About
Yvonne lives in Berkeley, California with her partner and their four-legged family. During the day, she works at a racial justice think tank, crunching numbers to eradicate white supremacy. At night and sometimes weekends, she sits at her computer, trying to make sense of the world.
These are the fruits of her attempts. Apologies in advance if they are sometimes sour, not always sweet, unripe or not fully ready to launch. Yvonne is working on her craft of writing and playing with using all five senses.
Yvonne tweets, shares what she reads, makes friends, takes pictures, and watches video. Occasionally, she chats and talks on the phone. She loves hearing from you at yvonnegrapher at gmail dot com.
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Takes on Economic Crisis
The Federal Reserve announced Tuesday morning the biggest one-day reduction of interest rates on record, by three-quarters of a percentage point to 3.5 percent. I read the news with great interest, having just digested a lengthy article on Ben Bernanke, the chair of the Fed as of 2005, in the Sunday NYT. I learned three things about the Fed.
First thing I learned which I maybe already knew
The Fed doesn’t actually increase or decrease the meta-interest rate for the U.S. economy. Times reporter Roger Lowenstein tells us that:
Then, he gets real technical:
He goes on:
I find this fascinating. I picture this huge bathtub, with us floating like a layer of bacteria on the surface of a rubber ducky, and Bernanke controlling the spigots. The water is turned on by his underlings – lower the interest rate – and the level of the water in the bathtub increases. We all bobble randomly from the waves generated, quite out of our control.
Second thing I learned
Lowenstein recounts for us the history of the Fed Reserve. It was not defined by the Constitution, it was sketched out in 1910 by Paul Warburg of a German-Jewish banking family, Chair of the Senate Finance Committee Nelson W. Aldrich, and other bankers in a secret meeting on Jekyll Island, off the coast of Georgia. Reporters were told, says Lowenstein, Warburg and co. were going duck hunting.
What was setup:
The chair that sits at the helm of the Fed is technically independent politically. This is a result of an accord in 1951 that liberated the Fed from the Treasury department. This results in:
The chair and president historically don’t get along:
So interesting. Here’s a cool visual history of the Fed, courtesy of the NYT.
Third thing I learned
Capitalists and Marxists disagree about what causes crises. I suppose I should have known that already, but the mainstream economist version is so kooky:
How can turning on the spigot solve a recession? More money, more liquidity, more waves lapping the bathtub doesn’t mean that more workers are gainfully employed and a chicken is in every pot daily. Doesn’t it just mean that everything is just more expensive, that prices are raised up a notch, in other words inflation?
I am puzzled by this. I try to resolve this by taking a closer look at the Great Depression and what the Marxist and capitalist takes on it are.
Marxist take on the Great Depression
Marx’s formula for capital in Vol. 1 of his hefty brick Capital is:
M—C—M + ∆M
Where M = money, C = commodity, M+∆M is the money the capitalist gets back for her commodity in the market, with added surplus value
Capital has several internal contradictions which will ultimately lead to its demise, according to Marx although he conveniently omitted a timetable. One of them is the problem of underconsumption, which affects the part in the circulation of capital where a commodity is exchanged for more money, the capitalist pocketing the profit. When this crisis occurs, people don’t want to spend money for commodities, they hoard money, and the water in the bathtub gets absorbed by fat little sponges holding their breaths.
My notes from the class with rockstar David Harvey say that various solutions are proposed.
I turn towards Bernanke’s hero Milton Friedman for orthodox economists’ take on this.
Milton Friedman on the Great Depression
I learn from Friedman’s essay on “Monetary Policy” published in the Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 116, No. 3. (June 9, 1972), that Keynesians differ from Friedmanites.
Keynesians – believe in fiscal policy, the state should spend more money to spur on demand
Friedmanites – swears by monetary policy, where the Fed Reserve should concern itself with increasing the quantity of money (the level of bathwater) and thereby sparking economic growth
Friedman shares with us a series of graphs that show the positive relation between money stock and income.
(I will insert charts 1-3 here.)
Increasing the quantity of money — flooding the bath, disturbing your downstairs neighbor with a water leak — doesn’t lead to rampant hyperinflation, as one would guess because of this logic:
And, if trade unions and proponents of a living wage would shut up, the “rigidities” would decrease the natural rate of unemployment. Therefore, the Phillips curve — unemployment and inflation are inversely related, therefore when the inflation rate increases, unemployment decreases — would lose its skew towards unemployment in the short-term.
Friedman goes on in his article to say how monetarists such as himself have been woefully misunderstood and ignored, much to the detriment of the U.S. economy. And, he raises his freak flag for a small, neoliberal state, where:
Therefore, the role of monetary policy is:
I’m not sure where I’m going with all of this. Friedman’s pronouncements of the Philips curve has momentarily absorbed me, and I feel that I must read this definition of the crisis of overproduction by Patrick Bond printed out and sitting neatly on my desk before I further expound on a Marxist critique of Friedman and his acolytes, including Bernanke.
I will end my inaugural post on this blog in an admittedly childish way: Follow this link to watch a clip about the Biotic Baking Brigade, a global pastry uprising, who pied Friedman in 1998 (I’m still trolling the WordPress manual on how to share video, bear with me).
And, another gratuitous play for laughs: Bernanke-themed comics.