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Austrian Economics and Deflation in the Greater Depression

Why your knowledge about Austrian economics is important to you surviving the coming deflation and Greater Depression. Please scroll down to important article on Austrian economics.

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Prechter Discusses Market Forecasts on CNBC Closing Bell

"The problem is deeper than just a minor recovery or a minor recession."

Robert Prechter joins CNBC hosts Bill Griffeth and Maria Bartiromo on Closing Bell to talk about the still-unfolding forecasts presented in his New York Times bestseller Conquer the Crash.

We invite you to watch the interview below. Then download Robert Prechter’s free report that uses an 84-year study of stock market values to help you prepare for and understand today’s critical market juncture.

Download Robert Prechter’s Free Report To Discover How You Can Prepare For Today’s Critical Market Juncture

While we're sure you're reading countless articles and analysis about the market's recent volatility, if you're not reading what EWI's subscribers read, you're missing the valuable, prescient perspective contained in each issue of Robert Prechter's market letter, The Elliott Wave Theorist.

Access Robert Prechter’s free report and read in-depth analysis -- including an 84-year study of stock values -- that will help you prepare for and understand today's critical market juncture.

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AUSTRIAN ECONOMICS AND YOU

Austrian Economics - Deflation and you in the Greater Depression

By Delwyn Lounsbury - THE DEFLATION GURU

"There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved."

Ludwig von Mises - Austrian Economics

The Austrian economics school of thought favors small government and gold backed money as their main principles. Followers of Austrian economics believe emphatically that the larger the credit inflation the larger the crash when credit deflation starts in earnest. The money supply starts dropping faster than government can create money and credit. The deflation is the cure for too much credit inflation as unemployment rises, lenders become afraid to lend, borrowers become afraid to borrow and the crash and depression are then unstoppable. Currently the whole world is experiencing an unsustainable credit creation climax in the economy. In addition, the Austrian economists favored libertarian thinking, free enterprise, small government and freedom.

Early Austrian economics scholars were Eugen von Bohn-Bawerk, Ludwig von Mises, and Nobel laureate Friedrich Hayek. Henry Haslet, Murray Rothbard and Carl Menger were later proponents. Haslitt wrote a line-by-line critique of Keynes's “General Theory” work.

These men advocated property rights and freedom to contract and trade while opposing onerous taxes, price controls, big government and regulations which they felt all inhibit the entrepreneurial process.

They were for the following: a gold standard, sound money, balanced budgets, free trade, free enterprise, no monopolies, no export subsidies and for sure no government intervention and bailouts.

They rightly showed that the 1930's stock market crash and subsequent economic downturn was an Austrian economics business cycle event and a result of bank credit expansion in the Roaring 20's.

Joseph Schumpeter called the followers of Austrian economics the first real economists.

Socialism, Mises predicted, would end in utter chaos and the end of civilization. Keynesian economic theory which all modern governments and most current economists subscribe, with attendant big government can cure all and fix all credo, will lead us to the chaos and hyperdeflation. The nightmare the Austrian economics school of thought warns about is the result of credit inflation. It happens every time there is credit inflation on the scale we have seen since the Federal Reserve Bank was formed in 1913.

The deflation economics cycle top started with the 2000 dot com stock mania bubble climax peak may not end until 2016 to 2018. At that time most of your assets may have lost 90% in price and unemployment could be 30%. Even the price of gold may drop in half. CASH IS KING in deflation. Japan has seen deflation for 20 years and now the rest of the world is catching the epidemic. You cannot stop the pendulum from swinging. Deflation economics will continue until the inflation is wrung out of the system in this Greater Depression. Just like Austrian economics warned.

Austrian economics says gold must back a private (free enterprise) money or governments will inflate the heck out of a fiat money. Fiat money is money with no backing. Fiat is a French word meaning “let it be made.” Finally, all credit inflations (as opposed to currency inflations, which are bad enough) end in a crashing credit collapse. You and I are already 11 years into this Greater Depression which will result in a 90% plus drop in most assets values, a 50% drop in the price of gold and 30% unemployment.

