By
Robert Prechter, CMT
Elliott Wave
International
The following was adapted from Bob Prechter’s 2002 New York Times and
Amazon best seller,
Conquer the
Crash – You Can
Survive and Prosper
in a Deflationary
Depression.
Deflation
requires a
precondition: a
major societal
buildup in the
extension of credit
(and its flip side,
the assumption of
debt). Austrian
economists Ludwig
von Mises and
Friedrich Hayek
warned of the
consequences of
credit expansion, as
have a handful of
other economists,
who today are mostly
ignored. Bank credit
and Elliott wave
expert Hamilton
Bolton, in a 1957
letter, summarized
his observations
this way:
In reading a
history of major
depressions in the
U.S. from 1830 on, I
was impressed with
the following:
(a) All were
set off by a
deflation of
excess credit.
This was the one
factor in
common.
(b) Sometimes
the
excess-of-credit
situation seemed
to last years
before the
bubble broke.
(c) Some outside
event, such as a
major failure,
brought the
thing to a head,
but the signs
were visible
many months, and
in some cases
years, in
advance.
(d) None was
ever quite like
the last, so
that the public
was always
fooled thereby.
(e) Some panics
occurred under
great government
surpluses of
revenue (1837,
for instance)
and some under
great government
deficits.
(f) Credit is
credit, whether
non-self-liquidating
or
self-liquidating.
(g)
Deflation of
non-self-liquidating
credit usually
produces the
greater slumps.
Self-liquidating
credit is a loan
that is paid back,
with interest, in a
moderately short
time from
production.
Production
facilitated by the
loan – for business
start-up or
expansion, for
example – generates
the financial return
that makes repayment
possible. The full
transaction adds
value to the
economy.
Non-self-liquidating
credit is a loan
that is not tied to
production and tends
to stay in the
system. When
financial
institutions lend
for consumer
purchases such as
cars, boats or
homes, or for
speculations such as
the purchase of
stock certificates,
no production effort
is tied to the loan.
Interest payments on
such loans stress
some other source of
income. Contrary to
nearly ubiquitous
belief, such lending
is almost always
counter-productive;
it adds costs
to the economy, not
value. If
someone needs a
cheap car to get to
work, then a loan to
buy it adds value to
the economy; if
someone wants a new
SUV to consume, then
a loan to buy it
does not add value
to the economy.
Advocates claim that
such loans
"stimulate
production," but
they ignore the cost
of the required debt
service, which
burdens production.
They also ignore the
subtle deterioration
in the quality of
spending choices due
to the shift of
buying power from
people who have
demonstrated a
superior ability to
invest or produce
(creditors) to those
who have
demonstrated
primarily a superior
ability to consume
(debtors).
Near the end of a
major expansion, few
creditors expect
default, which is
why they lend freely
to weak borrowers.
Few borrowers expect
their fortunes to
change, which is why
they borrow freely.
Deflation
involves a
substantial amount
of involuntary
debt liquidation
because almost no
one expects
deflation before
it starts.
For more on
deflation,
including the
following topics,
see Elliott Wave
International’s free
guide to
deflation,
inflation, money,
credit and debt.
There, you can also
download two free
chapters from
Conquer the Crash.
Learn more about
these six important
topics:
1.
What is
Deflation and
When Does it
Occur?
2.
Price Effects of
Inflation and
Deflation
3.
The Primary
Precondition of
Deflation
4.
What Triggers
the Change to
Deflation?
5.
Why Deflationary
Crashes and
Depressions Go
Together
6.
Financial Values
Can Disappear in
Deflation
Robert
Prechter, Certified
Market Technician,
is the founder and
CEO of Elliott Wave
International,
author of Wall
Street best sellers
Conquer the Crash
and
Elliott Wave
Principle and
editor of
The Elliott Wave
Theorist monthly
market letter since
1979.
Editor's Note:
For more information
on Deflation see
What
is Deflation?
|