According
to Applied Reasoning, Inc. (an economic indicator research
firm), there was $1.19 trillion in the U.S. money supply
on September 8, 2002. If you're like many businesses these
days, you might ask "OK, so where is it?" In order
to answer that question, we must examine two basic components
of the economic system. They are money and velocity.
Most
of the time we talk about money in terms of simple amounts.
Such as, "I have $10,000 in savings," or "I
need $35,000 to buy that car." However, underneath
those statements is the implied definition of "fiat"
money: something that represents control over goods and
services. The $10,000 in savings is meaningless unless it
is connected to some item or service that we desire. It's
really not the $35,000 we want; it's the car. Money has
no value if it doesn't move from one person to another.
The rate at which the money moves is called velocity.
What
makes an economy thrive is not just how much money there
is, but rather the amount that travels between people and
organizations. We've all heard the term "money is tight."
That
statement is more than just a clever catch-phrase. It means:
of that $1,192 billion dollars, not much of it is moving
around.
The
money supply turns over on average about three times a year.
When economists fail to predict the future, it's not because
they don't know how much money has been created by the Federal
Reserve Board and released through the banks. It's because
they don't know what people are doing with it. When people
feel threatened, they put their money in the bank and the
velocity goes down. When they feel good about life, they
buy everyone a beer and the velocity goes up.
The
velocity of money is affected by two sophisticated sounding
terms: "propensity to save, and propensity to spend.
Two other words that might be used are "keep"
and "give." The velocity of money is directly
affected by more than one person's (or company's) willingness
to give; which implies an exchange for something of value,
rather than simply keep. As this is repeated from one entity
to another it's called the "multiplier effect."
That is, person A gets $10, keeps a dollar and gives $9
away; hopefully in exchange for something useful. Person
B gets $9, keeps 90¢, and gives the rest away, and
so forth. Continuing with the original keep/give ratio of
10%, 50 exchanges will multiply the initial $10 into almost
$90 in economic activity. That's what makes the economy
either thrive or throttle.
There
is little doubt that today's financial climate is not encouraging.
There doesn't seem to be any money. That is not quite a
true statement. The basic amount of money in the system
has not dramatically changed. It is simply stuck. Velocity
has dropped to what some might call a snail's pace.
In
order to stimulate a faster velocity of money, or in other
words motivate people to "give" rather than "keep,"
a variety of fiscal and monetary tools are usually employed.
The Federal Reserve Board uses interest rates as a tool
to stimulate or slow the velocity of money. It is discouraging
to see that recently this utensil of lowering interest rates
has not had an immediate affect on the velocity of money
and hence economic stimulation. Fiscal and monetary policy
may not be enough for today's conditions. The bottom line
lies with those who are keeping the money.
A
recent phenomenon in business is that many of the same services
are being performed, and at the same rate as two years ago.
But, the providers of the services are not being paid. For
example, a consultant provides services to a client, that
same consultant engages an attorney to provide services
to him. The client doesn't pay the consultant and the consultant
doesn't pay the attorney. The same services were rendered
between the parties and the work was done but the only thing
created were accounts receivable and accounts payable. No
cash (money) changed hands. Removing the "monetizing"
layer reveals that the real measure of economic activity
may reside in accounts receivable/payable growth; which
is directly reflective of just how much work is actually
being performed. Maybe the Department of Commerce should
be measuring that?
If
fiscal and monetary policies are having no effect and work
is still being performed, then "Where has all the money
gone?" It's stuck. It's stuck with people and institutions
for emotional reasons that have little to do with traditional
financial evaluation. Interest rates could be virtually
zero, but unless someone makes an intentional decision to
spend based upon both intellectual and emotional confidence,
the money will stay stuck.