Posted on 09/19/2008 4:01:14 PM PDT by Rodm
With not an insignificant amount of fanfare last week, former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker endorsed Barack Obamas presidential candidacy. His endorsement drew more attention than it normally might have in that while Volcker is a lifelong Democrat, his legend is inextricably linked to Ronald Reagans, and the 80s economic revolution that reversed the U.S.s flagging economic fortunes.
Given Volckers historical ties to Reagan, some Republicans logically took offense to his seeming apostasy. Their dismay is misplaced. Volcker was never on board with the Reagan economic plan in the way that modern history suggests, and rather than an essential driver of the 80s economic renaissance, a more realistic account of Volckers early years at the Fed shows that far from a facilitator of pro-growth policies, Volckers actions nearly derailed Reagans economic plan and presidency altogether.
Though Reagan spoke confidently of renewed economic optimism that would result from tax cuts, Volckers countenance was very dark, with frequent pronunciations about us not being so naïve as to assume there are quick and painless solutions to the economic problems we faced. To Volcker, there was no way we could avoid a clash between monetary restraint .and the growth of economic activity; this despite the truth that growing economies require more money, not less.
Given his skeptical views about the Reagan tax cuts, Volcker lobbied in secret against their passage owing to his view that they would lead to a massive revenue shortfall. While Fed Chairman Fred Schultz worked on House members, Volcker lobbied senators to vote against the cuts.
As George Schultz told William Greider in Secrets of the Temple, Volckers position was that, We are in favor of a tax cut, but you must recognize that if you cant accomplish this with much bigger budget cuts than you are contemplating, its going to put much more pressure on us and that means higher interest rates. Shades of Robert Rubin.
Using his control of the interest rate lever as a weapon, Volcker kept money tight in order to prize tax increases out of the White House. More on monetary policy later, but bad dollar policy brought on the 81-82 recession, and remarkably led to a bill that increased taxes ahead of the 1982 elections. Unsurprisingly, the Republicans lost 26 House seats.
Even more galling, according to Paul Craig Roberts The Supply-Side Revolution, not a single Democrat voted for the tax increase. None needed to in that as Mark Shields wrote in the Washington Post at the time, Reagans advisors (including Volcker) did all of their dirty work for them in terms of attracting Republican votes in favor of tax increases. Thanks to economic advisors that did not share Reagans optimism about tax cuts, by 1983 the Reagan tax cuts of 81 had disappeared in dollar terms. The marginal incentives of course remained, but due to powerful opposition on the part of Volcker, Alan Greenspan and others, Reagans tax program was severely compromised.
In his most recent column, George Will continued the false legend concerning Volcker, noting that he and President Reagan whipped the inflationary dragon with contractionary economic policy that resulted in double-digit unemployment. Wills thinking resembles that of our present Fed Chairman who labors under the retro view that growth is the cause of, not the cure for inflation. The truth about Reagan vis-à-vis Volcker when it comes to inflation is a bit more nuanced.
A Carter appointee, Volckers attempts to use interest-rate increases to slay inflation in the late 70s were met with a great deal more inflation. By February of 1980, with the Fed funds rate at 14 percent, gold hit an all-time high of $875/ounce.
The dollars aforementioned fall was of course sped along by another major mistake carried out by Volcker just a few months prior. Correctly recognizing the futility of interest-rate targeting, Volcker shed the latter only to make a fateful decision that would drive the U.S. economy even further into the ditch. Put simply, in October of 1979 Volcker began a three year experiment with Milton Friedmans monetarism.
Instead of targeting the Fed funds rate, Volcker attempted to target the quantity of money with disastrous consequences. Though inflation is surely a monetary phenomenon as Friedman long noted, with the majority of physical dollars outside these fifty states, attempts to control the quantity of dollars within these fifty states were bound to fail. To the extent that the Fed targeted various aggregates of U.S. money supply lower, this merely meant that dollars in other markets (eurodollars for instance) would fill the shortfall.
Worse, given the Feds efforts to control money quantity rather than rates, the Fed funds rate bounced around on a daily basis such that businesses faced an impossible task of raising capital owing to uncertainty about the rate at which they could raise capital. As Charles Kadlec and Arthur Laffer wrote at the time, the Feds action reduced the viability and attractiveness of the dollar, and as a result its policies increased the prospects of inflation in spite of the fact that monetarist targets resulted in a slower growth in the measured quantity of money. What the economy needed according to Laffer and Kadlec were policies that lead to an excess demand for dollars relative to their supply.
Those policies did materialize, but no thanks to Paul Volcker. Though the dollar hit what was until recently an all-time low under Volcker in February of 1980, positive electoral developments began to reveal themselves which succeeded in arresting the dollars fall.
In short, by the spring of 1980 the markets started to price in Ronald Reagans election. Reagan of course ran on a pro-growth platform of further de-regulation, tax cuts, and a return to a more stable and stronger dollar. And economic growth, if it has any effect, serves to soak up excess liquidity. With investors pricing in a brighter economic future, gold was down to $600/ounce by election day in 1980, and by the end of 1981, the yellow metal had fallen below $400.
