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DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF FERDINAND LIPS
WHO ARDENTLY ADVOCATED THE PRESERVATION OF KNOWLEDGE HOW TO RUN
A GOLD STANDARD SO THAT IT CAN BE PASSED ON TO FUTURE
GENERATIONS
Abstract
Economists
have neglected to study the phenomenon of vanishing
uncertainties and risks in the production process as maturing
goods approach the final consumer who is eager to buy them at
established prices. We fill this gap in resurrecting Adam
Smith’s long-forgotten notion of social circulating capital.
Then the propensity to consume appears as the volume, and the
discount rate as the marginal productivity of social circulating
capital. It turns out that the rate of interest and the discount
rate are entirely different concepts animated by entirely
different forces. The fundamental error of Mises and Rothbard in
confusing the two was due to insufficient research, in
particular, ignorance of economic entropy, the measure of the
disappearance of uncertainty and risk. It was also due to their
denial of liquidity, the fruit of maximum entropy.
Social Circulating Capital
When
does a river cease to be a river? At the moment it gets within
sight of the sea. As the river is descending to sea level
significant and conspicuous changes occur. The salinity of the
water increases sharply and, with it, the ecology changes. Water
molecules lose their potential energy and their kinetic energy
is converted to entropy.
Similarly,
the flow of myriad goods from producer to market also undergoes
a remarkable metamorphosis when it gets within sight of the
consumer. Adam Smith was the first to notice this interesting
phenomenon. He formulated the concept of social circulating
capital. By this he meant the mass of finished or semi-finished
consumer goods which has reached sufficient proximity and is
moving sufficiently fast to the ultimate cash-paying consumer so
that its destiny of being consumed presently can no longer be in
doubt.
The
analogy between the flow of goods to the final consumer and the
river emptying into the ocean can be profitably extended to
include economic entropy. The risks and uncertainties, so
characteristic of processing in the earlier stages of
production, all but disappear by the time the maturing goods
become part and parcel of social circulating capital and sale at
the going price can be taken for granted. Speculation and other
forms of risk-taking give way to the highly predictable
automatic processes of distribution. In particular, established
retail prices do not normally change in response to changes in
demand because of the increase in economic entropy, measuring
the reduction of uncertainty and risk.
Liquidity
The
vanishing of uncertainty and risk, the emergence of social
circulating capital, and increase in economic entropy are
manifested in a most dramatic fashion through the appearance of
liquidity. To Adam Smith liquidity was tantamount to the
spontaneous circulation of real bills that he observed in
Manchester and Lancashire\. It refers to the qualitative
difference between goods carried by the trade at virtually no
risk in anticipation of sale to the final consumer at
established prices, and other goods carried at considerable risk
in anticipation of an eventual appreciation in value.
The
importance of the market phenomenon that stabilizes values as
economic entropy is maximized can hardly be overestimated. It is
incumbent on the monetary economist to study it closely. The
process of supplying the consumer with urgently needed goods
cannot be described in terms of a black-and-white equilibrium
model with circulating capital financed out of savings, as is
done in textbooks for dummies. It is a transition, a
metamorphosis, the description of which calls for the full
spectrum of colors involving a wholly new gamut of means of
payment which are legitimate substitutes for the ultimate
extinguisher of debt, gold. Demand does not operate on prices;
it operates on the discount rate. The vanishing of uncertainty
and risk, along with the emergence of social circulating capital
and the increase in economic entropy must be analyzed
independently of any banks or the banking system. It is the
disappearance of uncertainty and risks that gives rise to
banking, not the other way around. We would never understand
bank note circulation without liquidity and spontaneous bill
circulation that appear in the wake of increasing economic
entropy.
Liquidity
can be measured by the spread between the ask and bid price. The
smaller the spread, the higher liquidity is. The ultimate in
liquidity is epitomized by the gold coin with zero spread. Next
in line is the consumer good in urgent demand that sits on the
shelf of the shopkeeper waiting to be exchanged for the gold
coin of the final consumer. The bill drawn on the retail
merchant inherits liquidity from the collateralized merchandise
on the shelf. Higher-order goods, while they may also be liquid,
are progressively less so as we move farther away from the
ultimate consumer and his gold coin.
