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How
Turkey's goose was cooked
By
Henry C.K. Liu
This article appeared in AToL
on September 18, 2003
I was invited to give a lecture on "The Global Economy in Transition"
at the Seventh International Conference on Economics held on September
6-9 at the Economic Research Center of the Middle East Technical
University in Ankara. The conference brought together from all over the
world prominent economists with diverse viewpoints and special
expertise, ranging from central bankers and policy specialists to
academicians and scholars. The ideological range covered neo-classical
to Marxist economics, as well as apolitical macroeconomics and
mathematical modeling experts.
The event also gave me occasion to review the economic situation of
Turkey, a country that paid dearly for playing by the rules of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and neo-liberal market
fundamentalism. The Turkish government, in its good-faith efforts to
join the European Union, has managed to plunge the country's economy
from the frying pan into the fire.
The financial press reported that both Turkey and Argentina, beginning
in late November 2000, experienced a sudden drop in investor
"confidence", whatever that is, posing the biggest challenge to the IMF
and the United States since the Asian financial crisis of the 1997.
Both nations were desperately seeking emergency IMF loans, the largest
bailout packages since an IMF rescue of Brazil in 1998.
The precipitating troubles were linked to the sharp slowdown in the
growth rate of the United States economy and the selloff in US stock
markets. Export-oriented developing nations in Latin America, Asia and
the Middle East had depended heavily on robust expansion in the United
States to power their own tentative recoveries from a recession in the
late 1990s, and to service their dollar debts. The IMF agreed on
December 6, 2000, to provide US$7.5 billion in new loans and deliver
about $3 billion in already promised loans early to bolster Turkey,
where stocks plunged and overnight, interest rates soared on fears that
the nation's banking system could collapse. The turmoil raised fears
not only that Turkey's ambitious economic overhaul would fail but also
that investors would lose faith in the prospect of other major emerging
economies worldwide.
Unlike other situations, Turkey appears to have been the victim of
sound economic management along neo-liberal lines. In Turkey, the
coalition government of former prime minister Bulent Ecevit, acting
with dubious IMF advice and counterproductive support, began an
economic overhaul early in 2000 intended to bring the economy up to
European standards, part of its bid to join the EU. Dancing to the tune
of IMF doctrines, Turkey set up a strict currency-management system,
imposed budgetary discipline and moved to privatize state assets, all
in accordance with the Washington Consensus. The effort reduced
government borrowing and sharply lowered hyper-inflation. Unlike Japan,
Turkey adopted a program that forced its 81 banks to improve their
operations or face terminal consequences. Turkey had a neo-classical
long-term economic plan, it had the most stable government in a decade,
and it had been on a self-imposed austerity program since mid-1998.
Notwithstanding that such drastic austerity will destroy any booming
economy, let alone a troubled one, the IMF handed $4 billion to Turkey
to back a new three-year program, matched by another $4 billion from
the World Bank. The stated aim: to bring inflation, which had averaged
more than 80 percent in each of the previous eight years, down to
single digits by 2003. The IMF money created a brief illusion of
success for a program heading for systemic disaster.
The Turkey program was implemented in January 2000, and all went well
at first, thanks to the sudden injection of $8 billion from the IMF.
Interest rates on government paper plummeted to 45 percent from highs
of more than 140 percent in 1999. Turkish planners could make financial
plans at last, thanks to exchange-rate policies that were designed to
devalue the Turkish lira slowly and in an orderly manner until
mid-2001. The government even started fixing up social security and
agricultural subsidies, much to the delight of supply-side, neo-liberal
economists. By the summer of 2000, Turkey had raised more money through
privatization and the sale of mobile-phone licenses than it had in the
previous 15 years, using the US formula of "air ball" financing - loans
based on future cash flow rather than hard assets or current profits.