Contrary to modern accounts of that period suggesting Volckers policies whipped inflation, the markets had as mentioned already voted on them with gold having reached an all-time high in his early years at the Fed. The weak dollar that gold signaled was itself inflation, not a cause of the latter, and with Reagans election and its policy aftermath having boosted the dollar, inflation was effectively contained.
Sadly, Volcker did not agree. Seeking to tighten further through futile attempts at managing the various monetary aggregates, his actions sent the economy into a major recession which led to the 82 electoral rout, and which made Reagans 1984 re-election prospects increasingly dicey. Worse for the Reagan program, Alan Greenspan and Herbert Stein gave Volcker enhanced political cover given their view that the tax cuts themselves would be inflationary.
So rather than accommodating the Reagan tax cuts with increased liquidity, Volcker went in the opposite direction until a looming Mexican loan default threatened the worldwide banking system. The time was October of 1982, and on October 9th of that year Volcker finally abandoned the monetarist approach to Fed policy that had proven so disastrous.
The resulting expansion of dollar liquidity did not prove inflationary as so many (including Milton Friedman) assumed it would, because by 1983 the marginal tax cuts Reagan had championed fully kicked in. Contrary to suggestions today that say tax cuts are slow to impact the economy, a combination of lower rates and increased dollar liquidity Fed an economic boom that led to Ronald Reagans landslide re-election in 1984.
Still, the Reagan Revolution almost never was, and Paul Volckers 67 frame weighed on it like no other politician or government policy. If he should be given any credit for Ronald Reagans successes, it would have to do with his belated admission in 1982 that his policies were hammering the economy along with Reagans economic program. And it was the latter that whipped inflation, not Paul Volcker.
All this in mind, no one should be surprised by Volckers endorsement of Barack Obama. Despite the truth that Reagans visions elevated him to central-banker sainthood, he never agreed with the vision. As such, his embrace of the Illinois senator isn't newsworthy in the least.
John Tamny is editor of RealClearMarkets, a senior economist with H.C. Wainwright Economics, and a senior economic advisor to Toreador Research and Trading. He can be reached at jtamny@realclearmarkets.com.
And it was misery. Anyone who wants to vote for Obama, or to sit this election out because they don't like McCain's position on immigration should look no further than this endorsement.
“this despite the truth that growing economies require more money, not less.”
WRONG! Growing economies do not require more money. When the U.S. was experiencing the greatest economic expansion in the history of the world, productivity increased and prices FELL. We don’t need more money; we need more productivity. The two are not necessarily related.
Reagan said .. You have to produce your way out of inflation.
Too many dollars chasing too few goods and services.
He cut taxes and reduced regulation to spur invest in
jobs and factories , to produce our way out.
It worked. It is called supply side not because it means tax cuts for the rich but instead means increase the supply and tax cuts was just a means to producing more.
You might be shocked at how few of people understand
reaganomics because all they’ve heard over the years from liberal hacks is “ trickle down econmics “ , “tax cuts for the rich” .
Oh, Lord help us, that was the first time we had to re-mortgage and we were paying 19% on short term notes.
Fed policy is supposed to insure that there is neither in inflation nor deflation: that is, that the actual value of money stays fixed against productivity, which, historically has risen, which actually would require more money be printed. In practice, deflation is so dangerous that a slight degree of inflation is expected and tolerated even under the best circumstances. This absolutely requires printing more money.
Bump. That is my take on Volcker as well. He was a saboteur, just less overtly hostile, as David Stockman, a purported Republican ultimately proved to be....
All you need to remember is that the MSM called George Soros and Armand Hammer that too...
I will lay you odds that the suicidal debt circle, led by their Muscovite "Todd" are likely also nothing but kindred to these guys....
Agreed. It was.
The only thing good that happened was that Volcker tried so hard to make the recession worse...he inadvertantly helped Reagan kill off inflation (I am convinced if he knew it was going to work, he would have done something else to try and fail)...which was really just Raging when he got in.
Volker killed off inflation. Reagan stepped into the financial vacuum with supply side money which was desperately needed and worked wonders. What is needed now is another Volker (or Volker himself), then another Reagan. But, we'll end up with a Nixon and another moron like Burns. Come to think of it, BERNanke - BURNs, makes sense.
Wasn’t this the same man who got the job of white washing the UN Oil for Food Scandal?
Was Volker really such a genius for raising interest rates to 20+ percent or, was it the Iran-Iraq war and resulting plunge in oil prices that broke the back of inflation?
Volcker has plenty of defenders and fans here on FR. It’s nice to see an article exposing who he really is. Volcker was also on the committee that recommended wage and price controls to Nixon.
Only if you like a bunch of deflationary crashes.
I wish it were a retro view, but it is instead the unanimous consensus of central bankers around the world.
According to the article, and the truth, Volcker did no such thing.
The author misses a basic point: tight money kills inflation.
Tight money kills the economy, not inflation.
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