This is the ultimate outlier. Over the next thirty years, all the human population should effectively enter the middle class and this will support an expanded market. There will be setbacks, but event those will merely delay this maturation of human demand. Thus apply western demand to the whole global population.
assuming steps are also taken to properly end poverty, population growth will ultimately be restored as well as keep it all sustainable. Right now we have been riding an expansion driven and sustainable by improving health outcomes. Most think that this will slowly top off.
A more optimistic outcome will be life extension taking those life span numbers much higher.
What is really clear here is that predicting future demand is folly unless you plan expansion to coincide with a marketing drive to expand market share at the least as you default mode..
The Coming Whiskey Bubble?
As
Austrians we are always looking for evidence to lead us to the next
bubble. I think most of us are on high alert after a decade of easy
money, stock price inflation, and ever decreasing bond yields. However,
identifying the specific bubble sector(s) ahead of time is extremely
difficult (unless you are Mark Thornton).
This notwithstanding, one industry seems to me to display all of the
signs that it is in the midst of an Austrian business cycle theory
(ABCT) bubble. That industry is whiskey (or whisky) production.1
Let’s review what makes whiskey production especially susceptible to
expansion during the credit fueled boom and therefore likely to undergo a
violent contraction during the inevitable market correction.
Whiskey Has a Long Production Process
Whiskey production can be one of the longest production processes in
the entire economy. Planning whiskey production is extremely difficult,
even if you assume a perfectly stable, hard money economy. Even moderate
quality whiskies need to be planned years in advance. The youngest
whiskey that can be legally labeled as bourbon must be barrel aged for at least 2 years, but most middle shelf bourbons are aged for 4, 6, or 8 years. Scotch whiskey has even stricter requirements;
to be labeled Scotch the whiskey must be aged for a minimum of three
years, but it is rare to find a moderately rated Scotch aged for less
than 8 years. The most popular Scotches are aged 12, 14, and 16 years
while the most luxurious whiskies are aged as long as 25 or even 50
years. Compound this with losing 2 percent of volume per year aged to
the “angel’s share”
and you are in a very difficult entrepreneurial situation. The
entrepreneur has to accurately predict the demand for his product 12
years in the future so he can invest the correct amount of resources now
in order to produce an adequate supply for that demand. The only chance
one has to perform this economic calculation efficiently is to have
accurate interest rates. Even a small distortion in the interest rate
will have a dramatic effect on the profit/loss expectations for a
product you are expecting to sell in 12 years.
It’s Highly Capitalized
Whiskey production may not be what comes to mind when reading the
often referenced “capital goods industry.” Nevertheless, whiskey
production is very dependent on highly specific capital goods and
distilleries generally have a high level of vertical integration (often
mandated to do so by government regulations). In some cases they harvest raw materials like peat from the distillery’s land
(peat production probably warrants its own Austrian analysis), and they
don’t sell the product until it is nearly in the customer’s hand
decades later. This can be best illustrated with a brief summary of the whiskey production process.
The distiller-entrepreneur will first need to determine the recipe,
this will determine the proportion of grain, corn, rye, or barley that
must be acquired based on the predicted preferences of the customer
years later. Once the ingredients are acquired malting begins where the
barley (for example) is steeped in water on the malting floor to start
the germination. This process involves monitoring the germination of the
barley until the sugar content is within the target range. Once the
barley is ready it is dried out in a kiln where peat is burned in order
to add flavor and stop the germination. The malted barley is then ground
down and water is added, this is referred to as the mash. It is then
allowed to ferment into a beer like substance called the wash. The wash
is subsequently transformed into whiskey by distilling it in copper pot stills.
The distiller-entrepreneur then needs to decide how long to age this
clear, harsh whiskey and in what type of cask. A popular combination
would be an oak cask that was previously used to age sherry, aged for 12
years. During this 12 years the cask sits in an enormous dunnage
warehouse. Once the maturation is complete, the whiskey is sent through a
strict quality assurance program, bottled, labeled, and distributed all
over the world. At this point the distiller has finally sold his
product. So in short, the distillery needs peat harvesting equipment,
malting floors, kilns, copper pot stills, thousands of casks, dunnage
warehouses, land, and a lot of time.
The whiskey industry suffers from another disadvantage because of the
specificity of the capital goods required. When the inevitable market
adjustment occurs, the large amounts of capital that the company
invested in during the boom is virtually impossible to liquidate because
it has no other uses. This will make it very difficult for highly
leveraged distilleries to stay afloat after the bust. Contrast that with
a labor heavy industry like restaurants in which, economically
speaking, labor rates are essentially a rent that can be scaled back
immediately. Consider Diageo,
the corporation that owns many popular whiskey brands, it has a market
cap of around $96 billion, but only employs around 30,000 employees. On
the other hand, Yum Brands,
the owner of many large fast food businesses has a market cap of $35
billion and employs 90,000 employees. The restaurant business could
potentially have an easier time scaling back operations — via cutting
staff — when the contraction hits because they are not tied down to
highly specific capital.
Production of Luxury Goods
ABCT tells us that the major price fluctuations occur in the higher
stages and leaves the lower stages relatively unaffected. However,
empirical data and common experience tells us that luxury goods may be
an exception. During the boom, the public’s time preference did not
change, but they found more money in their pocket. This encouraged
increased spending. During the 2000s boom, we found that this extra
spending was directed largely toward luxury items, whether it be houses,
cars, or vacations.
While the distiller-entrepreneur is planning the quantity of whiskey
to supply, a major data point to consider is the current demand. In a
sound economy the entrepreneur would see low interest rates and it would
entice him to invest in higher production to be released in the future.
Inherent in that signal is the knowledge that consumers are curbing
consumption now to fund their increased spending in the future.
Moreover, if the entrepreneur sees low interest rates while current
consumption in his industry is booming despite the higher savings, this
has a compounding effect on predictions for the future. In other words,
if business is booming now while people are saving, imagine the height
of demand for the whiskey in 12 years when consumers’ time preference
shift toward consumption spending!
Unfortunately, in the current economy, over investment (or malinvestment) is occurring now,
squandering the resources that are expected to be available to fund the
consumption in the future. During the contraction, when unemployment
will rise, it stands to reason some of the first items to drop off a
household’s budget will be discretionary luxury items, like $100 bottles
of whiskey. This will cause the demand for whiskey to plummet at the
same time the supply is exploding. This could spell disaster for the
hundreds of new distilleries that have been started in the last decade.
Conclusion
Massive investment has entered this industry in response to rising prices.
Unfortunately, solid economic theory is telling us that this investment
is probably in error. However, I am not advocating any financial
advice. I know for myself whiskey would be one of the last things to
drop off my budget during hard times. It’s possible that distilleries
can sell off a portion of their inventory to weather the storm. Or maybe
this is a real industry boom; maybe whiskey has so engrained itself
into modern culture that demand will never really drop off and all of
this investment was undertaken with undistorted signals. If there is one
thing that Austrian economics teaches us, it is that predictions are
often futile. The dynamics of the market are based on each individual
making thousands of decisions a day. Predicting the timing, location, or
extent of future economic events will likely end up embarrassing in
hindsight. I guess all we can do is wait and pour ourselves another
dram.
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