Not surprisingly, after 11 months, privatization had slowed to a crawl,
with potential buyers waiting for further declining prices and pending
deregulation. Lower domestic interest rates in the context of fixed
exchange rates had fed a consumer-lending boom that sucked in imports,
putting pressure on Turkey's foreign-currency reserves. The lower rates
also constrained the easy profits once made by midsize banks that
survived mostly by lending money to the government. Criminal cases were
publicized to uncover decades of corrupt bank management, to lay blame
on human frailty rather than policy error. The same corruption, albeit
real, was not credited for the brief "success" of the flawed program.
Turks at all level of wealth began to move money abroad cashing in
their Turkish liras for US dollars. Foreign investors/creditors began
withdrawing credit lines from Turkey at the beginning of December 2000,
after fears developed that many Turkish banks, which were under heavy
pressure to reorganize, had become insolvent.
Unlike Argentina, which faced a different problem - investors there
were worried that Argentina's slow-growing economy might not have the
wherewithal to repay its hefty foreign debt - Turkey's crisis was
caused by faulty monetary and fiscal policies that even the United
States would not have been able to afford. Ironically, the government's
seizure of 10 troubled banks in November 2000 to clean up the banking
system had the opposite effect. The move, instead of promoting "market
discipline", caused foreign investors to panic about the solvency of
the banking system. In reality, the foreign banks were merely upset
that their hope of buying up Turkish banks on the cheap had been
spoiled by the government. A $7.5 billion package of emergency IMF
funding announced on December 6, 2002, brought a fragile stability to
Turkish markets. With a straight face, the IMF said Turkey would not
then need extra bridge loans from other international institutions, as
foreign banks cut their exposure to the country with vengeance.
A full-scale financial crisis was triggered by a minor "bloodletting"
among Turkish banks. The crisis had its roots in 1999. Turkey, a
country of 65 million people, with a $200 billion economy that overtook
Russia's gross national product in 1998, applied for its 17th standby
agreement with the IMF, with a promise to adopt Fund prescriptions.
Consumer lending that had helped the economy return to growth after a
massive August 1999 earthquake had ground to a halt. Growth was now
expected to be flat in the first quarter of 2001, causing severe
economic pain.
Already overburdened Turkish taxpayers again paid the price for
budgetary- and economic-stability policies at the wrong time and on a
wrong schedule. It was at this critical juncture that a "blood feud",
as the big newspaper Hurriyet called it, broke out in the banking
sector.
One of the midsize banks, Demirbank, had been taking business from
Turkey's big established banks. It had also bet big on the
anti-inflation program's success in bringing interest rates down still
further. At one point, Demirbank held 10 percent of Turkey's domestic
debt. But it was funding its operations from Turkey's short-term money
markets, which were supplied by the same big-money banks it had
alienated. The funny thing was that these money-center banks, with
their international network, got their funds from the short-term US
repo debt market through New York international banks.
When delays hit a big Demirbank foreign-loan syndication, the bank
suddenly found its lines of credit cut. Demirbank was forced to dump
its Turkish treasury bills at a loss to meet margin calls and other
obligations. A classic fire sale began, not much different from the
situation faced by the hedge fund LTCM in the United States, except on
a much smaller scale. Normally, the Turkish central bank would have
stepped in to ease Demirbank over its liquidity crisis, as the New York
Fed did with LTCM, and all would have been fine. But a key condition of
IMF support for Turkey's anti-inflation program was a cap on the total
foreign and local currency in circulation in Turkey. So when the
Demirbank crisis triggered a small rush to buy dollars from the central
bank, it drained Turkish lira out of circulation just when they were
most needed to ease lending between banks.
Already spooked by trouble brewing in Argentina, emerging-market
investors stampeded out of Turkey on November 22, 2000, before the long
US Thanksgiving holiday weekend. As yields on Turkish domestic assets
slid from 35 percent to 4.5 percent, many investors started selling
Turkish treasury bills to cut their losses. They sought safety in
dollars, sucking the central bank's currency reserves down farther.