The Anglo financial power elite that want to be "Big Brother" in a new world order/one world government (and one world currency) will have already sold most of their real estate and now will be selling and shorting stocks, commodities and all but the most pristine government debt.

Bonds may still loose value big time when interest rates rise as people and businesses scurry around borrowing to stay afloat. Austrian economics indicates many junk bonds may go to zero.

Finally, Austrian economics says these Ango financial power elite powers-that-be will want a strong more valuable U.S. dollar (as they take the last of our freedom and liberty) since most of their money is in the safety of America and Wall Street. They have will be planning to buy assets back at "fire sale" prices of 10 cents on the dollar after 2016. Hurry and get prepared by buying gold after a 61.8% drop from its recent high of $1,912 per ounce! Only private money backed by gold is honest money. Don't let government control the money creation. Austrian economics is important to your family’s survival! Austrian economics says all credit inflations end in a nasty violent credit deflation - like the one we are having now. EVERY TIME!

www.mises.org is the web site for the Ludwig von Mises Institute and a great source of information about Austrian economics and about how fiat money inflation has lead to deflation and now the Greater Depression which will be twice as large and twice as long as the Great Depression of the 1930's.

Copyright 2011 by Delwyn Lounsbury - THE DEFLATION GURU

Use of this article allowed with attribution back to:

http://www.deflationeconomy.com

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AUSTRIAN ECONOMICS

Steven Horwitz is the Charles A. Dana Professor of Economics at St. Lawrence University in Canton, NY. He is the author of two books, Microfoundations and Macroeconomics: An Austrian Perspective (Routledge, 2000) and Monetary Evolution, Free Banking, and Economic Order (Westview, 1992), and he has written extensively on Austrian economics, Hayekian political economy, monetary theory and history, and the economics and social theory of gender and the family. His work has been published in professional journals such as History of Political Economy, Southern Economic Journal, and The Cambridge Journal of Economics. He is also an Affiliated Senior Scholar at the Mercatus Center in Arlington, Virginia where he has published public policy research on Walmart's role in Hurricane Katrina recovery as well as on the ongoing recession. His current project is a book tentatively titled Classical Liberalism and the Evolution of the Modern Family. Horwitz is the book review editor of the Review of Austrian Economics, an associate editor of the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, and a co-editor of the book series Advances in Austrian Economics. He is also a contributing editor and weekly online columnist for The Freeman.

From: www.dailybell.com

Daily Bell: What is the role of government if any?

Steve Horwitz: Well sometimes it depends what day of the week you ask me but certainly I have not ever seen a case for government to do something that is so persuasive that I think it's conclusive. That does not mean that such a case could not be argued, but my working hypothesis is that the role for government should be little to nothing and to the extent that is has a role it should be as decentralized, small and localized as possible. I am a great believer in governance. I'm a great believer in rules. I'm a great believer that groups of people need to organize themselves according to rules, but I am also a great believer that government works best when it's small, decentralized and voluntary.

Daily Bell: Do you believe the current war on terror is justified?

Steve Horwitz: No. We have created this enemy, terrorism, which we will never defeat, because it's not a person or a place, it's an idea. We will always continue to invent new ghosts to scare us. The American people have been so willing to give up so many liberties in the name of this abstract fight against something that in some sense does not even exist as a thing to fight. It is a war that can never be won because the enemy is so amorphous. It stuns me how quickly people have preferred the illusion of security over their own liberties. Throwing ourselves into serfdom over this constructed thing called terrorism is just a mistake.

Daily Bell: What kind of war is justifiable, if any?

Steve Horwitz: Genuinely out of defense. There is never justification for the initiation of coercion, whether it's by states or by individuals.

