Who Benefits from Deflation?
by TRNN
Pollin: Deflation is dangerous to overall economy, but Fed policy is no solution
Bio
Robert Pollin
is Professor of Economics and founding Co-Director of the Political
Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst. His research centers on macroeconomics, conditions for low-wage
workers in the U.S. and globally, the analysis of financial markets,
and the economics of building a clean-energy economy in the U.S. Most
recently, he co-authored the reports “Job Opportunities for the Green
Economy” (June 2008) and “Green Recovery” (September 2008), exploring
the broader economic benefits of large-scale investments in a
clean-energy economy in the U.S. He has worked with the United Nations
Development Programme and the United Nations Economic Commission on
Africa on policies to promote to promote decent employment expansion and
poverty reduction in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa. He has also
worked with the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress and as a
member of the Capital Formation Subcouncil of the U.S. Competiveness
Policy Council.
PAUL JAY, SENIOR
EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay, coming to
you again from the PERI institute in Amherst, Massachusetts. A few days
ago we interviewed Bob Pollin. We were talking about news stories. Here
it is again. The "Fed tries to energize the recovery". And underneath
here it says, "Smiling stocks, bummed out bonds". Now joining us,
codirector of the PERI institute Bob Pollin will help us try to
understand all of this. Thanks for joining us again. Alright. So what
does this mean, "Smiling stocks, bummed out bonds", based on the Fed
saying they're going to buy $600 billion of bonds? So what is this
about?
ROBERT POLLIN, CODIRECTOR, POLITICAL ECONOMY
RESEARCH INSTITUTE: Well, basically the idea is that the interest rates
are going to go down so that that means the yields, I mean the amount of
money you make on interest rates on bonds, is based on the interest
rate.JAY: So let's talk about who this affects. So, first
of all, retired people or somebody with a little bit of savings, they
want to put their money someplace really safe, and often what they do is
they buy bonds. So they got the bonds in the bank now. How does that
affect an ordinary person who's got some savings in bonds in a bank?
What happens to [inaudible] POLLIN: Well, okay, so let's
say you're earning a Treasury bond. I mean, the rate is fixed on the
bond. So the rate is, let's say, 3 percent. Now, the Fed is going to go
in and start buying those bonds. The price on the bonds will go up, so
at least in the short term they'll benefit. What's going to happen is
that the rates on new bonds is going to go down. But the real concern
here with bondholders, because the rates are fixed (a 3 percent bond is a
3 percent bond no matter what happens in the next 25 years), is
inflation. So if you're going to get a 3 percent return, but the value
of the dollar goes down because of inflation, then, you know, if you're
going to get, you know, $30 on a $1,000 bond, the value of that $30,
what you can buy for $30, is also going down.JAY: Right.
So if you've got more or less zero percent inflation and you're getting 3
percent of your bond, you're making 3 percent. But if inflation's 3
percent and you're getting 3 percent on your bond, you're down to zero.
Now, so the Fed is saying that we can do this quantitative easing,
increasing the money supply, in a way that isn't inflationary, up to a
point. So why are bondholders so concerned, then?POLLIN: Because they want to make sure.JAY: They don't believe [inaudible] POLLIN:
It is going to be inflationary. How much it's going to inflationary is
an issue. But, you know, what these people are ignoring is that the
greatest danger to the financial system, including themselves, is
deflation, because deflation means, conversely with inflation, that the
value of the dollars is going up, the value of the dollar is going up.
So that means that debt holders—it's going to be more difficult for
people to pay off their debts. In a deflation it's more difficult to pay
off your debts. In an inflation, with cheaper dollars, it's easier to
pay off your debts.JAY: But if you own government bonds,
are you doing fine with deflation? 'Cause now your 3 percent's worth
even more, and when you cash out your bond, your dollars buy even more.