Deutsche Bank alone sold $700 million worth of Turkish treasury bills
in a day, mostly on behalf of clients (read hedge funds) but also for
its own proprietary trading accounts.
Briefly breaking with the IMF plan, the Turkish central bank supplied
local currency to the banks. But it was too late.
Turkish markets stalled and plunged into a panicky tailspin. Within two
weeks, $7 billion of Turkey's $24 billion of pre-crisis
foreign-currency reserves had fled the system. Fears spread that Turkey
would be forced to devalue its currency, which would wreck the Turkish
economic program, shake global "confidence" in emerging markets and
undermine the stability of the ruling order of Turkey, a rare secular
democracy in the Muslim world.
Turkey hung tough and took over Demirbank. This helped it earn the
admiration of the IMF and the promise of $7.5 billion in emergency
funds. As the outcome became clear, investors poured back in more than
$1.5 billion - including at least $300 million through Deutsche Bank
(less than half of one day's sale earlier). On December 10, 2000, 30
Europe-based banks met in Frankfurt, Germany, and pledged to keep
credit lines open. Turkish and IMF officials would seek similar
commitments a few days later in a meeting with US bankers in New York
convened by Citibank. No one mentioned anything about the interest
rates. The Turkish central banks had no option but to accept what the
international banks demanded.
Speculators with liquid assets had won big. Some foreign speculators
tried to point out that as many as one-third of the customers of the
international banks at the December 29 meeting in Frankfurt were
actually high-net-worth Turks, who bought dollars and euros with their
lira and sent their foreign currency back into Turkey as foreign
capital. International hedge funds, despite their new strategy of
avoiding overwhelming the small markets, also bet hundreds of millions
of dollars against the Turkish lira. They could achieve 10 percent
gains in dollar terms in two weeks simply by playing the market for
short-term deposits during the crisis. Indeed, a dollar-based gain on
Turkish treasury bills of 29 percent to the end of June could still be
locked in on December 11, according to Istanbul's Bender Securities.
Far greater returns were theoretically possible at the Istanbul Stock
Exchange, where prices fell 50 percent during the 30 days to December
5, and then rocketed back up 40 percent in two days. Speculators were
laughing all to way not to the bank, but on their way out from the
bank.
Meanwhile, the economy of Turkey lost big. The legitimacy of the reform
process itself had also been thrown into question. Although Turkey
vowed that the aim of its IMF-backed program was to privatize the
economy and financial system, Demirbank became the 11th Turkish bank to
be taken under state control in the past two years. More seemed likely
to follow.
When would the IMF snake oil be exposed for the quack medicine that is
actually was? Western bankers had vowed (as a non-binding commitment)
to continue lending money to Turkey, giving a vital boost to efforts to
restore "confidence" in that nation's finances just days after the Fund
agreed to provide an emergency aid package. This loss of confidence was
cause by the very IMF rescue policy earlier. It seems that the IMF and
the international banks were a team: the IMF arrived first as a carrier
of financial virus in the name of financial health, then the
international banks came as vulture investors in the name of financial
rescue. Market confidence returned as one big confidence game.
Gazi Ercel, then governor of Turkey's central bank, and Stanley
Fischer, the No 2 official at the IMF, conducted the meeting in
Frankfurt, which was organized by Deutsche Bank and included
representatives from Dresdner Bank and Commerzbank of Germany and
Citigroup of the United States, among other major lenders. (Less than
three years later, Fischer joined Citigroup as vice chairman.)
In hindsight, it becomes clear that the Turkish financial crisis could
have been avoided if the Turkish government had rejected IMF
prescriptions earlier. Once the crisis began, it could have been
defused with central-bank intervention to provide a timely inter-bank
liquidity rescue. Alas, neo-liberal fixation on market fundamentalism
caused the Turkish government to forgo that option, and the rest was
history. Liberalization of financial market under dollar hegemony had
plunged the Turkish economy into a protracted abyss from which it will
not be able to extract itself unless Turkish leaders summon up the
necessary political courage to expel the IMF, curb the "political
independence" of its central bank, which views its mandate as
protecting the value of money at the expense of the national economy,
and reinstitute a national banking regime that uses the banking system
to support the national economy.