What Is Deflation: First Step, Understand It There is still time to prepare if deflation is indeed in our future. August 16, 2010 By Elliott Wave International "Fed's Bullard Raises Specter of Japanese-Style Deflation," read a July 29 Washington Post headline.

When the St. Louis Fed Chief speaks, people listen. Now that deflation -- something that EWI's president Robert Prechter has been warning about for several years -- is making mainstream news headlines, is it too late to prepare?

It's not too late.

There are still steps you can take if deflation is indeed in our future. The first step is to understand what it is. So we've put together a special, free, 90-page Club EWI resource, "The Guide to Understanding Deflation: Robert Prechter’s most important warnings about deflation." Enjoy this quick excerpt. (For details on how to read this important report free, look below.)

When Does Deflation Occur? By Robert Prechter

To understand inflation and deflation, we have to understand the terms money and credit.

Money is a socially accepted medium of exchange, value storage and final payment; credit may be summarized as a right to access money. In today’s economy, most credit is lent, so people often use the terms "credit" and "debt" interchangeably, as money lent by one entity is simultaneously money borrowed by another.

Deflation requires a precondition: a major societal buildup in the extension of credit (and its flip side, the assumption of debt). Austrian economists Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek warned of the consequences of credit expansion, as have a handful of other economists, who today are mostly ignored. Bank credit and Elliott wave expert Hamilton Bolton, in a 1957 letter, summarized his observations this way:

In reading a history of major depressions in the U.S. from 1830 on, I was impressed with the following: (a) All were set off by a deflation of excess credit. This was the one factor in common. (b) Sometimes the excess-of-credit situation seemed to last years before the bubble broke. (c) Some outside event, such as a major failure, brought the thing to a head, but the signs were visible many months, and in some cases years, in advance. (d) None was ever quite like the last, so that the public was always fooled thereby. (e) Some panics occurred under great government surpluses of revenue (1837, for instance) and some under great government deficits.

Near the end of a major expansion, few creditors expect default, which is why they lend freely to weak borrowers. Few borrowers expect their fortunes to change, which is why they borrow freely. The psychological aspect of deflation and depression cannot be overstated. ...

Read the rest of this important 90-page Robert Prechter's report online now, free! Here's what else you'll learn:

What Makes Deflation Likely Today? How Big a Deflation? Why Falling Interest Rates in This Environment Will Be Bearish Myth: "Deflation Will Cause a Run on the Dollar, Which Will Make Prices Rise" Myth: "Debt Is Not as High as It Seems" Myth: "War Will Bail Out the Economy" Myth: "The Fed Will Stop Deflation" The following is from www.mises.org:

Is Deflation Really Bad for the Economy? Mises Daily: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 by Frank Shostak

On Friday, July 30, the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank president, James Bullard, speaking on CNBC television, said that the Fed must weigh medium-term inflation risks against near-term deflation risks. For most economists and commentators, a general fall in prices, which they label deflation, is a terrible thing. They hold that a fall in prices generates expectations for a further decline in prices. As a result of this, consumers postpone their buying of goods at present because they expect to buy these goods at lower prices in the future. Consequently, this weakens the overall flow of spending, and that in turn weakens the economy.

A fall in consumer expenditure subsequently not only weakens overall economic activity but also puts further pressure on prices, so it is argued. Note that from this it follows that deflation causes a spiraling decline in economic activity.

From this way of thinking, one could conclude that a general fall in prices should be associated with an economic slump. Indeed, during 1932, the fall in the CPI of 10.3% was associated with a fall in industrial production of 21.6%. But is it true that a fall in prices should always be bad news for the economy?

Take, for instance, a case where a general fall in prices results from an expansion in the production of goods and services. Why should this be classified as bad news? On the contrary, every holder of money can now command a larger quantity of goods and services; therefore, people's living standards are going up — so what is wrong with that?

Does a General Fall in Prices Cause People to Postpone Buying? If prices are trending down, does it mean that people will stop buying at present? As a rule, most individuals are trying to maintain their life and well-being. This of course means that they will not postpone their buying of goods at present.

