Best of the Week
Most Popular
1.Warning Global Fiat Currency Financial System Collapse By Early 2011 - Matthias_Chang
2.The Poor Have No Chance of Joining the Rich, the Game is Rigged - James_Quinn
3.Gold Imminent Breakout and Investment In Failure - Jim_Willie_CB
4.Fear is Driving the Markets, But Don't Let it Drive You - Jon D. Markman
5.Quantitative Easing, Money Velocity Inflationary Armageddon - DeepCaster_LLC
6.Stock Market Crash, Bull or Bear?  - JD_Rosendahl
7.UK Economy Booms Whilst U.S. Stutters, Stocks Fail to Follow Crash Script - Nadeem_Walayat
8.Charts Reveal Stock Market Truths - Barry_M_Ferguson
9.HMRC PAYE Tax Error To Cost Workers £1,400 Each, £400 Rebate for Others - Nadeem_Walayat
10.Debt is Main Threat to U.S. National Security ... Pentagon Must Cut Spending -Washingtons_Blog
Last 5 Days Analysis
Inflation Mega-Trend Long-term Growth Spiral Continues to Drive Stock Market Trend - 5th Sept 10
Non Farm Payrolls: The Devil Is In the Adjustments - 5th Sept 10
HP`s 3PAR Acquisition Makes Strategic & Financial Sense - 5th Sept 10
More Economic Stimulus to Fix Unemployment? - 5th Sept 10
The Economic Insane Asylum - 5th Sept 10
America's Economic Nightmare Is Just Beginning - 5th Sept 10
Middle East Conflict Costs Region $12 Trillion Over 20 Years - 5th Sept 10
Gold Continues to Climb Higher, Where Next? - 5th Sept 10
The Great Traffic Jam of China, Transport Crisis and Investment Opportunity - 5th Sept 10
Population and Productivity Fundemental Drivers for Economic Growth - 5th Sept 10
Stimulus and Full Employment, Averting the Great Depression Again - 5th Sept 10
Gold Continuing Rally or Inevitable Correction? - 5th Sept 10
China Knows the Fate of the Euro - 5th Sept 10
SPX Bounces as Nasdaq Readies for its Next Flash Stock Market Crash - 5th Sept 10
Afghanistan Banking System Crash, Americans to Bailout Afghanistan's Biggest Bank? - 5th Sept 10
Reconstructing The IPCC - 5th Sept 10
Economic Suicide as Economies and the Middle Class are Taxed to Death - 4th Sept 10
U.S. Government Policy Caused America's Unemployment Crisis - 4th Sept 10
Quantitative Easing QE2, Debt Created Out of Thin Air, Banking Crisis Worsens - 4th Sept 10
Rip-Off By The Federal Reserve - 4th Sept 10
Today’s Most Important Price Points in Gold Update - 4th Sept 10
British Columbia Mining Renaissance Continues with Historic Revenue Agreement - 4th Sept 10
Learn How to Create Synthetic SPX Equity Positions Using Options - 4th Sept 10
Inflation and Speculating in Gold - 4th Sept 10
The QE Money Printing Case for Gold and Silver - 4th Sept 10
Agri-Food Price Index Makes New High! - 4th Sept 10
Premium Charts Analysis and Forecasts of Asian-Pacific and European Stock Markets - 3rd Sept 10
5 Reasons To Lock In Stock Market Gains Today! - 3rd Sept 10
U.S. Unemployment Rises to 9.6%, A Look Beneath the Surface - 3rd Sept 10
Gold Mining Stock Margins - 3rd Sept 10
Stock Market Apocalypse Not Yet? - 3rd Sept 10
Peak Denial About Peak Oil - 3rd Sept 10
Bad Monetary Policy Is Redundant - 3rd Sept 10
If a Pure Market Economy Is So Good, Why Doesn't It Exist? - 3rd Sept 10
Stock Market Relief Rally Beckons? - 3rd Sept 10
US Global Consumer Franchise Stocks –Surely Value lies with these Stocks not Bonds! - 3rd Sept 10
Double-Dip Recession Deepens as U.S. Housing Market Collapses - 3rd Sept 10
Moving into Bonds: From Frying Pan to Fire - 3rd Sept 10
Endeavour Merchant Bank Becomes Gold Producer - 3rd Sept 10
Stock Market Nominal Low is Behind Us! - 3rd Sept 10
China Using Government Muscle to Turbo Charge its Auto Industry - 3rd Sept 10
How to Profit From the “Widow-Maker” Trade, Shorting U.S. Treasury Bonds - 3rd Sept 10
Putting an End to Democrats, Liberals, & Progressives...once and for all!!! - 3rd Sept 10
Charts Reveal Stock Market Truths - 3rd Sept 10
The Financial Markets Week in Review - 3rd Sept 10
Exhaustion Gap on Yields Chart! - 3rd Sept 10
For Labor Day Weekend, When Unemployment Happens To You - 3rd Sept 10
UK House Prices and GDP Growth Trends Analysis - 3rd Sept 10
Blowing Bubbles, U.S. Treasury Bonds - 2nd Sep 10
What to Expect for Future Potash Prices - 2nd Sep 10
Is Asia’s Economic Rebound Sustainable? - 2nd Sep 10
China MFG Growth Fuels Global Stock Market Bullishness... - 2nd Sep 10
Think Small Cap Stocks When Investing International - 2nd Sep 10
Stock Markets Treading Water After a Big Up Day - 2nd Sep 10
Militancy and the U.S. Drawdown in Afghanistan - 2nd Sep 10
The Surprise Threat to BP's Future - 2nd Sep 10
U.S. Economic Recovery Collapses - 2nd Sep 10
Obama’s Iraq Speech An Exercise in Cowardice and Deceit - 2nd Sep 10
Fed Engineering a Delebrate State of Slow Economic Collapse - 2nd Sep 10 -
The State's "Inception" Fails, Massive unemployment and failing industries are the reality - 2nd Sep 10
The GOP's Masterplan: Obstruct, Smear, Lie, Repeat  - 2nd Sep 10
Stock Market Crash, Bull or Bear?  - 2nd Sep 10 - JD_Rosendahl
I Renounce Monetarism, That Money Supply is a Leading Indicator for Aggregate Demand - 2nd Sep 10
Hedge Your Bets in Small and Micro-Cap Gold and Silver Stocks - 2nd Sep 10
Quantitative Easing, Money Velocity Inflationary Armageddon - 1st Sep 10
Crude Oil’s Out - Find Out What’s In - 1st Sep 10
Gold Imminent Breakout and Investment In Failure - 1st Sep 10
Rally in Stocks, Commodities, and Risk-currencies Could be Sustainable - 1st Sep 10
How the Stock Market and Economy Really Work - 1st Sep 10
War is Over Wednesday, Stocks Bottom Fishing - 1st Sep 10
Chinese Data Cheers Stock Markets But NFP Looms - 1st Sep 10
U.S. Housing Sales Slump Whilst China's Boom - 1st Sep 10
Government Debt Defaults and Inflation Are the Norm, Not the Exception - 1st Sep 10
10 Financial Scams For Investors to be on Guard Against - 1st Sep 10
How to Buy Silver, Special Report - 1st Sep 10
Warning Global Fiat Currency Financial System Collapse By Early 2011 - 1st Sep 10
The Fourth Turning – Economic and Social Skies Over the United States Darkening - 1st Sep 10
Inflation, Rounding Up the Culprits of Rising Prices - 1st Sep 10
U.S. Taxes Set to Sky Rocket, Protect Your Wealth by Going Global - 1st Sep 10 -
Why the Bank of Japan's Economic Stimulus is Good For the Gold Price - 1st Sep 10 -
Peasgood Preaches Patience on Geothermal Stock Sector Investments - 1st Sep 10
Quantitative Easing Will Trigger Another Wave of Mergers and Acquisitions - 1st Sep 10
Economic Death By Globalism, Economists Haven’t a Clue - 1st Sep 10
Buy Stocks “In The Face Of Fear” - 1st Sep 10 - David_Grandey