The
evolution of the bill market has made the circulating gold coin
in the hand of the consumer extremely efficient, far beyond the
limits of its physical mobility. Henceforth only finished
consumer goods would be sold against gold coins at the retail
counter. Semi-finished goods at various stages of production and
distribution would be traded against bills of exchange. At the
end of each quarter all transactions are cleared, and all
outstanding bills paid from the proceeds of the final sale of
first-order goods into which fast-moving higher-order goods have
matured. The gold coins of the final consumer liquidate all
claims that have arisen during the maturation of goods.
Propensity to Consume
The
volume of social circulating capital and changes in its
composition are of the highest importance. They change as a
result of arbitrage between the consumer goods market and the
bill market. The arbitrageur is none other than the shopkeeper
who makes the crucial decision which items to carry on his
shelves and which ones to discontinue. In these decisions he is
guided by one consideration alone: the wishes of the sovereign
consumer. For this reason, propensity to consume can be
identified with the volume of social circulating capital. If the
latter is visualized as a great river emptying into the sea of
consumption, then an increase in propensity to consume appears
as the merger of some of the tributaries with the main river
(tide). Conversely, a decrease appears as the separation of a
new tributary from the main flow (ebb).These changes are not
merely quantitative but, on a periodic basis, become qualitative
following the change of seasons. The composition of social
circulating capital is changing along with the change of volume.
Above all, it is a change in the variety of its components.
Interestingly, the mechanism whereby the wishes of the sovereign
consumer are transmuted into changes of stock in the retail
store, to wit, arbitrage of the marginal shopkeeper between the
bill market and the consumer goods market, has escaped the
attention of the economists. A detailed analysis follows.
Marginal Productivity of Social Circulating Capital
Each
merchandise on the shelf of every retail shopkeeper has a
productivity of its own that can be measured by the ratio of the
percentage of the retail mark-up (with due allowance being made
for overhead) to the average length of its sojourn on the shelf.
Thus if the retail mark-up on $1 worth of sauerkraut is ˝ cent
and the average sojourn on the shelf of one bottle is three
months, then the productivity of sauerkraut is (1/2)/(3/12) = 2%
per annum. The merchandise on the shelf of the marginal
shopkeeper with the lowest productivity is called the marginal
item of social circulating capital. The marginal shopkeeper is
the one who is first to change the composition of his stock at
the first sign of change in the willingness, buying habits, and
taste of the consumer. In other words, the marginal shopkeeper
adjusts the volume of social circulating capital to the
propensity to consume. The marginal item will disappear from the
shelf as propensity to consume declines, because it will not be
re-ordered by the marginal shopkeeper, and no more bills will be
drawn against its movement from producer to consumer. Another
item on the shelf with a higher productivity will take its place
as the new marginal item.
The
rate of marginal productivity of social circulating capital is
the productivity of the marginal item. In more details, it is
the rate at which the opportunity cost of carrying the marginal
item on the shelf becomes critical to the marginal shopkeeper.
The reference is to his opportunity to carry bills drawn on
other shopkeepers with faster-moving merchandise, rather than
carrying the marginal item on his shelf. Indeed, the marginal
shopkeeper is doing arbitrage: he is letting his stock of
marginal merchandise run down whenever the rate of marginal
productivity of social circulating capital increases. This
happens precisely when the propensity to consume declines. The
old marginal item with a low productivity gives way to the new
with a higher productivity. Through his arbitrage the marginal
shopkeeper is able to escape a deep cut in his income due to
seasonal and other changes in demand. He can, thanks to his
portfolio of real bills, participate in the higher earnings of
his colleagues operating with higher productivity. Conversely,
the marginal shopkeeper will sell bills from portfolio and
re-order some (heretofore submarginal) merchandise which he is
now willing to carry in stock, provided that the rate of
marginal productivity of social circulating capital decreases.
This happens precisely when the propensity to consume rises.
Higher consumer spending will promote a submarginal item with a
lower productivity to become the new marginal item. Thus we have
proved our First Theorem asserting that the rate of marginal
productivity of social circulating capital varies inversely with
the propensity to consume.
Discount Rate
The
arbitrage of the marginal shopkeeper between the bill market and
the consumer goods market is the centerpiece of the analysis of
the discount rate. We shall now prove our Second Therorem
asserting that the discount rate is equal to the rate of
marginal productivity of social circulating capital. At every
moment the marginal shopkeeper (who may be impersonated by a
different shopkeeper from one point in time to the next) is
guided by two indicators: (1) the rate of marginal productivity
of social circulating capital; (2) the discount rate. If the
former is higher, then he will sell real bills from portfolio
and order a new marginal item to display on his shelf. As a
consequence (1) decreases while (2) increases (since the fall in
the price of real bills makes the discount rate rise).
