stimulate an economy – “giving to the rich” and “giving to the poor”. Giving to the rich involves tax cuts for business and the wealthy and policies such as QE “which tend to cause a rise in the prices of assets, most of which are owned by the rich.” Giving to the poor, in Pettis’s description, entails cutting taxes on the not wealthy, funding social safety nets, creating jobs or “setting minimum basic income policies”.

It’s revealing that the response of the British government – and other western governments – to the financial crisis and the Covid pandemic has almost exclusively centred on the first option. In addition to endless QE, corporation tax has fallen from 28% to 19% (it is slated to rise to 25% in 2023 but whether that will happen is a moot point). The top rate of income tax was also cut by George Osborne in 2012 and, if that wasn’t enough, capital gains tax (the tax you pay when you sell shares) was slashed by the soon-to-be newspaper editor in 2016.

As for the second option, it is not a question of giving to the poor but rather of taking from them. Taxes which affect poor people the most, such as VAT and now National Insurance, have been hiked. Social safety nets, by contrast, have been cut – witness the benefit freeze, sanctions, and the £30 cut in weekly payments to disabled people. Creating jobs has been left to the tender mercies of the private sector, and as for basic income policies, I think there’s been a pilot project in Finland. In Britain, destitution and food banks are the preferred course of action.

Boris Johnson’s “strong preference” for people to see their incomes rise “through their efforts” strangely only applies to folk without share portfolios. “The imbalance is unbelievable,” says Robert Reich, former labour secretary under Bill Clinton in the US, “Socialism for the rich, corporate socialism, but the harshest form of capitalism for most working people and the poor.”

The whimper of capitalism

 Of course, the notable feature of “corporate socialism” – apart from its colossal unfairness – is that it’s not capitalism anymore. QE is a massive distortion of the fêted free market. The theory of capitalism is that asset values are based on economic fundamentals – if stock prices rise that is because people believe, maybe mistakenly but genuinely, that the companies in question will generate profits in the future. Under the QE regime, they are rising because the state, in the guise of ‘independent’ central banks, is injecting huge amounts of money into markets.

Former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis sees this as a momentous change. Pre-financial crisis capitalism (before 2008) may have been based on “daylight robbery” – the extraction of rent from a market controlled by Coca-Cola or General Electric – but it was still rooted in some kind of market and driven by private profits. That is no longer the case:

Then, after 2008, everything changed. Ever since the G7’s central banks coalesced in April 2009 to use their money printing capacity to re-float global finance, a deep discontinuity emerged. Today, the global economy is powered by the constant generation of central bank money, not by private profit.

To be more precise, the pursuit of private profit is still at the heart of the system – we haven’t socialised hedge funds – but the profit urge does not ‘make the world go round’. Central banks do.

 Market society, not economy

The supreme irony is that while the economic summit of society is changing into something that is not capitalist, capitalist values are penetrating ever more deeply into the texture of life. Economic and monetary values dominate politics and morality and we seem unable to value non-economic realms without assigning them a financial status, such as “natural capital”.  Individual endeavours, such as learning, physical fitness, volunteering, or nurturing ‘mindfulness’ are frequently seen in terms of their effect on our employability and careers, and undertaken for that reason.

In the 1980s, the social ecologist Murray Bookchin pioneered the idea that we don’t just live in a market economy, but also a market society. By the middle of the 20th century, he said, “large-scale market operations had colonised every aspect of social and personal life.” The prognosis in the second decade of the 21st century is that we seem to live in a market society without the concomitant market economy. Or possibly an irredeemably rigged market economy.

How long will it last?

The ultimate question is whether this regime of corporate socialism is sustainable. Japan, “the petri-dish” of Quantitative Easing, been following the policy since 2001 – several years before the rest of the advanced capitalist world followed in its wake. Indeed, it has deepened the practice considerably, coming to own around half the company shares quoted on the Tokyo stock exchange. “If this trend continues it is evident that the Japanese state will become the de facto owner of the bulk of what has been the hitherto privately owned enterprise sector,” wrote economist Harry Shutt in 2019.

However, from the point of view of the powerful and wealthy in Japan, the discernible effects don’t appear catastrophic. Profit has continued to be extracted, well-known corporate forms have endured and, if there has been a quiet revolution in ownership under the surface, it hasn’t resulted in a shift in power. In fact, inequality, low growth, ferocious competition for jobs and little prospect of pay rises, have, far from inculcating a spirit of rebellion, fuelled a culture of conservatism among Japanese youth.

The rulers of our society don’t have, despite the propaganda, a fervent ideological commitment to the free market, but merely a belief in private property. If that endures, they are satisfied.

The lingering question is, if Japan has indulged the QE fixation for two decades without presaging economic Armageddon, are western economies free to follow its example and practice QE for years, decades even, and emerge basically unscathed? Or are we preparing the ground for a financial collapse of mammoth proportions?

I want to address this question in the second part.