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

It's FreeWeek at EWI: Get charts, analysis and forecasts of Asian-Pacific and European markets

British Pound Devaluation Delusions

Currencies / British Pound Sep 27, 2009 - 12:31 PM

By: Phill_Tomlinson

Currencies

Best Financial Markets Analysis Article"It does not mean that the pound here in Britain, in your pocket or purse or in your bank, has been devalued."
Harold Wilson, British Prime Minister, after the Pounds devaluation in 1967

"A weak currency arises from a weak economy which in turn is the result of a weak Government."
Gordon Brown, During the Pounds devaluation after it was withdrawn from the ERM


Mervyn King the Bank of England's Governor has been causing a stir in the markets this week. Despite Sterling being a flawed currency it hasn't stopped Mervyn King from making comments that he feels a weaker currency is beneficial for the UK. Undeterred by the pound losing around a quarter of its value, it seems that the BoE still feel the need to send it lower. US-centric reporting has been emphasising the Federal Reserves draconian monetary actions, but yet it is the UK that leads the way in QE and the destruction of its currency. Labour Governments always seem to be in power when the pound gets a pounding. 1931, 1967, 1976 and recently 2008 and beyond.

If Neil Kinnock had won the 1992 election like so many believed at the time, they would have got the whole set for the past one hundred years. So what does it matter that the pound has devalued of late? Is it as black and white as 'it will boost our exports', that the media and business pundits proclaim? I agree with the quote above, not Harold Wilson's, but Gordon Browns. Over the long term, Governments that use their currencies to try and solve their economic troubles are doomed to fail. If you try to alleviate trade deficits with this mechanism over the short term it may succeed, but eventually more devaluations will be required in order to 'boost' exports again.

