{"id":27350,"date":"2015-05-18T15:00:36","date_gmt":"2015-05-18T15:00:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.capitalismmagazine.com\/?p=27350"},"modified":"2015-05-19T17:03:56","modified_gmt":"2015-05-19T17:03:56","slug":"falling-yield-rising-asset","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.capitalismmagazine.com\/2015\/05\/falling-yield-rising-asset\/","title":{"rendered":"Falling Yield, Rising Asset"},"content":{"rendered":"
Our monetary system is failing, but explaining that isn\u2019t easy. The most popular argument is that the dollar has falling purchasing power<\/em> and rising inflation<\/em>. The problem with this argument is that consumer prices aren\u2019t skyrocketing now. So, of course, people remain skeptical.<\/p>\n Meanwhile, yields across all markets are falling worldwide. This causes the income generated from assets to fall. I wrote about this serious problem last time, introducing the concept of yield purchasing power<\/em>\u2014which is how much you can buy with the interest<\/a> on your savings.<\/p>\n Today, there is little to no interest, which forces retirees to spend down their principal. This is no accident. It\u2019s the vision of economist John Maynard Keynes. Nearly 80 years ago, he called for the \u201ceuthanasia of the rentier<\/em>,\u201d\u2014his pejorative term for retirees and others on fixed income. Today Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen calls herself a New Keynesian.<\/p>\n To picture the plight of the retiree living on fixed income, let\u2019s use the example of a poor farmer. Every year, his harvest shrinks. With a smaller and smaller crop, it\u2019s harder and harder to live. So he commits the sin of eating some of his seed corn. Smaller plantings only accelerate the decline in his crops.<\/p>\n Our paper currency causes falling productivity, though not in terms of bushels per acre. What falls is productivity per dollar or euro of savings. This is the real meaning of the falling interest rate. When the rate was 10 percent, $1,000 of principal produced $100 of return. When it falls to two percent, then the same capital generates a return of only $20. Now with the Swiss 10-year bond, CHF 1,000 earns only CHF 1.3.<\/p>\n Every farmer understands a falling crop yield. However, few investors see the problem with a falling interest rate. Let\u2019s use another farm example to help clarify. A dealer wants to buy the farmer\u2019s tractor. He offers $10,000 for it. The farmer says no. Next week, he increases his offer to $11,000. Still no. The dealer keeps coming back with higher offers, until the farmer finally accepts $50,000. He can live for a year on that. Unfortunately, he\u2019s given up his most important tool. Now he\u2019s not consuming his seed corn, but his capital stock. Next year\u2019s harvest will be even more meager.<\/p>\n