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The Illusion of Household Wealth Chris Leithner A Journal for Western Man-- Issue XXXV-- May 5, 2005 |
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On several occasions during 2003 and 2004, politicians announced – and
print and broadcast media dutifully parroted – that Americans,
Australians, Britons and Canadians have never been richer than they are
today. In Australia, for example, the median net worth of households
(net of mortgage and other debt) is presently approximately $A250,000,
and in recent years it has increased at an annualised compound rate of
roughly 7%.
This increase is partly the consequence of the country's relatively high (by international standards) level of share ownership. But given their even higher level of home ownership, and the fact that the capitalisation of the average family's home greatly exceeds that of its share portfolio, the increase of Australian households' net worth (like that of their counterparts in these other countries) owes most to the sharp increase of the price of residential real estate. The family's home, most people emphatically agree, is its most valuable asset. Yet this rise of median household net worth –
which media coverage typically and erroneously interprets as an increase
of wealth – is largely illusory (see also
Letter 45). Why? There are two reasons. First, if time is money, as
Ben Franklin quipped, and if lack of time is dearth of capital, as
Ludwig von Mises demonstrated, then wealth is time. An appropriate
measure of a household's wealth, in other words, is the number of years
that the stream of income generated by its assets (as opposed to the
salaries of its members) can maintain a desired standard of living. My
guess, bearing in mind its innate subjectivity, is that the wealth of
the median household in these countries is no more than three years. If
so, then few are wealthy.
By borrowing against a home whose price is rising,
sometimes substantially, households have been able to "extract equity"
and consume the proceeds; and the growing magnitude of extraction has
enabled them to increase their consumption at a rate that has greatly
exceeded the increase of household income. But all financial
transactions incur risk, and the most immediate risk of this behaviour
is the sturdiness of the assumption that the prices of households'
assets, particularly houses, can continue to rise much more quickly than
income. A less immediate but ultimately much more significant risk is
the weakening of the capital structure. A weaker structure today implies
sluggishly growing or stagnant or even falling living standards in the
future. Far better than most contemporary economists, who seem
to comprehend it not at all, Kasriel understands the concept of capital.
He notes that capital stock is conventionally defined as the sum of
business assets, private residential housing, consumer durables and
government property. Although he does not explicitly say so, he seems to
recognise that residential real estate, consumer durables and government
property are not capital goods – and therefore that they should not be
regarded as components of the capital stock. With a few caveats, these
things are better regarded as consumption goods (see
Letter 41).
Kasriel provides – actually, he restates for the
legions of people who have either forgotten them or never learnt them –
two critical insights into the nature and causes of the growth of
wealth. The first is that it owes much more to savings than to capital
gains. The second insight is that wealth also depends heavily upon the
composition of capital stock. In particular, wealth presupposes an
increase in the number of "drill presses" (i.e., true capital goods that
increase production and productivity). In sharp contrast, the prominence
of consumption goods mislabelled as capital goods (things such as
owner-occupied real estate, military and other government expenditure
and the like) is a possible consequence – but certainly not a cause – of
wealth. Kasriel examines the composition of America's capital
stock over the years. Most notably, he ascertains whether production-
and productivity-enhancing "business" capital is becoming a greater
share of the total stock of capital. Its percentage rose sluggishly
during the 1990s, in 2001 it began to fall and in 2002-2003 it decreased
at the fastest pace since the early 1950s. In conclusion, he asks "if
the share of the business capital stock is falling relative to the total
since the stock market and business investment bust of 2000, what shares
are rising? You guessed it … McMansions and SUVs are gaining as a share
of the total capital stock. So, in the past four years, not only has the
growth in the nation's capital stock slowed, but the growth in the truly
productive part of that capital stock – the business capital stock – has
slowed even more." In short, policies that encourage saving and investment – and do not sanctify spending and consumption – are required (see "Why Have They All Been Fooled?"). But to expect politicians to change their profligate spots is to suppose that leopards will become vegetarians. As a result, potentially severe disorders have been bequeathed to the future (see also in particular "The Robinson Crusoe Ethic Versus the Distemper of Our Times" and "A Tale of Two Islands"). Chris Leithner grew up in Canada. He is director of Leithner & Co. Pty. Ltd., a private investment company based in Brisbane, Australia. Order Mr. Stolyarov's newest science fiction novel, Eden against the Colossus, in eBook form, here. You only pay $10.00, with no shipping and handling fees. Give feedback on this work at TRA's forum, which you can access at http://rationalarg.proboards24.com. Advertise your business or product permanently on TRA for a mere $1 donation to a worthy endeavor to combat human aging. Click here to learn more. Help bring about the cure for human aging within our lifetimes. Learn how you can help through the Chicago Methuselah Foundation Fund. Visit The Rational Argumentator's new Online Store. Visit TRA's Yahoo! Group, a means of notification and communication for our subscribers. You can find it at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rationalargumentator. You can sign up by sending an e-mail to [email protected]. Click here to return to the Issue XXXV index. Visit TRA's Master Index, a convenient way of navigating throughout the issues of the magazine. Click here. |
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