Turkey must take decisive steps to protect itself from predictable harm
from dollar hegemony. It should recapture the authority to issue
sovereign credit to put its national economy on the path to new
prosperity with equality and economic justice for all.
Henry
C K Liu is chairman of a New York-based private investment group.
His lecture discussed the global economy in transition, focusing on the
changing nature and role of money, debt, trade, markets and
development. In summary, the lecture presented the view that an economy
is not an abstraction. An economy is the material manifestation of a
political system, which in turn is the interplay of group interests
representing, among others, gender, age, religion, property, class,
sector, region or nation. Click here
to read more.
Henry C K Liu
was invited to give a lecture at the Seventh International Conference
on Economics held on September 6-9 at the Economic Research Center of
the Middle East Technical University in Ankara. The conference brought
together from all over the world prominent economists with diverse
viewpoints and special expertise, ranging from central bankers and
policy specialists to academicians and scholars. The ideological range
covered neo-classical to Marxist economics, as well as apolitical
macroeconomics and mathematical modeling experts.
Liu's lecture discussed the global economy in transition, focusing on
the changing nature and role of money, debt, trade, markets and
development. In summary, the lecture presented the view that an economy
is not an abstraction. An economy is the material manifestation of a
political system, which in turn is the interplay of group interests
representing, among others, gender, age, religion, property, class,
sector, region or nation. This is an edited version.
Individual interests are not issues of politics. Therefore, the
politics of individualism is an oxymoron and, by extension, the
Hayekian notion of a market of individual decisions is an ideological
fantasy. Markets are phenomena of large numbers and herd instinct where
unique individualism is of little consequence. The defining basis of
politics is power, which takes many forms: moral, intellectual,
financial, electoral and military. In an overcapacity environment,
company executives lament about the loss of pricing power. The global
economy is the material manifestation of the global geopolitical
system, and global macroeconomics is the rationalization of that
geopolitical system.
The nomenclature of economics reflects, and in turn dictates, the logic
of the economic system. Terms such as money, capital, labor, debt,
interest, profits, employment, market, etc, have been conceptualized to
describe components of an artificial material system created by power
politics. The concept of the economic man who presumably always acts in
his self-interest is a gross abstraction based on the flawed assumption
of market participants acting with perfect information and clear
understanding of its meanings. The pervasive use of these terms over
time disguises the artificial system as the product of natural laws,
rather than the conceptual components of power politics. Just as
monarchism was rationalized as a natural law of politics in the past,
the same is true with market capitalism today.
The market is not the economy. It is only one aspect of the economy. A
market economy can be viewed as an aberration of human civilization.
People trade to compensate for deficiencies in their current state of
development. Exploitation is slavery, not trade. Imperialism is
exploitation on an international level. Neo-imperialism after the end
of the Cold War takes the form of neo-liberal international trade.
Free trade cannot exist without protection from systemic coercion. To
participate in free trade, a trader must have something with which to
trade voluntarily in a market free of systemic coercion. That tradable
something comes from development, which is a process of
self-betterment. International trade is not development, although it
can contribute to domestic development. Domestic development must take
precedence over international trade, which is a system of external
transactions supposedly to augment domestic development. But
neo-liberal international trade since the end of the Cold War has
increasingly preempted domestic development in both the center and the
periphery. Global trade has become a vehicle for exploitation of the
weak to strengthen the strong. Aside from being unjust, neo-liberal
global trade as it currently exists is unsustainable, because the
transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich is unsustainable.
Neo-liberal claims of fair benefits of liberalized trade to the poor of
the world, both in the center and the peripheral, are simply not
supported by facts.
