The immediate
problem for which the world needs a solution to-day is different from
the problem of a year ago. Then it was a question of how we could lift
ourselves out of the state of acute slump into which we had fallen and
raise the volume of production back toward a normal figure. But to-day
the primary problem is to avoid a far-reaching financial crisis. There
is now no possibility of reaching a normal level of production in the
near future. Our efforts are directed toward the attainment of more
limited hopes. Can we prevent an almost complete collapse of the
financial structure of modern capitalism? With no financial leadership
left in the world and profound intellectual error as to causes and cures
prevailing in the responsible seats of power, one begins to wonder and
to doubt. At any rate, no one is likely to dispute that for the world as
a whole the avoidance of financial collapse, rather than the stimulation
of industrial activity, is now the front-rank problem. The restoration
of industry must come second in order of time. Nowhere, I believe, is
this better understood than in the United States.
The immediate causes of the world financial panic--for that is
what it is--are obvious. They are to be found in a catastrophic fall
in the money value, not only of commodities, but of practically every
kind of asset. The 'margins,' as we call them, upon confidence in the
maintenance of which the debt and credit structure of the modern world
depends, have 'run off.' In many countries the assets of the banks are
no longer equal, conservatively valued, to their liabilities to their
depositors. Debtors of all kinds find that their securities are no
longer the equal of their debts. Few governments still have revenues
sufficient to cover the fixed money charges for which they have made
themselves liable.
Moreover, a collapse of this kind feeds on itself. We are now
in the phase where the risk of carrying assets with borrowed money is
so great that there is a competitive panic to get liquid. And each
individual who succeeds in getting more liquid forces down the price
of assets in the process of getting liquid, with the result that the
margins of other individuals are impaired and their courage
undermined. And so the process continues. It is, indeed, in the United
States itself that this has proceeded to the most incredible lengths.
The collapse of values there has reached astronomical dimensions. I
scarcely need to remind American readers of the facts. But the United
States only offers an example--extreme, owing to the psychology of its
people--of a state of affairs which exists in some degree almost
everywhere.
The competitive struggle for liquidity has now extended beyond
individuals and institutions to nations and to governments, each of
which endeavors to make its internal balance sheet more liquid by
restricting imports and stimulating exports by every possible means,
the success of each one in this direction meaning the defeat of
someone else. Moreover, each country discourages capital development
within its own borders for fear of the effect on its international
balance. Yet it will only be successful in its object in so far as its
progress toward negation is greater than that of its neighbors.
II
We have here an extreme example of the disharmony of general
and particular interest. Each nation, in an effort to improve its
relative position, takes measures injurious to the absolute prosperity
of its neighbors; and, since its example is not confined to itself, it
suffers more from similar action by its neighbors than it gains by
such action itself. Practically all the remedies popularly advocated
to-day are of this internecine character. Competitive wage reductions,
competitive tariffs, competitive liquidation of foreign assets,
competitive currency deflations, competitive economy campaigns--all
are of this beggar-my-neighbor description. For one man's expenditure
is another man's income. Thus, while we undoubtedly increase our own
margin, we diminish that of someone else; and if the practice is
universally followed everyone will be worse off. An individual may be
forced by his private circumstances to curtail his normal expenditure,
and no one can blame him. But let no one suppose that he is performing
a public duty in behaving in such a way. The modern capitalist is a
fair-weather sailor. As soon as a storm rises, he abandons the duties
of navigation and even sinks the boats which might carry him to safety
by his haste to push his neighbor off and himself in.
Unfortunately the popular mind has been educated away from the
truth, away from common sense. The average man has been taught to
believe what his own common sense, if he relied on it, would tell him
was absurd. Even remedies of a right tendency have become discredited
because of the failure of a timid and vacillating application of them.
Now, at last, under the teaching of hard experience, there may be some
slight improvement toward wiser counsels. But through lack of
foresight, and constructive imagination the financial and political
authorities of the world have lacked the courage or the conviction at
each stage of the decline to apply the available remedies in
sufficiently drastic doses; and by now they have allowed the collapse
to reach a point where the whole system may have lost its resiliency
and its capacity for a rebound.
Meanwhile the problem of reparations and war debts darkens the
whole scene. We all know that these are now as dead as mutton, and as
distasteful as stale mutton. There is no question of any substantial
payments' being made. The problem has ceased to be financial and has
become entirely political and psychological. If in the next six months
the French were to make a very moderate and reasonable proposal in
final settlement, I believe that the Germans, in spite of all their
present protestations to the contrary, would accept it and would be
wise to accept it. But to all outward appearances the French mind
appears to be hardening against such a solution and in favor of
forcing a situation in which Germany will default. French politicians
(and in candid moments American politicians may confess to a fellow
feeling) are conscious that it will be much easier for them, vis-a-vis
the home political front to get rid of reparations by a German default
than to reach by agreement a moderate sum, most of which might have to
be handed on to the United States. Moreover, this outcome would have
what they deem to be the advantage of piling up grievances and a legal
case against Germany for use in connection with the other outstanding
questions created between the two countries by the Treaty of
Versailles. I cannot, therefore, extract much comfort or prospective
hope from developments in this sphere of international finance.
