Title: The global debt bubble
1The global debt bubble
- Steve KeenUniversity of Western Sydney
2A booming economy
- Seventeen years of growth
3A booming economy
- Fifteen years of falling unemployment
4A booming economy
- And 43 years of debt rising faster than GDP
5Having the (borrowed) time of our lives
- Another look at the medium term trend
- Does that look sustainable to you?
6Asset Rich and Debt Poor
- But not as fast as debt has risen
7Asset Rich and Debt Poor
- And housing assets have risen only because
theyve become more expensive
8Volatile Prices Sluggish Output
- Additions to housing stock lower in 2004 than in
1997
- We had a borrowing boom, not a building boom
9Volatile Prices Sluggish Output
- Which is why were having a rental crisis
- But even rents havent kept pace with debt
servicing
- Apparent high value of assets illusory
10Volatile Prices Sluggish Output
- Houses more expensive simply because weve been
willing to borrow more money to buy them - Prices up 250 since 1996 mortgage debt up 520
11Whos having a housing bubble then?
- Australias house price bubble even bigger than
USAs - And still growing!
12Ponzi Households
- Lending for housing rose from 5-25 of GDP
- Proportion that financed construction fell from
30 to under 10
- No wonder were having a rental crisis
- We didnt build (m)any houses!
- Whats driving the debt?
13Having the (borrowed) time of our lives
- Theres something systematic going on here
- And were not alone unfortunately
14Having the (borrowed) time of our lives
- Not for the first time in our history either
15The Ponzi Economy
And Our Generation?
Baby Boomers Follies?
1890s Depression
Great Depression
Melbourne Land Boom
Roaring Twenties
What comes next?
16The Ponzi Economy
- Correlation isnt causation, but
Clearly exponential process
Biggest bubble in our history
- Serious Depressions after previous two debt
bubbles - What can we expect after this one?
- According to RBA, theres nothing to worry about!
17Efficient markets financial democracy?
- Ric Battellino, Deputy Governor, RBA
- Has the expansion of household credit run its
course? Will it reverse? We cannot know the
answer to these questions with any certainty, but
my guess is that the democratisation of finance
which has underpinned this rise in household debt
probably has not yet run its course... - Eventually, household debt will reach a point
where it is in some form of equilibrium relative
to GDP or income, but the evidence suggests that
this point is higher than current levels. - (Battellino, Some Observations on Financial
Trends, 25 September 2007)
Heading to equilibrium??
Skip Model
Analysis, or wishful thinking?
18Another interpretation limitless lending
- Whos in control of the money supply and debt?
- Economics textbooks
- The Government/Central Bank
- Central Bank creates base money
- Sets money multiplier
- Credit Money Base Money Credit Money
- Economic data
- There is no evidence that either the monetary
base leads the cycle, although some economists
still believe this monetary myth. - the monetary base lags the cycle slightly
- The difference of M2-M1 leads the cycle by
about three quarters. (Kydland Prescott 1990,
p. 15)
19The new monetary paradigm
- Money supply endogenous
- Credit money not under government control
- Inherent bias towards providing as much debt as
can flog - How does it work? Simple!
- Consider bank loan of L to Firm
- Simultaneously creates Deposit L and Loan L
- Charges rL p.a. on loan
- Pays rD p.a. on deposit
- And so on
- Put together flows you can understand credit
creation - Starting from the beginning
- Loan by bank created both money and debt
20Money from nothing, but your cheques aint free
- Loan an asset of bank
- Simultaneously creates liability of money in
firms deposit account
- Sets off series of obligations
- Interest charged on loan at rL p.a.
- Interest paid on deposit at rD p.a. where rL gt
rD - Third account needed to record this Bank Deposit
BD
21Money from nothing, but your cheques aint free
Interest flows banklt?gtfirm
Wage flows firm?gtworkers
Interest flows bank?gtworkers
Consumption flows bank workers?gtfirms
New Money/Debt flows banklt?gtfirms
Debt repayment flows firms?gtbank
Reserve relending flows bank?gtfirms
- Table describes self-sustaining pure credit
economy - Can now ask What happens to bank income if
- New money created more quickly
- Loans repaid more quickly
- Reserves re-lent more quickly?