For instance, since January 1998 the price of personal computers has fallen by 93%. Did this fall in prices cause people to postpone buying personal computers? Not at all. Consumer outlays on personal computers have increased by over 2,700% since January 1998.

Now, if deflation leads to an economic slump, then, following the logic of the popular thinking, policies that reverse deflation should be good for the economy. Since reversing deflation means introducing policies that boost a general increase in the prices of goods — inflation — this means that inflation could actually be an agent of economic growth.

For most experts, a little bit of inflation can actually be a good thing. Hence they would like the Fed to generate an inflation "buffer" to prevent the economy from falling into a deflationary black hole. They hold that a rate of inflation of around 3% could be the appropriate protective "buffer." It is held by mainstream thinkers that inflation of 3% is not harmful to economic growth, but inflation of 10% could be bad news.

In this way of thinking, at an inflation rate of 3%, consumers will not postpone their spending on goods and hence will not set in motion an economic slump. But then, at a 10% rate of inflation, it is likely that consumers are going to form rising inflation expectations. According to the popular thinking, in response to a high rate of inflation consumers will speed up their expenditure on goods at present, which should boost the economic growth. So why, then, is a rate of inflation of 10% or higher regarded by experts as a bad thing? Clearly this type of thinking is problematic.[1]

A General Fall in Prices and the Money Supply A general fall in prices can also emerge as a result of a fall in the money stock. An important cause for such a fall is a decline in fractional-reserve lending. The existence of a central bank and of fractional-reserve banking permits commercial banks to generate credit not backed up by real savings, i.e., credit created out of thin air. Once the unbacked credit is generated, it creates activities that the free market would never support — activities that consume, and do not produce, real wealth. As long as the pool of real savings is expanding and banks are eager to expand credit, various false activities continue to prosper.

Whenever the extensive creation of credit out of thin air lifts the pace of real-wealth consumption above the pace of real-wealth production, this undermines the pool of real saving. Consequently, the performance of various activities starts to deteriorate, and bank's bad loans start to rise. In response to this, banks curtail their loans by not renewing maturing loans and this in turn sets in motion a decline in the money stock.[2]

The point that must be emphasized here is that the fall in the money stock that precedes price deflation and an economic slump is actually triggered by the previous loose monetary policies of the central bank and not by the liquidation of debt.

It is loose monetary policy that provides support for the creation of unbacked credit. Without this support, banks would have difficulty practicing fractional-reserve lending.

The unbacked credit in turn leads to the reshuffling of real savings from wealth generators to non–wealth generators. This in turn weakens the ability to grow the pool of real savings, which in turn weakens economic growth.

It must also be emphasized here that government outlays are another important factor undermining the pool of real savings. The larger the outlays are, the more real savings are diverted from wealth generators.

"Under deflation, it is those non–wealth generating activities that end up having the most difficulties in serving their debt, because these activities were never generating any real wealth and were really supported or funded, so to speak, by genuine wealth generators."Many commentators, including Bernanke, are of the view that a fall in prices raises the debt burden and causes consumers to repay their debt much faster. Rather than using the money in their possession to buy goods and services, consumers use a larger portion of their money to repay their debt.[3]

In this way of thinking, a continuous debt liquidation could put severe pressure on the money stock and in turn on household demand for goods and services. All this, Bernanke believes, could lead to a prolonged decline in the price level. A fall in the price level in turn raises the debt burden and leads to a strengthening in the process of debt liquidation. Hence, to prevent this downward spiral, Bernanke recommends aggressive monetary pumping by the central bank.

Again, the debt liquidation and emerging price deflation are not the causes of the economic slump but the necessary outcomes of the previous loose monetary policies of the Fed, which have weakened the pool of real savings. Also note that it is not a fall in prices as such but instead the declining pool of real savings that raises the debt burden and intensifies price deflation. The declining pool weakens the process of real-wealth generation and in turn weakens borrowers' ability to serve the debt.