III
Well, I have painted the prospect in the blackest colors. What
is there to be said on the other side? What elements of hope can we
discern in the surrounding gloom? And what useful action does it still
lie in our power to take?
The outstanding ground for cheerfulness lies, I think, in
this--that the system has shown already its capacity to stand an
almost inconceivable strain. If anyone had prophesied to us a year or
two ago the actual state of affairs which exists to-day, could we have
believed that the world could continue to maintain even that degree of
normality which we actually have? This remarkable capacity of the
system to take punishment is the best reason for hoping that we still
have time to rally the constructive forces of the world.
Moreover, there has been a still recent and, in my judgment,
most blessed event of which we have not yet had time to gain the full
benefit. I mean Great Britain's abandonment of the gold standard. I
believe that this event has been charged with beneficent significance
over a wide field. If Great Britain had somehow contrived to maintain
her gold parity, the position of the world as a whole to-day would be
considerably more desperate than it is, and default more general.
For Great Britain's action has had two signal consequences. The
first has been to stop the decline of prices, measured in terms of
national currencies, over a very considerable proportion of the world.
Consider for a moment what an array of countries are now linked to the
fortunes of sterling rather than gold: Australasia, India, Ceylon,
Malaya, East and West Africa, Egypt, and Scandinavia; and, in
substance, though not so literally, South America, Canada, and Japan.
Outside Europe there are no countries in the whole world except South
Africa and the United States which now conform to a gold standard.
France and the United States are the only remaining countries of major
importance where the gold standard is functioning freely.
This means a very great abatement of the deflationary pressure
which was existing six months ago. Over wide areas producers are now
obtaining prices in terms of their domestic currencies which are not
so desperately unsatisfactory in relation to their costs of production
and to their debts. These events have been too recent to attract all
the attention they deserve. There are several countries of which it
could be argued that their economic and financial condition may have
turned the corner in the last six months. It is true, for example, of
Australia. I think it may be true of Argentina and Brazil. There has
been an extraordinary improvement in India, where the export of gold
previously hoarded, a consequence of the discount of sterling in terms
of gold which no one predicted, has almost solved the financial
problem.
As regards Great Britain herself, the world has a little
overlooked, I think, the change since last September, which
represents, if not an absolute, at least a relative improvement. The
number of persons employed to-day exceeds by 200,000 the number
employed a year ago--which is true of no other industrial country.
This has been achieved in spite of the fact that there has been, even
during the past year, a further rise in real wages; for, while money
wages have fallen by 2 per cent, the cost of living, in spite of the
depreciation of the sterling exchange, has fallen by 4 per cent. And
the explanation is an encouragement for the future. For the
explanation lies in the fact that over a wide field of her
characteristic activities Great Britain to-day is once again the
cheapest producer in the world. The forces set on foot last September
have by no means had time to work their full effect. Yet even
to-day--though, since popular knowledge of a foreign country is always
out of date, it may surprise you that I should say so--Great Britain
is decidedly the most prosperous country in the world.
IV
But there is a second major consequence of the partition of the
countries of the world into two groups, on and off the gold standard
respectively. For the two groups roughly correspond to those which
have been exercising deflationary pressure on the rest of the world,
by having a net creditor position which causes them to draw gold, and
those which have been suffering this pressure. Now the departure of
the latter group from gold means the beginning of a process toward the
restoration of economic equilibrium. It means the setting into motion
of natural forces which are certain in course of time to undermine and
eventually destroy the creditor position of the two leading creditor
gold countries. The process will be seen most rapidly in the case of
France, whose creditor position is likely to be completely undermined
before the end of 1932. The cessation of reparation receipts, the loss
of tourist traffic, the competitive disadvantage of her export trades
with non-gold countries, and the importation of a large proportion of
the world's available gold, will, between them, do that work. In the
case of the United States the process may be a slower one, largely
because the reduction of tourist traffic, which costs France so dear,
means for the United States a large saving. But the tendency will be
the same. A point will surely come when the current release of gold
from India and the mines will exceed the favorable balance of the gold
countries.
