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Debt, inequality and economic stability Steve Keen www.debtdeflation.com/blogs www.debunkingeconomics.com Neoclassical economics ignores debt, banks & money • “Keen … asserts that putting banks in the story is essential. • Now, I’m all for including the banking sector in stories where it’s relevant; – but why is it so crucial to a story about debt and leverage?...” • (Krugman 2012) • Ignorance of finance sector due to false model of money & lending – “If I decide to cut back on my spending – and stash the funds in a bank, – which lends them out to someone else, – this doesn’t have to represent a net increase in demand.” • (Krugman 2012) • “Loanable Funds” model of lending – Fixed stock of money (amount controlled by Federal Reserve) – Two types of agents (“patient” & “impatient”) – Patient generally lenders—high interest rate encourages high volume of Loanable Funds – Impatient generally borrowers—demand rises as interest rate falls Sustainable development & financial instability • Sees lending as occurring between non-bank “agents” • Banks mere intermediaries • Money absent from analysis: lending effectively of commodities today in return for more commodities in the future: – “In what follows, we begin by setting out a flexible-price endowment model in which “impatient” agents borrow from “patient” agents, but are subject to a debt limit… (p. 3) – “We assume initially that borrowing and lending take the form of risk-free bonds denominated in the consumption good” (p. 5) • Krugman & Eggertsson (2010) • Ignore aggregate debt because of asset-liability balance – “to a first approximation debt is money we owe to ourselves… – looking at the world as a whole, the overall level of debt makes no difference to aggregate net worth • one person’s liability is another person’s asset.” (p. 3) • Treat lending as “person to person”—not “bank to person” – But real lending is bank to person… Sustainable development & financial instability • Aggregate debt can’t be ignored in a genuine monetary economy – Money is a liability of bank sector to non-bank sectors of economy • Debt an asset of banking sector that sets servicing/repayment obligations on non-bank sectors • Expansion of bank assets & liabilities therefore increases aggregate demand – Growth of assets & liabilities is not economic-growth-neutral – If growth of debt results in debt servicing/repayment obligations that exceed capacity of non-bank sectors, economic collapse ensues. • Banks, debt & money must play essential roles in economic models • Illustrating difference between false Neoclassical vision of lending and accurate “Post Keynesian” vision… Sustainable development & financial instability • Neoclassical vision of lending would ultimately appear to bank sector… Assets Liabilities (Deposits) Equity Row Sum Patient Impatient Nothing +Loan -Loan 0 over here… No change in aggregate money supply Increase in liabilities shown as minus in double-entry bookkeeping • As lending ultimately appears in Post Keynesian model of lending… Assets Liabilities (Deposits) Equity Row Sum Loans Reserves Patient Impatient +Loan -Loan 0 Money supply grows by size of the loan Sustainable development & financial instability • In Open Source simulation program “Minsky” (developers click here) – Loanable Funds: • Endogenous Money: Sustainable development & financial instability • Why does it matter? • Neoclassical “Loanable Funds” vision—no change in aggregate demand: • Post Keynesian “Endogenous Money” vision—aggregate demand grows as debt grows • Macroeconomic impact: • Aggregate debt & change in debt have extreme impact on economic growth • Growing debt creates additional demand • Causes asset bubbles… Sustainable development & financial instability • How does change in debt feed into economic activity? • Two sources of monetary demand – Income (Wages + Profits) – Borrowing (Change in Debt) • Two categories of supply – Goods & Services (Consumer + Investment Goods/Services) – Net new financial assets • Schumpeter: – Incomes mainly spent on consumption – Change in debt main source of funds for investment • Minsky: Change in debt