So you might actually like deflation.POLLIN: Yeah, yeah. I
mean, again, that's very short-term, narrow thinking, because if we
think about the financial system as a whole, if we already have a very
fragile financial system, if you have a deflation and on average it's
more difficult for everybody to pay off their debts, we will have more
debt defaults. The kinds of things that happened, you know, a year and a
half ago will certainly reemerge. Ordinary people will start
defaulting, foreclosing. That will inevitably happen as a consequence of
deflation.JAY: So if you're really focused on your bonds
and on your savings accounts, what—you may think you're protecting this,
but as the whole economy is burning around you.POLLIN: That's right.JAY: In which case, in the end you might be dealing with such a collapse that what you had may not be worth much anyway.POLLIN:
Well, yeah. I mean, you can say, great, deflation is good for me
because I'm still going to get $30 on a $1,000 bond, and $30 will buy
more because prices have fallen.JAY: Well, is this part of
the problem is that there's a lot of people sitting on a lot of cash
right now? And as you've pointed out in previous interviews, some of the
big banks are sitting on almost $1 trillion of cash. A lot of
businesses are staying liquid, a lot of investors are staying liquid.
They're all—want—so—and if you're sitting on a lot of cash, then maybe
austerity measures, no stimulus, and deflation is good for you, 'cause
at some point you're going to be able to buy back in at bargain prices.POLLIN: Yes. I mean—.JAY: Except a lot of people are going to lose their houses and homes [inaudible] POLLIN:
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, yeah, it's playing with fire, because you can say,
yeah, when the value of—when deflation hits, the value of my money goes
up, I'm sitting on $1 trillion, and now I can buy more with $1 trillion
dollars than I could last year. But then all that ignores is the fact
that it's also more difficult for each and every person that is a debtor
in this economy, it makes it more difficult for them to pay back their
debts. And when that happens, of course, you can have a massive debt
devaluation because there's all these defaults out there. That's what
happened a year and a half ago. And, by the way, we really haven't had
any experience with major deflation in this economy. So we [are] moving
into uncharted territories. It's extremely dangerous. Bernanke himself
and actually even Greenspan acknowledge this. So the notion that
deflation is a solution to everything is scary.JAY: The—it
kind of leads you to this thing is that these really are class issues.
Like, if you're on the side of sitting on a lot of dough and you want
short-term gain, and then, you know,
après moi, la déluge [sic],
you know, if I make my short-term gain, then the hell with what comes
next, you're in this camp. If you're trying to think longer-term, you're
in this other camp. But it seems like in this last vote there's a heck
of a lot of people voted either for the short-term gain or out of the
fear of inflation.POLLIN: Who knows what they were voting
for. I mean, they're voting for the fact that they don't have jobs, that
we're at, as you said in the last interview, properly measured, nearly
20 percent unemployment. People can't pay off their mortgages. They're
getting, you know, fear of being tossed out of their homes. They think
the government is arrogant. We've borrowed all this money, there's a big
deficit, and there's no jobs. I mean, I don't think that most people
are thinking much beyond that. If they are, they're fairly
sophisticated. And, unfortunately, sophisticated people, [it] turns out,
don't really understand what's going on either.JAY: Or just want to make a quick buck.POLLIN:
Yeah. Well, they certainly want to make a quick buck. Now, whether you
can make a quick buck in a deflationary environment, again, I think it's
very, very tenuous. I can certainly play out the logic, but I can play
out the other logic. When, you know, tens of millions of people can't
pay off their debts, they—. JAY: The unfortunate thing is
the way to make a quick buck in this economy is take your dollars and go
to Asia and Latin America and do your investments over there and let it
burn here a little longer.POLLIN: Okay. Yeah. That's certainly the thought.JAY: Thanks for joining us.POLLIN: Okay. Thank you.JAY:
I think if the question is what should people at home do, start to
understand economics. And that's what we're going to try to do. Let's
have a real debate about what's going on and what we can do about it.
Thanks for joining us on The Real News Network.
End of Transcript
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