Similarly, it is not increases in real interest rates, as suggested by many commentators, but a shrinking pool of real savings that undermines real economic growth. On the contrary, increases in real interest rates put things in proper perspective and arrest the wastage of scarce real savings, thereby helping the real economy.

Now if the pool of real savings is falling, then even if the Fed were to be successful in dramatically increasing the money supply and increasing the price level, i.e., countering deflation, the economy would still follow the declining pool of real savings.

Contrary to the popular view, in this situation the more money the Fed pushes into the economy, the worse the economic conditions become. The reason for this is that more money only weakens the wealth-generating process by stimulating nonproductive consumption (consumption that is not preceded by the production of real wealth).

Why Deflation Heals the Economy As we have seen, deflation comes in response to previous inflation. Note that as a rule a general increase in prices, which is labeled inflation, requires increases in the money supply. Hence a fall in the money supply leads to a fall in general prices — labeled as deflation. This amounts to the disappearance of money that was previously generated out of thin air. This type of money gives rise to various nonproductive activities by diverting real savings from productive real wealth generating activities.

Obviously, then, a fall in the money stock on account of the disappearance of money out "of thin air" is great news for all wealth-generating activities; the disappearance of this type of money arrests their bleeding. A fall in the money stock undermines various nonproductive activities. It slows down the decline of the pool of real savings and thereby lays the foundation for an economic revival.

But what about the fact that a general decline in prices is accompanied by a fall in general economic activity? Surely this means that deflation may be bad news for productive and nonproductive activities? The fall in economic activity, as we have already shown, comes not on account of falling prices, but on account of a fall in the pool of real savings.

The emergence of deflation is the beginning of the process of economic healing. Deflation arrests the process of impoverishment inflicted by prior monetary inflation. Deflation of the money stock, which as a rule is followed by a general fall in prices, strengthens the producers of wealth, thereby revitalizing the economy.

Obviously, the side effects that accompany deflation are never pleasant. However, these bad side effects are not caused by deflation but rather by the previous inflation. All that deflation does is shatter the illusion of prosperity created by monetary pumping.

Again, it is not the fall in the money supply and the consequent fall in prices that burdens borrowers but the fact that there is less real wealth. The fall in the money supply, a money supply created out of "thin air," puts things in proper perspective. As a result of the fall in money, various activities that sprang up on the back of the previously expanding money supply now find it hard going.

It is those non–wealth generating activities that end up having the most difficulties in serving their debt, because these activities were never generating any real wealth and were really supported or funded, so to speak, by genuine wealth generators.

Contrary to the popular view then, a fall in the money supply is precisely what is needed to set in motion the buildup of real wealth and a revitalizing of the economy. Printing money only inflicts more damage and therefore should never be considered as a means to help the economy.

Conclusion

Despite the almost-unanimous agreement that deflation is bad news for the economy's health, that idea is false. As we have seen, deflation comes in response to previous inflation. This amounts to the disappearance of money that was previously generated out of thin air. This type of money gives rise to various nonproductive activities by diverting real saving from productive activities.

Obviously then, a fall in the money stock on account of the disappearance of money created out of thin air is great news for all wealth-generating activities. The disappearance of this type of money arrests their bleeding. A fall in the money stock undermines various nonproductive activities; it therefore slows down the decline of the pool of real savings and lays the foundation for an economic revival.

It must be realized that it is only commercial-bank lending not backed up by proper savings (fractional-reserve banking) that can disappear into "thin air," thus causing the decline in the stock of money. Money, which is fully backed up by savings, once repaid by the borrower to the bank, is passed back to the original lender and therefore cannot disappear unless the original lender decides to physically destroy it. From this, we can infer that the greater the percentage of credit created out of thin air is in relation to overall credit, the greater is the risk of a large fall in the money stock once the pool of real savings starts declining.



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