also finances Ponzi behavior d Wages + Profits + = D Consumption + Investment + NetAssetTurnover dt Sustainable development & financial instability • Aggregate Demand = Income + Change in Debt • Aggregate Supply = Good & Services + Net Asset Turnover d Y + D = GDP + NAT dt • Implications for macro & finance: NAT = PA ⋅ QA ⋅ TA – Change in debt a factor in level of employment, output – Debt acceleration drives change in GDP & asset prices 2 d d d d Y+ = D GDP + ( PA ⋅ QA ⋅ TA ) 2 dt dt dt dt • Change in debt explains crisis (& “Great Moderation” before it) • Accelerating debt explains why asset bubbles must burst Sustainable development & financial instability • Crisis can only be understood from dynamics of debt – Decline in income relatively mild… – But decline in debt change huge… USA GDP 7 2×10 7 1.9×10 7 GDP GDP + Debt Change BNP 1.8×10 7 US $ Million 1.7×10 7 1.6×10 7 1.5×10 7 1.4×10 7 1.3×10 7 1.2×10 7 1.1×10 7 1×10 6 9×10 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 www.debunkingeconomics.com Sustainable development & financial instability • Change in debt & unemployment… Debt contribution to demand & unemployment 30 Debt change Unemployment Rate 0 1 20 2 15 3 10 4 5 5 0 0 6 −5 7 − 10 8 − 15 • Correlation -0.76 9 − 20 10 − 25 11 − 30 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Sources: As for Figure 3 plus BEA GDP 2015 Percent unemployed (inverted) Percent of GDP p.a. 25 ZLB Sustainable development & financial instability • Acceleration of debt drives change in economic activity 15 3 10 2 5 1 0 00 −5 −1 − 10 −2 − 15 −3 − 20 −4 − 25 Credit Acceleration Employment Change −5 − 30 −6 1980198219841986 198819901992 1994199619982000 200220042006 200820102012 2014 www.debtdeflation.com/blogs Change in 100 minus unemployment rate p.a. Private Debt Acceleration p.a. as percent of GDP Credit Acceleration & Employment Change (Corr=0.69) Sustainable development & financial instability 7 21 6 18 5 15 4 12 3 9 2 6 1 3 0 00 −1 −3 −2 −6 −3 −9 −4 − 12 −5 −6 Mortgage Accelerator Change in Real House Prices − 15 − 18 −7 − 21 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 www.debtdeflation.com/blogs Percent change in real Case-Shiller Index p.a. Percent of GDP Mortgage Acceleration & House Price Movements (Corr=0.78) Sustainable development & financial instability • Accelerating debt drives change in stock market prices 2 40 1.5 30 1 20 0.5 10 00 0 − 0.5 − 10 −1 − 20 − 1.5 − 30 −2 − 40 − 2.5 −3 2001 Margin Acceleration Share Index Change 2002 2003 2004 2005 − 50 2006 2007 2008 2009 www.debunkingeconomics.com 2010 2011 2012 − 60 2013 Percent real change p.a. Percent of GDP p.a. Margin Debt Acceleration & Share Price Change (Corr = 0.81) The Financial Instability Hypothesis • Minsky has best verbal model of debt & instability – Economy in historical time – Debt-induced recession in recent past – Firms and banks conservative re debt/equity, assets – Only conservative projects are funded • Recovery means most projects succeed – Firms and banks revise risk premiums • Accepted debt/equity ratio rises • Assets revalued upwards… – “Stability is destabilising” • Period of tranquility causes expectations to rise… – Self-fulfilling expectations • Decline in risk aversion causes increase in investment • Investment expansion causes economy to grow faster – Rising expectations leads to “The Euphoric Economy”… The Financial Instability Hypothesis • Asset prices rise: speculation on assets profitable • Increased willingness to lend increases money supply – Money supply endogenous, not controlled by CB • Riskier investments enabled, asset speculation rises • The emergence of “Ponzi” financiers – Cash flow less than debt servicing costs – Profit by selling assets on rising market – Interest-rate insensitive demand for finance • Rising debt levels & interest rates lead to crisis – Rising rates make conservative projects speculative – Non-Ponzi investors sell assets to service debts – Entry of new sellers floods asset markets – Rising trend of asset prices falters or reverses The Financial Instability Hypothesis • Boom turns to bust • Ponzi financiers first to go bankrupt – Can no longer sell assets for a profit – Debt servicing on assets far exceeds cash flows • Asset prices collapse, increasing debt/equity ratios • Endogenous expansion of money supply reverses • Investment evaporates; economic growth slows • Economy enters a debt-induced recession – Back where we started... • Process repeats once debt levels fall – But starts from higher debt to GDP level • Final crisis where debt burden overwhelms economy – Modeling Minsky… Keen 1995 Model Foundations: Nonlinear dynamics • Growth Cycle model (Goodwin 1967, Blatt 1983) • Capital K determines output Y via the accelerator: K 1/3 Accelerator K 1/3 Y Y Goodwin's cyclical growth model 1.50 Accelerator • Y determines employment L via productivity a: l r 1 a Y Productivity l Labour a 1 1 LabourPopulation Productivity / r N L / Employment Wages 1.25 L l r 1.00 l / • L determines employment rate l via population N: .96 "NAIRU" + 10 L WageResponse 100 N 1 Population .75 * l r PhillipsCurve dw/dt l / .50 2 0 6 4 Time (Years) 8 10 • l determines rate of change of wages w via Phillips Curve + - Y w L + 1/S + Integrator + .96 "NAIRU" 10 WageResponse * W * Goodwin's cyclical growth model 1.3 Pi dw/dt PhillipsCurve I dK/dt 1.2 1.1 Wages Initial Wage •1 Integral of w determines W (given initial value) 3 Initial Capital Initial Wage dw/dt + 1/S + Integrator + 1.0 .9 w L 1/S + Integrator * W .8 .7 .9 • Y-W determines profits P and thus Investment I… Y W + - Pi I dK/dt • Closes the loop: 1 Initial Capital dK/dt .95 1 Employment + 1/S + Integrator 1.05 Adding Ponzi Finance • Realism: Capitalists invest more than profits during boom – Debt needed to finance excess • Embellishment: Distinguish productive from unproductive debt • As systems dynamic model: Capital l Output Productivity Equilibrium r Parameters / Employment l Population r / Graphs Switches Values Wages Output Profit Debt + Speculation + + r * Interest + TotalDebt d_ratio tdratio sratio Debt/Output 7.5 Debt to GDP 5.0 Productive Speculative 2.5 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Time (Years) E_rate WageShare Employment & Wages 1.00 Wage & Employment Dynamics Employment Rate Wages Share .75 Wages Share • Model predicts systemic breakdown as feasible outcome • But still only implicitly monetary • Explicitly monetary model (Graziani): Capitalism not barter (2-sided, 2 commodity exchange) but monetary (3 sided—seller, buyer, bank—1 commodity), money a non-commodity token .50 .25 0 0 10 30 50 70 1.00 .75 .50 .25 0 .3 90 .5 Time (Years) g_rate .7 .9 1.1 Employment Rate dratio_g sratio_g Rate of Growth Long Recovery/Boom, Short Slump 1.0 Change in Output Change in Debt to GDP Change in Speculative Debt to GDP .5 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Time (Years) 60 70 80 90 Explicitly Monetary Minsky Model • Input financial relations in Table: Assets Liabilities Equity d ReservesReserve =− A +Loan F Firm Deposit Worker Deposit Bank Equity dt Lend -AB A FL d V = − BV d Record Loan τ L (=π rA dt Loan ) −τ VF(π+r )G A Interest B dt BT d = ⋅ − ⋅ + − B r F r F H ( ) Pay Interest B ddt T L L D D D τ B -B Record FirmDeposit = A −-BB − C + D + E − F + G BV FL d dt Wages C = − + Y ⋅ Inv (π r ) -C FL τ V (π r ) τ L (π r ) Consumption D+E -D -E ddt WorkerDeposit = C − D B -F d Repay Loan F dt FD = ( rD ⋅ FD − rL ⋅ FL ) − W ⋅ L + V − FL + B T + H D + Y ⋅ Inv (π r ) Record -F τ V (π r ) τ L (π r ) τ B τ H dt d Money New G −DE d BankEquity= B H H D = rD ⋅ H D + W ⋅ L − dt Record τ G dt H • System of dynamic equations derived automatically: • Placeholders replaced by behavioural functions: Explicitly Monetary Minsky Model • Full system of 14 coupled differential equations Financial Sector d d d d d FL( t) ( ) − BV( t) ( ) BV( t) dt τ RL π r( t) BT( t) dt BT( t) rL⋅ FL( t) − rD⋅ FD( t) − rD⋅ HD( t) − τB BV( t) ( ) − τ LC π r( t) FL( t) ( ) ( + P( t) ⋅ Yr( t) ⋅ Inv π r( t) ) BV( 0) BV0 BT( 0) BT0 FL( 0) FL0 FL( t) dt τ LC π r( t) FD( t) dt FL( t) BT( t) HD( t) W ( t) ⋅ Yr( t) BV( t) − + + + P( t) ⋅ Yr( t) ⋅ Inv π r( t) − rD⋅ FD( t) − rL⋅ FL( t) + τ RL π r( t) τB τW a( t ) τ LC π r( t) FD( 0) FD0 HD( t) dt W ( t) ⋅ Yr( t) HD( t) + rD⋅ HD( t) − a( t ) τW HD( 0) HD0 τ RL π r( t) ( ) ( ( ) ) Physical output, labour