Thus a process has been set moving which may relieve in the end
the deflationary pressure. The question is whether this will have time
to happen before financial organization and the system of
international credit break under the strain. If it does, then the way
will be cleared for a concerted policy, probably under the leadership
of Great Britain, of capital expansion and price raising throughout
the world. For without this the only alternative solution which I can
envisage is one of the general default of debts and the disappearance
of the existing credit system, followed by rebuilding on quite new
foundations.
The following, then, is the chapter of events which might
conceivably--I will not attempt to evaluate the probability of their
occurrence--lead us out of the bog. The financial crisis might wear
itself out before a point of catastrophe and general default had been
reached. This is, perhaps, happening. The greatest dangers may have
been surmounted during the past few months. "Pari passu"
with this, the deflationary pressure exerted on the rest of the world
by the unbalanced creditor position of France and the United States
may be relaxed, through their losing their creditor position as a
result of the steady operation of the forces which I have already
described. If and when these things are clearly the case, we shall
then enter the cheap-money phase. This is the point at which, on the
precedent of previous slumps, we might hope for the beginning of
recovery. I am not confident, however, that on this occasion the
cheap-money phase will be sufficient by itself to bring about an
adequate recovery of new investment. It may still be the case that the
lender, with his confidence shattered by his experiences, will
continue to ask for new enterprise rates of interest which the
borrower cannot expect to earn. Indeed, this was already the case in
the moderately-cheap-money phase which preceded the financial crisis
of last autumn.
If this proves to be so, there will be no means of escape from
prolonged and perhaps interminable depression except by direct state
intervention to promote and subsidize new investment. Formerly there
was no expenditure out of the proceeds of borrowing that it was
thought proper for the State to incur except for war. In the past,
therefore, we have not infrequently had to wait for a war to terminate
a major depression. I hope that in the future we shall not adhere to
this purist financial attitude, and that we shall be ready to spend on
the enterprises of peace what the financial maxims of the past would
only allow us to spend on the devastations of war. At any rate, I
predict with an assured confidence that the only way out is for us to
discover some object which is admitted even by the deadheads to be a
legitimate excuse for largely increasing the expenditure of someone on
something!
In all our thoughts and feelings and projects for the
betterment of things, we should have it at the back of our heads that
this is not a crisis of poverty, but a crisis of abundance. It is not
the harshness and the niggardliness of nature which are oppressing us,
but our own incompetence and wrong-headedness which hinder us from
making use of the bountifulness of inventive science and cause us to
be overwhelmed by its generous fruits. The voices which--in such a
conjuncture--tell us that the path of escape is to be found in strict
economy and in refraining, wherever possible, from utilizing the
world's potential production are the voices of fools and madmen. There
is a passage from David Hume in which he says: 'Though the ancients
maintained that, in order to reach the gifts of prophecy, a certain
divine fury or madness was requisite, one may safely affirm that, in
order to deliver such prophecies as these, no more is necessary than
merely to be in one's senses, free from the influence of popular
madness and delusion.'
Obviously it is much more difficult to solve the problem to-day
than it would have been a year ago. But I believe even now, as I
believed then, that we could still be, if we would, the masters of our
fate. The obstacles to recovery are not material. They reside in the
state of knowledge, judgment, and opinion of those who sit in the seat
of authority. Unluckily the traditional and ingrained beliefs of those
who hold responsible positions throughout the world grew out of
experiences which contained no parallel to the present, and are often
the opposite of what one would wish them to believe to-day. In France
the weight of authoritative opinion and public sentiment is genuinely
and sincerely opposed to the whole line of thought which runs through
what I have been saying. In the United States it is almost
inconceivable what rubbish a public man has to utter to-day if he is
to keep respectable. Serious and sensible bankers, who as men of
common sense are trying to do what they can to stem the tide of
liquidation and to stimulate the forces of expansion, have to go about
assuring the world of their conviction that there is no serious risk
of inflation, when what they really mean is that they cannot yet see
good enough grounds for daring to hope for it. In Great Britain
opinion is probably more advanced. I believe that the ideas of British
bankers are on sounder lines than those current elsewhere. What we in
London have to fear is timidity and a reluctance to act boldly.
Nothing could be a greater advantage to the world than that the
United States should solve her own domestic problems, and, by solving
them, provide the stimulus and the example to other countries. But
observing from a distance,--a nearer view of the prospect might modify
my pessimism,--I am unable to imagine a course of events which could
restore health to American industry in the near future. I even fancy
that, so far from the United States giving the example, she will
herself have to wait for stimulus from outside. I, therefore, dare to
hope--however improbable it may seem in the light of recent
experience--that relief may come first of all to Great Britain and the
group of overseas countries which look to her for financial
leadership. It is a dim hope, I confess. But I discern less light
elsewhere.