Most monetary economists view government-issued money as a sovereign
debt instrument with zero maturity, historically derived from the bill
of exchange in free banking. This view is valid for specie money, which
is a certificate that can claim on demand a prescribed amount of gold
or other specie of value. Government-issued fiat money, on the other
hand, is not a sovereign debt but a sovereign credit instrument.
Sovereign government bonds are sovereign debt while local government
bonds are institutional debt, but not sovereign debt because local
governments cannot print money. When money buys bonds, the transaction
represents credit canceling debt. The relationship is rather
straightforward, but of fundamental importance.
If fiat money is not sovereign debt, then the entire conceptual
structure of capitalism is subject to reordering, just as physics was
subject to reordering when man's world view changed with the
realization that the earth is not stationary nor is it the center of
the universe. For one thing, capital formation for socially useful
development will be exposed as a cruel hoax. With sovereign credit,
there is no need for capital formation for socially useful development.
For another, private savings are not necessary to finance development,
since private savings are not required for the supply of sovereign
credit. With sovereign credit, labor should be in perpetual shortage,
and the price of labor should constantly rise.
A vibrant economy is one in which there is labor shortage. Private
savings are needed only for private investment that has no social
purpose or value. Savings are deflationary without full employment, as
savings reduces current consumption to provide investment to increase
future supply. Say's Law of supply creating its own demand is a very
special situation that is operative only under full employment. Say's
Law ignores a critical time lag between supply and demand that can be
fatal to a fast-moving modern economy. Savings require interest
payments, the compounding of which will regressively make any financial
system unsustainable. The religions forbade usury for very practical
reasons.
Fiat money issued by government is now legal tender in all modern
national economies since the collapse of the Bretton Woods regime of
fixed exchange rates linked to a gold-backed dollar in 1971. The State
Theory of Money (Chartalism) holds that the general acceptance of
government-issued fiat currency rests fundamentally on government's
authority to tax. Government's willingness to accept the currency it
issues for payment of taxes gives the issuance currency within a
national economy. That currency is sovereign credit for tax
liabilities, which are dischargeable by credit instruments issued by
government. When issuing fiat money, the government owes no one
anything except to make good a promise to accept its money for tax
payment. A central banking regime operates on the notion of
government-issued fiat money as sovereign credit. That is the essential
difference between central banking with government-issued fiat money,
which is a sovereign credit instrument, and free banking with privately
issued specie money, which is a bank IOU that allows the holder to
claim the gold behind it.
US president Thomas Jefferson prophesied: "If the American people allow
the banks to control the issuance of their currency, first by
inflation, and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will
grow up around them will deprive people of all property until their
children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers occupied
... The issuing power of money should be taken from the banks and
restored to Congress and the people to whom it belongs." It was a
definitive statement against the "political independence" of central
banks. This warning applies to the people of the world as well.
The Independent Treasury Act, passed in 1840, removed the federal
government from involvement with the United States' banking system by
establishing federal depositories for public funds instead of keeping
the money in national, state, or private banks. Under the Independent
Treasury Act, bank notes were to be gradually phased out for payments
to and from the government; by June 30, 1843, only hard money was to be
accepted.
The Whigs, led by Henry Clay and Daniel Webster, opposed the
Independent Treasury, but not to favor private banking. They were
committed to the re-establishment of a national bank like the one
president Andrew Jackson abolished in 1832. After winning a
congressional majority in the election of 1840, the Whigs succeeded in
repealing the Independent Treasury Act on August 13, 1841, although
they were unable to gain the support of President John Tyler for their
national bank proposal. The return of the Democrats to power after the
election of 1844 led to the passage in 1846 of a new Independent
Treasury Act, nearly identical to that of 1840. This legislation
remained substantially unchanged until passage of the Federal Reserve
Act in 1913, which established central banking in the US.