and price systems Level of output Employment Rate of Profit Rate of employment Rate of real economic growth Kr( t) Yr( t) L( t) Yr( t) L( 0) a( t ) ( P( t) ⋅ Yr( t) − W ( t) ⋅ L( t) − rL⋅ FL( t) − rD⋅ FD( t) v ⋅ P( t) ⋅ Yr( t) λ ( t) dt g ( t) Yr0 v π r( t) d Yr( 0) λ ( t) ⋅ [ g ( t) − ( α + β ) ] ( Inv π r( t) v ) −δ ) π r( 0) L0 π r0 λ ( 0) λ0 g ( 0) g0 Explicitly Monetary Minsky Model • Generates both “Great Moderation” & “Great Depression” Inflation, Unemployment and Debt 25 500 Inflation Unemployment Debt to GDP 15 400 10 5 300 0 0 −5 200 − 10 − 15 100 − 20 − 25 0 10 20 30 40 50 0 60 Debt to GDP Ratio Percent Inflation & Unemployment Percent 20 Explicitly Monetary Minsky Model • Fits stylized facts of crisis Unemployment, Inflation & Debt (smoothed) 3 15 12.5 Percent 7.5 2 5 2.5 0 − 2.5 −5 1980 0 1.5 Unemployment Inflation Debt to GDP 1985 1990 1995 2000 Year 2005 2010 1 2015 Ratio to GDP 2.5 10 Debt and Inequality • Model fundamentally has 3 system states: – Rate of Employment – Debt to GDP ratio – Workers’ share of output • Equilibria of model involve – Rate of Employment – Debt to GDP ratio – Capitalists’ share of output • Workers income a residual after capitalists & bankers income • Residual necessarily falls as debt ratio rises • Workers pay for rising debt even if they have no debt • Necessary link between rising debt & rising inequality… Debt and Inequality • If income distribution ignored, all appears well until catastrophe strikes Income distribution & economic breakdown 100 Workers Capitalists Bankers 90 80 Percent of GDP 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 • Essential to restrain level of private debt to limit damaging inequality References • Grasselli, M. and B. Costa Lima (2013). “An analysis of the Keen model for credit expansion, asset price bubbles and financial fragility.” Mathematics and Financial Economics: 1-20. • Keen, S. (2013). “Predicting the “Global Financial Crisis”—Post Keynesian macroeconomics.” Economic Record • Krugman, P. (2012). “Minsky and Methodology (Wonkish).” The Conscience of a Liberal – http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/03/27/minksy-and-methodology-wonkish/ • Krugman, P. and G. B. Eggertsson (2010). “Debt, Deleveraging, and the Liquidity Trap: A Fisher-Minsky-Koo approach” [2nd draft 2/14/2011]. New York, Federal Reserve Bank of New York & Princeton University. Not “Double-counting”… • Income is wages plus profits • Divide profits into – Distributed profits – Retained profits YI= W + Π YI= W + Π= W + Π D + Π R • Expenditure (ignoring asset markets & government for the moment) – Is money spent buying either Consumer Goods or Capital Goods YE= C + I • Two sources of demand for Consumer Goods: Workers & Capitalists d CW= W + DWC dt d CΠ =Π D + DΠC dt • Borrowing by workers for consumption • Can be negative (=“savings”) • Borrowing by capitalists for consumption • Can also be negative (=“savings”) Not “Double-counting”… • Two sources of demand for Investment Goods – Retained earnings d – New debt I =Π + D R • Borrowing by firms for investment • Can be negative (=“savings”) dt FI • Comparing the two equations… YE= C + I d Y= ( CW + CΠ ) + Π R + DFI E dt d d d Y= E W + dt DWC + Π D + dt DΠC + Π R + dt DFI Not “Double-counting”… • Rearranging… d d d Y= W D D D + Π + Π + + + ( ) E D R WC FI ΠC dt dt dt • Subtract income from expenditure d d d YE −= YI (W + Π D + Π R ) + DWC + DΠC + DFI − (W + Π D + Π R ) dt dt dt • So expenditure equals income plus the change in debt d d d DWC + DΠC + DFI dt dt dt Still sounds like double-counting? – Yes probably: because of “ex-ante” vs “ex-post” confusion… Mathematical equality of recorded income & expenditure (“ex-post”) – Even though differ “ex-ante” (before the event) Debt injected at discrete points in time Added to spending from income at that time After that time, debt has boosted incomes Recorded levels are the same… YE = YI + • • • • • • Not “Double-counting”… • In a picture… Expenditure at time t Change in debt Income at time t • Measured income at time t is “income looking back” YI (t+) =lim+ YI ( s) s →t • This is identical to expenditure at time t YE (t= ) YI (t+= ) YI (t) + ∆D(t)