Sunday, May 21, 2023

The Inflationary Budget

The nation’s budgeting process is in need of significant restructuring. The current offering prevents the nation from properly managing the money supply. Current policy lacks the ability to directly influence this pivotal economic indicator, but setting the US economy onto a better path will be no small task. Not only do tactical operations reinforce misguided policies, but the strategic direction is also profoundly off course. Imagining that wealth hoarders are sacrosanct and require special considerations leads us down the wrong path. It is within this context that a fresh look at money supply management is necessary. A better understanding of how economies work may be a good place to start.

The current strategy administers the economy based upon microeconomic principles. National economies, however, do not respond to efficiencies or the profit motive. They respond to an “effective demand” for goods and services, a term first made prominent by John Maynard Keynes in the 1930s. Without an effective demand for their product or service, most business firms will fail. This is where proper management of the money supply becomes necessary. The appropriate level of demand is put at risk when the money supply is left to chance. Proper management of this key indicator is the necessary objective, but to be sustainable, economic policies must be couched within societal objectives.

To achieve the social objective of improving humanity’s well-being, democracy and the rule of law must be protected. To protect democracy and the freedom it bestows, social and economic objectives must address human shortcomings by limiting unhealthy concentrations of private wealth that will attempt to influence public policy in a self-serving direction. Initiating a Sufficiently Progressive Tax Code and a wealth tax is necessary as a starting point, but this, of course, is no easy task in an environment where money and politics have been engrained in our system of governance. Proper management of the money supply must begin with an equitable distribution of the burden. Assuming a more level playing field is in the offing, the following will attempt to uncover the benefit of moving away from a microeconomic financial budget at the national level and toward a truly economic budget by focusing on the prospects of inflation within the context of the money supply.

                                                                    Fiat (Sovereign) Currency

With centuries in development, our current economic budgetary process has evolved little. It remains captive to the “supply creates its own demand” mantra. The current economic financial budgetary process, however, is no longer appropriate for a country that enjoys a sovereign currency such as we have in the US. Managing to a financial budget assumes too much. It assumes a level playing field where revenue is reintroduced into the economy by way of tax collection at appropriate levels. Given the current tax structure, this assumption is not warranted. Managing to a financial budget also assumes the appropriate level of funding can be determined as the annual budget is finalized. The appropriate level of funding (revenue creation or revenue withdrawn) will keep an economy from running too hot or too cold and is, in fact, a moving target unlikely to be arrived at annually. The ability to adjust spending as the situation arises is lost in the current budgeting process.

A fiat currency allows for more flexibility. It allows policy makers the ability to fund socially useful initiatives up to the point where the prospect of accelerating inflation becomes apparent. In an inflationary budget regime, an across-the-board adjustment to the rate of taxation is initiated once the appropriate economic indicators appear. Tax rates are either increased to slow consumer buying power or, in the case of high unemployment, lowered to increase demand. The distraction of deficit financing is put to rest. A fiat currency allows for this greater versatility.

Managing to a financial budget may be reassuring to those on the profit motive, but economies do not operate on the profit motive. A national economy operates on the principles of price stability and full employment, that is, within the context of the social goods it can produce. Because future optimum money supply levels cannot be known in a world full of contingencies, discovering inflationary trends must now become the focus. An inflationary budget that projects the likelihood of accelerating inflation allows for a more robust economy, one not constrained by artificial limits. An inflationary budget can allow for policies that better administer to the needs of all stakeholders. Constraints must be put on the money supply by way of an inflationary budget with less self-defeating intrusions.

                                                                    Appropriate Tools

The authority to manage the money supply has been delegated by Congress to the Federal Reserve (Fed). To influence this key economic indicator, the Fed raises or lowers interest rates. It is felt here that this is the wrong approach to managing the money supply. While the Fed has the ability to act decisively, results of interest rate adjustments are often less than optimal and sometimes even harmful as the recent banking crisis has shown. A more appropriate approach would be to use Fiscal Policy to effect changes to the money supply when necessary. Fiscal policy has the advantage of adding or withdrawing revenue directly from the economy and not having to wait for the private sector to perform this function by way of increased or decreased lending. Moving from a central bank (private) focus to a Congressional (public) focus presents major obstacles but is necessary for a more rational approach to economic policy.

In the fight against inflation, Congress has the ability to raise taxes or suspend non-essential governmental spending to reduce the money supply and lessen demand. It can better target a money supply that produces an economy that runs neither too hot nor too cold. This “Goldilocks economy” is in a sense the objective of good economic policy. Adjusting the money supply to prevent inflation while providing for full employment should be left to those with the appropriate tools.

The unfortunate reality, however, is that Congress has been designed to be deliberative, which can be a significant disadvantage when fighting inflation. Quick action is typically needed to prevent the snowball effect inflation can sometimes elicit. When inflation appears in the data, raising personal income tax rates must be initiated to maintain the economic sweet spot. Producing an economy that runs neither too hot nor too cold is a daunting task when faced with the headwinds of windfall profits, barriers to entry, monopolistic power, managing expectations, and other exogenous variables.

                                                                    Congress

Along with tax considerations mentioned earlier, one of the most challenging obstacles to the creation of an inflationary budget is Congress itself. As is commonly understood, when fighting inflation, time is of the essence. Because our elected representatives are tied to the mainstream narrative, heroic efforts must be taken to ensure a timely response to inflationary pressure once Congress reassumes responsibility for price stability. This response will require authority only big data can provide. Advances made in the field of machine intelligence must be considered as a tool to make the deliberative process a matter of acquiescence on the part of Congress and not one of research. Deep Learning, a subset of Machine Learning, shows the power of pattern recognition and the ability to serve a designed purpose. We must develop a tool that can recognize all contributions to inflation and recommend a path forward to mitigate perceived ill effects. Factoring in a policy to optimize private enterprise performance vs. societal well-being will undoubtedly be a stumbling block, but a well-designed tool should be able to provide supportable data that ensures integrity. This tool must be a bipartisan government funded basic research project that can predict the likelihood of inflation (undoubtedly using much of the same data the Congressional Budget Office and the Fed’s 400 or so PhD scholars use to make projections) and then recommend appropriate Fiscal Policy adjustments when inflationary trends are found.

                                                                    Conclusion

While an inflationary budget process makes good economic sense, current obstacles to good money management must be overcome before a useful budgetary process of this sort can be properly administered. Profound obstacles stand in the way of creating the level playing field necessary for an inflationary budget to work properly. Asking the economic community of scholars to abandon 150 years of the financial economy in favor of a more wholistic approach to wealth creation will not be easily overcome. The challenge is probably analogous to the centuries long struggle to unseat the Catholic Church as the supreme arbiter of morality.

Before an inflationary budget can be seriously considered, a Sufficiently Progressive Tax Code, based upon one’s saving behavior, and a wealth tax must be in place to avoid fueling our current march toward oligarchical rule. A recognition that Fiscal Policy, administered by Congress, is the more appropriate tool for addressing the money supply can then be entertained. Finally, because of the nature of politics, the use of Machine Learning must be developed to minimize the obstruction politics will have on good economic policy.

A financial budget has the presumed benefit of fiscal responsibility. The inflationary budget approach must be couched in similar terms. We do ourselves a disservice by ignoring the possibility of greater social well-being by way of proper economic tools. We must begin to better focus on economic and social objectives by moving economic policies into the twenty-first century.