When the Civil War began in 1861, the newly installed president,
Abraham Lincoln, finding the Independent Treasury empty and payments in
gold having to be suspended, appealed in vain to the state-chartered
private banks for loans to pay for supplies needed to mobilize and
equip the Union Army. At that time, there were 1,600 banks chartered by
29 different states, and altogether they were issuing 7,000 different
kinds of banknotes in circulation. Lincoln immediately induced the
Congress to pass the Legal Tender Act of 1862 to authorize the issuing
of government notes (called greenbacks) without any reserve or specie
basis, on a par with bank notes backed by specie, promising to pay "on
demand" the amount shown on the face of the note with another note of
same value. The greenbacks were supposed to be gradually withdrawn
through payment of taxes, as specified in the Funding Act of 1866, to
allow the government to redeem these greenback notes in an orderly way
without interest.
Still, during the gloomiest period of the war when Union victory was in
serious doubt, the greenback had a market price of only 39 cents in
gold. The fall in value was related to the survival prospect of the
Union, not to loss of specie basis, which was non-existent. After the
war, the Supreme Court in a series of cases declared the Legal Tender
Act constitutional and Congress decreed that greenbacks then
outstanding would remain a permanent part of the nation's currency.
Indisputably, these greenback notes helped Lincoln save the Union.
Lincoln wrote: "We finally accomplished it and gave to the people of
this Republic the greatest blessing they ever had - their own paper to
pay their own debts." The importance of this lesson was never taught to
the world's governments by neo-liberal monetarists.
Government levies taxes not to finance its operations, but to give
value to its fiat money as credit instruments. If it chooses to,
government can finance its operation entirely through user fees, as
some fiscal conservatives suggest. Government needs never be indebted
to the public. It creates a government debt component to anchor the
debt market, not because it needs money. Technically, government never
borrows. It issues tax credit in the form of fiat money. So when US
president Ronald Reagan said the government does not make any money,
only the private sector does, he was merely mouthing a political
slogan, with no clear understanding of the true nature of money and
credit. Fiat money is all that government makes, freely and without
constraint, as Federal Reserve governor Ben S Bernanke recently warned
in a speech on deflation. And only government can make fiat money as
sovereign credit.
Sovereign debt is a pretend game to make private debts tradable. The
relationship between assets and liabilities is expressed as credit or
debt, with the designation determined by the flow of obligation. A flow
from asset to liability is known as credit, the reverse is known as
debt. A creditor is one who reduces his liability to increase his
assets, which include the right of collection on the liabilities of his
debtors.
The state, representing the people, owns all assets of a nation not
assigned to the private sector. Thus the state's assets is the national
wealth less that portion of private sector wealth after tax
liabilities, and all other claims on the private sector by sovereign
rights. Privatization generally reduces state assets. As long as a
state exists, its credit is limited only by the national wealth. If
sovereign credit is used to increase national wealth, then sovereign
credit is limitless as long as the growth of national wealth keeps pace
with the growth of sovereign credit. Even if the private sector has
been assigned all of a nation's tangible assets, the state, by virtual
of its existence, can still claim that portion of private sector assets
allowed by the constitutional regime. Such claims include the state's
power of taxation, nationalization, confiscation, condemnation by
eminent domain and the power to grant and revoke monopolies, and above
all, the power to issue legal tender by fiat - in other words, the
inherent rights of sovereignty.
When the state issues money as legal tender, it issues a monetary
instrument backed by its sovereign rights, which includes taxation. The
state never owes debts except specifically so denoted voluntarily. When
a state borrows in order to avoid levying or raising taxes, it is a
political expedience, not a financial necessity. When a state borrows,
through the selling of government bonds denominated in its own
currency, it is withdrawing previously issued sovereign credit from the
financial system. When a state borrows foreign currency, it forfeits
its sovereign credit privilege and reduces itself to an ordinary debtor
because the state cannot issue foreign currency.