Implications of Devaluations

An examination of the devaluation is required to understand what benefits/disadvantages it brings. Governments always claim that this will lower the cost of our exports, which it does, but no analysis is paid to what actually occurs. If we examine a factory that exports goods, they may be struggling to compete, say against similar German products. A devaluation would instantly lower the cost of the good on the export market. The German Government, for example, may hold steadfast and are not willing to allow their currency to depreciate by the same margin. The British company without doing anything have instantly gained a cost advantage, in effect a free handout. The German company on the other hand has to look for savings itself. Management immediately begin cost cutting, increase productivity or improving their processes. They look at their product, they start to innovate or add extra features or improve the quality to justify the short term price dynamic that has just occurred. The British management does not need to do the above. They can produce the exact same product, using the same processes as there is no immediate need to innovate.

Also something much worse occurs. For the sake of the example say the two products, German and British, now are priced at €500 and €400 respectively after the devaluation, whilst previously they were €500 and €550 respectively. The British management now can increase the price over the short term, to say €450 as they are still cheaper than the German products. This extra margin may go into inflating workers pay, or other company benefits. Not only have no product or business improvements happened, but the British company is also rewarding itself.

The Import Dynamic

Misreporting in the media leads us to believe that the cost of our overseas holiday is the biggest headache when the value of our currency goes down - if only. When the currency takes a fall the whole nation is immediately given a pay cut, all our imports now go up in price. If we have to buy raw materials or products produced abroad it now costs us more, our purchasing power has effectively fallen. In the example given above, if the British company has to import any materials to produce its end product these will drive up their costs. Also the public now have to pay more for the product in question. The cost may seem to have reduced to €450 but remember its all relative, the British people are still getting paid in pounds. People can't buy the same amount of products as imports go up. A price spiral starts. The mechanic who imports car parts from abroad must now charge the public more for car repair work.

There are an infinite number of other business transactions that take the same format as the given example. All these costs eventually come back to the British company as their workers require higher wages to cope with the higher prices. This in turn keeps driving the cost of the product higher. Meanwhile in Germany, they have continued innovating lowering their costs through business improvements, driving costs down in order to compete and in turn producing a better end product. The end products cost after a year or two, could now be say €400 and €500, for the German and British companies respectively. The British company is back where it started but in a worse condition, as they have fallen further behind in terms of productivity and end product quality.

The above process can develop into a vicious spiral, with the British company loosing further export share and demanding further devaluation in order to 'boost' exports. There is no simple fix, if a currency goes down in value it doesn't help anyone.

What needs to occur is to let the market take the pain, not the currency. This may mean higher unemployment in the short term, but people and companies get competitive again. Any nation in history who has enjoyed an export boom has done so on the back of a strong domestic currency. Britain during the 19th Century, Germany and Japan through the second half of the 20th Century, the US when they rose as the global superpower. However times change. For the past 30 years or so US politicians have put forward the benefits of a lower Dollar for jobs and exports, but over the years it hasn't worked. Workers wages continue to decline, and US companies continue to disappear.

In Japan from the end of the second world war up until just before the lost two decades, the Yen dramatically appreciated against the US dollar. Yet Japanese exports during the same time frame also increased. Westerners used to joke that Japan only produced kimonos or tiny cheap ornaments. Japan subsequently underwent a huge economic development, beating the West on car manufacture and electronics to such a point that it has now become hard to name a handful of Western electronics companies. In 1970 the Yen was valued at around 357 to the US dollar. Within 20 years it was 146, more than doubling in value. During the lost two decades it hasn't moved much further, to around 90, however its worrying that its still appreciating despite the stagnation of the Japanese economy during this time.

Where does this leave the British Pound?

It's worrying when the people responsible for the defence of a currency welcome devaluation and even believe that this will solve the economic imbalances we face. You can't solve a domestic economies shortcomings by debasing the currency. The British Pound has resumed what it was prior to the late seventies and early eighties. It's once again the whipping boy in the currency markets. Investors beware, the British Pound will not be a place to be for the foreseeable future.

By Phill Tomlinson

http://theageofstupidity.blogspot.com

The Age of Stupidity "There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.", Ludwig Von Mises

© 2009 Copyright Phill Tomlinson - All Rights Reserved Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion provided for general information purposes only and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilising methods believed to be reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Individuals should consult with their personal financial advisors.  


© 2005-2010 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




(Note Commenting Issue: If after Submitting you are returned to the Main Index Page then due to site caching your comment has not been accepted. Solution - Click the Browser Back Button to the article page and Press PAGE REFRESH (you should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation") Now re-enter your comment (ignoring the notice) - If all's well then you will remain on the article page after submitting, a moderator will check and authorise the comment. Alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk , quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book