Abnormal
behaviour
The Bank
of France is worried. Capitalist enterprises, it seems, are not
behaving normally.
In an
article entitled “Is the investment
behaviour of enterprises ‘normal’”
in the August issue of its Bulletin
(www.banque-france.fr/fr/publications/telechar/bulletin/152focus.pdf),
the Bank notes that enterprises in the G7 countries (US, Japan,
Germany, Britain, France, Italy and Canada) are registering “very
strong profitability” and that “as
a percentage of GDP enterprise profits are at their highest level for
decades”, but that an unusually high
proportion of these profits are not being reinvested in production.
Some (most in fact) are of course but what is not normal, according
to the Bank, is that in 2005 the enterprise sector of the economy was
a net lender to other sectors, which is “disconcerting
as one would normally expect enterprises to be in general net
borrowers” (i.e., to be borrowing money
to invest in production), adding “in fact
this has always been the case up till now”
and that “it is particularly surprising
to note that investment is not more dynamic when long-term real rates
of interest are at their historical lowest level”.
Two
questions arise. If they are not investing enough, what are
enterprises doing with the extra profits? And, more fundamentally,
why are they not investing them?
The Bank
identifies a number of ways in which enterprises are using the
profits that they are not investing. First, holding them as liquid
assets (placed on financial markets in forms that can be readily be
converted into cash): “liquid assets
represent 9 percent of their total assets, a level that is difficult
to explain by any historical precedent or traditional economic
approach”. Second, distributing them to
shareholders. Third, spending them on taking over other enterprises.
As to why,
the Bank offers two scenarios. In the “optimistic”
one, the current underaccumulation of physical assets is seen as the
other side of the coin to the overaccumulation that took place in the
1990s; in other words, as one phase of the capitalist business cycle;
sooner or later the profit hoards will disappear as they are absorbed
by rising wages and interest rates when the cycle moves on to its
next phase.
In the
“less optimistic”
scenario, the unusually high level of uninvested profits is seen as
the result of investment in physical assets being more risky than
placing the money on financial markets. The Bank lists three reasons
as to why investment is currently regarded as being too risky:
geopolitical uncertainties, anticipated inevitable exchange rate
adjustments, and the threat of protectionism.
At the
moment, the Bank says, this can only be conjecture, but:
“A
situation where the risk premiums of physical assets are very
different from those of financial assets cannot go on for ever. In
the long term financial assets only reflect an underlying ‘real’
economic reality. These two categories of risk premium can in time
only converge”.
The Bank
says that it is “of the greatest
importance for the world economy that this process [of convergence]
should take place in an orderly manner”
(ie., without a financial crash and its consequences), but doesn’t
seem too optimistic that it will. It might of course. We shall see.
In any event, what sort of economic system is it in which it is
normal to have to rely on whether or not a big enough profit can be
made to get things produced?
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