The Fed and the Joy of Joblessness
by Seth Sandronsky
The Federal Reserve Bank (Fed) hiked key interest rates by 0.5% on May
16 to halt what it called "inflationary imbalances." Inflation is usually
measured as the percentage increase of prices for consumer items such as
energy, food and housing (called the Consumer Price Index). Yet the CPI
remained virtually unchanged during April.
However, the Fed's action has changed the lives of many U.S. workers and
their families. For May, there were 116,000 private-sector layoffs, an
eight-year high, according to the Labor Department. On this news, the
NASDAQ rose 230 points to cap a one-week jump of more than 600 points, an
all-time best for percentage growth.
With capitalistic vision, the June 2 Financial Times editorialized,
"Rarely has so much joy been shown at a rise in unemployment as it was
Friday in the US." The next day, Louis Uchitelle reported in the New York
Times that May's job cuts are "the strongest signal yet that the booming
American economy is finally slowing."
The conventional wisdom generally accepts the Fed's line that increasing
joblessness is the way to fight inflation (our economy's worst enemy). But
is
the current triumph of Fed policy the complete story?
Consider the role of debt in the American economy. For the vast majority of
Americans--hourly workers and small-business people--the Fed's policy is
hurtful due to their growing reliance on credit to make ends meet.
Between December 1994 and December 1999, consumer credit rose $437
billion, an increase of 45%.
Borrowed money is also sustaining the U.S. trade deficit, the gap between
imports bought and exports sold. In March 2000, our trade deficit soared to
a record $30.2 billion. Though workers' wages and benefits climbed 1.4
percent during January through March (almost an 11-year high), the U.S.
trade
deficit is growing by about $1 billion a day.
Meanwhile, buying on credit and going into debt has lowered our rate of
personal savings, down 74% since 1997. In a related development, U.S. banks
now have the lowest levels ever of required reserves (credit balances with
the Fed and vault cash for emergencies) as a percentage of deposits, writes
Andrew Caughey.
He continues: "Required reserves on savings accounts were eliminated in
1990, at a time when banks were weakened by losses in the commercial real
estate market. Sweep accounts (moving customers' deposits into checking
accounts not subject to reserve requirements) for retail or non-business
accounts began to spread in 1994. These two developments have reduced
required reserves to their lowest level in history."
Significantly, reducing required reserves has increased banks' expansion
of credit. Caughey asks, "If debt-money creation underlies the current
economic boom, what will sustain it in the future?" (The Pulse of
Capitalism, April 2000). The Fed knows that the answer to his question will
affect creditors and debtors here and around the world.
For now, the Fed's raising of interest rates may calm lenders who are
nervous about Americans' soaring indebtedness. One example is the growing
U.S. trade deficit being financed by Japanese lenders. They are now earning
ahigher rate of profit for the risk of lending to indebted Americans.
However, increasing the cost of borrowed money cuts two ways. Fed
policy of interest rate increases runs the risk of drying up the demand for
credit. Could this be a fate worse than debt?
On one hand, Americans' use of credit has resulted in our being the
biggest private debtor in the world. On the other, this trend also means
that American and foreign firms and workers are vulnerable to the Fed's
hikes in the cost of borrowed money.
If workers buy less on loaned money, firms would sell less. With
falling sales, firms would be forced by market competition to cut costs.
Under Fed policy to make borrowed money more expensive, some firms would
be forced to survive by worker layoffs. What Marx called "the reserve army
of the unemployed" would grow. And this "army" has grown, with the official
U.S. jobless rate rising to 4.1% in May versus 3.9% in April.
As market competition drives some firms to the wall, workers who stay
employed could be forced to accept lower wages and worse working
conditions.
This would in part cut workers' income to buy goods and services. In
turn, their weakened purchasing power would slow business investment.
Mr. Dow and Mr. Jones could also take a hit if the Fed continues to
raise the cost of borrowed money.
"A rapid rise in interest rates threatens to collapse the stock market
bubble, leading to an outflow of capital which has increasingly found its
way on to Wall Street," notes Nick Beam (wsws.org, 5-25-00). Capital
flight, of course, was a key factor in the East Asian financial crisis
three
years ago.
Back to Wall Street now, Fed interest-rate increases could pinch the
profits being returned to stock market investors who, in turn, buy luxury
items. This is the stock market's so-called "wealth effect," and its
slowing down would also slow business investment.
To be sure, the world is watching to see if Fed policy will keep our
"booming economy" on track. Given the Fed's six interest-rate increases
during the past year, can debt-driven spending and speculating continue to
keep employment and investment chugging along? Or, is the April 14 loss of
$2 trillion in shareholder wealth a sign of more financial turbulence to
come? Perhaps this is the calm before the storm of global capitalism. Time
will tell.
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