Conversely, if the latter is higher, then he will discontinue
offering the marginal item and will purchase real bills to put
in portfolio instead. As a consequence (1) increases while (2)
decreases (since the rise in the price of real bills makes the
discount rate fall). In either case the two rates get equalized.
A
higher discount rate heralds to all shopkeepers a decline in the
propensity to consume. Instead of re-ordering marginal
merchandise they will in response buy real bills in order to
benefit from the higher discount rate. Social circulating
capital shrinks. Conversely, a lower discount rate heralds to
all shopkeepers a rise in the propensity to consume. They can
now beat the discount rate by offering a greater variety of
goods to the consumer, so they will reduce their portfolio of
real bills while ordering new merchandise to display on their
shelves. Social circulating capital expands.
This
arbitrage of the marginal shopkeeper between the consumer goods
market and the bill market that regulates the discount rate is
analogous to, but conceptually is very different from, the
arbitrage of the marginal producer between the producer goods
market and the bond market that regulates the (ceiling for the)
rate of interest. Comparison of the two reveal that the discount
rate is different from the rate of interest. The economic forces
changing the two rates are different. The force driving the rate
of interest is the propensity to save. As is well-known, the
rate of interest varies inversely with the propensity to save.
The force driving the discount rate is the propensity to
consume. It is immediate from our First and Second Theorems that
the discount rate varies inversely with the propensity to
consume: rising propensity to consume is tantamount to a falling
discount rate and vice versa.
It
is important to note that the two propensities are not
complementary. A third one, the propensity to hoard, is
sandwiched between them. Thus it is possible for the rate of
interest and the discount rate to rise together. It simply means
that people are hoarding goods. By the same token it is also
possible for the two rates to fall together. It means that
people are dishoarding previously hoarded goods. The propensity
to hoard plays a pivotal role in the genesis of the Kondratiev
long-wave cycle. This is a topic for a forthcoming article.
There
is only one constraint limiting the relative moves of the two
rates. The rate of interest is not at liberty to fall below the
discount rate. Having said that, we must admit that illicit
interest arbitrage, or financing bond purchases through the sale
of bills at the lower discount rate (a.k.a. borrowing short in
order to lend long) could engineer such a fall. This has been a
lucrative if illegitimate source of profits for banks quick to
make a buck by short-changing the public. Illicit interest
arbitrage plays a pivotal role in the genesis of the business
cycle. Again, this is a topic for another forthcoming article.
Supply/Demand Equilibrium
We
conclude that the vulgar supply/demand equilibrium model is
inoperative in the consumer goods market. Supply is not an
independent variable: it is closely regulated by demand through
changes in the discount rate. It is insulated from the “slings
and arrows of outrageous fortune” by the paraphernalia of
self-liquidating credit. An increase in demand lowers the
discount rate, which quickly brings out a greater variety of
consumer goods. Conversely, a decrease in demand raises the
discount rate, which quickly eliminates marginal merchandise
from the shelves of retail stores. Consumers who still want them
will have to look for them in specialty shops where they will be
available albeit at a higher price, since moving them can no
longer be financed through real bills, that is, through
self-liquidating credit at the discount rate. It has to be
financed through funds borrowed at the higher interest rate.
Thus we observe the curious but pleasing fact that the price of
goods belonging to the social circulating capital cannot be
upset through supply and demand shocks.
Economists
who are unable to distinguish between the discount rate and the
rate of interest are at a loss to explain why retail prices
under the gold standard were stable even in the face of changing
demand. Their denial of concepts such as liquidity and economic
entropy reduces them to play the role of stooges riding on the
coattails of the enemies of freedom, the protagonists of
irredeemable currency. The latter know full well that they have
nothing to fear from a color-blind gold standard outlawing the
bill market as it is doomed to failure anyway. Only a gold
standard recognizing the full spectrum of colors in the light of
liquidity and entropy that rehabilitates international trade in
real bills will scare them.
References
Adam Smith, The
Wealth of Nations, Book 2, Chapters 1-2
Antal E. Fekete, Where Mises Went Wrong,
Financial Sense Online, September 16, 2005

© 2005 Antal E. Fekete
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