22Would you like a credit card with that?
- Surprise surprise!
- Bank income rises if
- Loans are repaid slowly (or not at all)
- Repaid money is recycled more quickly and
- More new money is created
- Lenders profits by extending more credit
- Structural reason for lenders creating rising
debt - What if they decide to change direction?
23Money from nothing, but your cheques aint free
- Credit Crunch
- Rate of money creation drops
- Repayment of loans increases
- Relending drops
- LoansAssets in circulation fall even without
bankruptcy - Credit-driven economic reversal
24Why do borrowers accept debt in the first place?
- Hyman Minskys Financial Instability Hypothesis
- An explanation for debt-driven booms
depressions - Economy in historical time
- Debt-induced recession in recent past
- Firms and banks conservative re debt/equity
ratios, asset valuation - Only conservative projects are funded
- Recovery means conservative projects succeed
- Firms and banks revise risk premiums
- Accepted debt/equity ratio rises
- Assets revalued upwards
25The Euphoric Economy
- Self-fulfilling expectations
- Decline in risk aversion causes increase in
investment - Investment causes economy to grow faster
- Asset prices rise
- Speculation on assets becomes profitable
- Increased willingness to lend increases money
supply - Credit money endogenous
- Riskier investments enabled, more asset
speculation - Emergence of Ponzi financiers
- Cash flow always less than debt servicing costs
- Profits made by selling assets on a rising market
- Interest-rate insensitive demand for finance
26The Assets Boom and Bust
- Initial profitability of asset speculation
- reduces debt and interest rate sensitivity
- drives up supply of and demand for finance
- market interest rates rise
- But eventually
- rising interest rates make many once conservative
projects speculative - forces non-Ponzi investors to attempt to sell
assets to service debts - entry of new sellers floods asset markets
- rising trend of asset prices falters or reverses
27Crisis and Aftermath
- Ponzi financiers go bankrupt
- can no longer sell assets for a profit
- debt servicing on assets far exceeds cash flows
- Asset prices collapse, drastically increasing
debt/equity ratios - Endogenous expansion of money supply reverses
- Investment evaporates economic growth slows or
reverses - Economy enters a debt-induced recession ...
- High Inflation?
- Debts repaid by rising price level
- Economic growth remains low Stagflation
- Renewal of cycle once debt levels reduced
28Crisis and Aftermath
- Low Inflation?
- Debts cannot be repaid
- Chain of bankruptcy affects even non-speculative
businesses - Economic activity remains suppressed a
Depression - Big Government?
- Anti-cyclical spending and taxation of government
enables debts to be repaid - Renewal of cycle once debt levels reduced
- Sounds like history lesson rather than economic
theory
29Meanwhile, in the real world
- Combination of record Debt/GDP, high nominal
interest rates and low inflation means huge real
interest burden
- Debt servicing pressure will constrain debt
growth at some point - Borrowers cease borrowing
- Lenders cause credit crunch
30The Ponzi Economy
- Rising debt in the economic drivers seat
- No influence on unemployment in the 60s
- Accounts for 90 of unemployment now
31Back in the USA
- USA Housing Bubble has clearly burst
House prices falling by more than 1 per month!
32In China we trust?
- Macroeconomic link
- Aggregate demand GDP change in debt
- As debt rises, dependence on change in debt has
risen - Now accounts for 18 of aggregate demand
- Even stabilising debt/GDP ratio will cause 5
cut in spending - Serious downturn inevitable
- Counter forces
- Possible global warming/peak oil inflation
- Inflation reduces debt burden
- China boom
- We are entering stormy economic waters
May you live in interesting times...
33For more information
www.debdeflation.com/blogs
www.debunkingeconomics.com