Government bonds can act as absorber of credit from the private sector.
Government bonds in the United States, through dollar hegemony, enjoy
the highest credit rating, topping a credit risk pyramid in the
international debt market. Dollar hegemony is a geopolitical phenomenon
in which the US dollar, a fiat currency, assumes the status of primary
reserve currency of the international finance architecture. Yet
architecture is an art of esthetics in the moral-goodness sense, of
which the current international finance architecture is visibly
deficient. Thus dollar hegemony is objectionable not only because the
dollar usurps a role it does not deserve, but also because its effect
on the world community is devoid of moral goodness.
Money issued by government fiat is a sovereign monopoly, while debt is
not. Anyone with an acceptable credit rating can borrow or lend, but
only government can issue money as legal tender. When government issues
fiat money, it issues certificates of its credit good for discharging
tax liabilities imposed by government on its citizens. Privately issued
money can exist only with the grace and permission of the sovereign,
and is different from government-issued money in that privately issued
money is an IOU from the issuer, with the issuer owing the holder the
content of the money's backing.
But government-issued fiat money is not an IOU from the government
because the money is backed by a potential IOU from the holder in the
form of tax liabilities. Money issued by government by fiat as legal
tender is good by law for settling all debts, private and public.
Anyone refusing to accept dollars in the United States is in violation
of US law. Instruments used for settling debts are credit instruments.
Buying up government bonds with government-issued fiat money is one of
the ways government releases more credit into the economy. By logic,
the money supply in an economy is not government debt because, if
increasing the money supply means increasing the national debt, then
monetary easing would contract credit from the economy. Empirical
evidence suggests otherwise: monetary ease increases the supply of
credit. Thus if money creation by government increases credit, money
issued by government is a credit instrument, quod erat
demonstrandum.
Hyman Minsky rightly said that whenever credit is issued, money is
created. The issuing of credit creates debt on the part of the
counterparty, but debt is not money; credit is. If anything, debt is
negative money, a form of financial antimatter. Physicists understand
the relationship between matter and antimatter. Albert Einstein
theorized that matter results from concentration of energy and Paul
Dirac conceptualized the creation of antimatter through the creation of
matter out of energy. The collision of matter and antimatter produces
annihilation that returns matter and antimatter to pure energy. The
same is true with credit and debt, which are related but opposite. They
are created in separate forms out of financial energy to produce matter
(credit) and antimatter (debt). The collision of credit and debt will
produce an annihilation and return the resultant union to pure
financial energy unharnessed for human benefit.
Monetary debt is repayable with money. Government does not become a
debtor by issuing fiat money, which, in the United States, takes the
form of a Federal Reserve note, not an ordinary banknote. The word
"bank" does not appear on US dollars. Zero maturity money (ZMM) in the
dollar economy, which grew from $550 billion in 1971, when president
Richard Nixon took the dollar off a gold standard, to $6.333 trillion
as of June 2003, is not a federal debt. It amounts to more than 60
percent of US gross domestic product (GDP), roughly equal to the
national debt of $6.67 trillion at the same point in time.
A holder of fiat money is a holder of sovereign credit. The holder of
fiat money is not a creditor to the state, as many monetary economists
claim. Fiat money only entitles its holder a replacement of the same
money from government, nothing more. The holder of fiat money is acting
as a state agent, with the full faith and credit of the state behind
the instrument, which is also good for paying taxes. Fiat money, like a
passport, entitles the holder to the protection of the state in
enforcing sovereign credit. It is a certificate of state financial
power inherent in sovereignty.
Topics presented at the Seventh International
Conference on Economics included the critical examination of
globalization, the causes and management of financial crises,
international finance architecture, growth economics, labor economics
and risk management. The conference provided a venue to exchange views
on the latest thinking and recent technical advances in economics in
response to pressing current problems and issues. For more information,
visit the conference website at http://www.erc.metu.edu.tr.
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