The Emperor's New Tools
Gary North
April 25, 2009
"With conventional monetary policy having reached its
limit, any further policy stimulus requires a different
set of tools." -- Ben Bernanke, April 3. I have this mental image of Bernanke and a dozen other
Ph.D.-holding economists laboring over a car. Its hood is up.
It is stalled at the side of the road. It is about an hour from
Yuma, Arizona, the fan belt capital of the world. Bernanke has a
tool kit next to him. It is filled with brand-new metric tools.
He is working on a used Plymouth. The problem is, the car they are working on is not their
car. It's ours. In the good old days, the FED's tool kit was simple: expand
the monetary base, lower the federal funds rate at which banks
lend to each other overnight, and issue a press release about the
mandate for economic recovery. It's not working any more.
THE ULTIMATE TRAP The FED has increased the monetary base to such an extent
that there is now way to turn back without risking not merely a
recession, which we are in, but a depression, which the FED has
inflated to avoid. This is clear to anyone who understands the Austrian theory
of the business cycle. The FED has moved into panic mode. Yet
it has been unsuccessful so far in stemming the tide of
recession. The Federal deficit is now out of control. When Congress
consents to a $1.8 trillion deficit, it no longer exercises the
power of the purse. The FED will have to fund whatever the private markets will
not fund, which now appears to be whatever foreign investors
refuse to fund. They sold a quarter of a trillion dollars in
Treasury debt in February and March. These debt certificates
constituted an increase in supply on the capital markets. These
unexpected sales would have raised Treasury interest rates had
the FED not intervened to buy more Treasury debt. The question of questions now is this. When banks at last
decide that this economy is safe enough to lend into, the excess
reserves that they hold at the FED will flow into the economy.
This will put the FED's balance sheet into play. The fractional
reserve banking process will take over. M1 will increase by
100%. It will not be offset by a decline in the M1 money
multiplier. The fun will begin. Bernanke understands this. He knows what will happen to the
money supply unless the FED increases reserve requirements to
offset the increase in the monetary base. The FED can do this,
of course. But then it is back to square 1: the recession that
its increased spending will have overcome will return. He is in a lobster trap. He says he can get out. He said in his April 3 speech that this will not be a
pressing problem anytime soon. This was another way of saying
that bankers will remain too terrified of this economy to lend.
At its December 2008 meeting, the Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) reduced its target for the federal
funds rate close to its lower bound, setting a target
range between 0 and 1/4 percent. And, with inflation
expected to remain subdued for some time, the Committee
has indicated that short-term interest rates are likely
to remain low for an extended period. With conventional
monetary policy having reached its limit, any further
policy stimulus requires a different set of tools. "Tools." He has begun to use this word again and again in
his speeches. He makes monetary policy look like a candidate for
one of those auto manuals that Chilton publishes.
The Federal Reserve has been a global leader in
developing such tools. In particular, to further
improve the functioning of credit markets and provide
additional support to the economy, the Fed has
established and expanded a number of liquidity programs
and recently initiated a large-scale program of asset
purchases. These actions have had significant effects
on both the size and composition of the Federal
Reserve's balance sheet. Notably, the balance sheet has
more than doubled, from roughly $870 billion before the
crisis to roughly $2 trillion now.
Translation: "We have been inflating like mad. The monetary
base has gone through the roof."
Depository institutions also maintain accounts at the
Federal Reserve, of course, and over recent months, as
the size of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet has
expanded, the balances held in these accounts have
increased substantially. Translation: "Bankers are scared out of their wits. They
know this economy is close to going over the edge. They would
rather get paid nothing on deposits at the FED than lend money.
They think they will lose money in today's economic environment."
The large volume of reserve balances outstanding must
be monitored carefully, as -- if not carefully managed
-- they could complicate the Fed's task of raising
short-term interest rates when the economy begins to
recover or if inflation expectations were to begin to
move higher. Translation: "When the huge increase in FED reserves finally
starts pushing up prices, bankers' decision to lend money will
push prices up even higher. Rates will climb, so bankers will
lend more, and prices will climb. In short, what the FED has
already done will finally create conditions of mass price
inflation: price increases well into double-digit rates."
MAGICAL TOOLS Bernanke assured his listeners that the FED has lots of ways
to deal with this threat -- painless, politically acceptable
ways, he implied.
We have a number of tools we can use to reduce bank
reserves or increase short-term interest rates when
that becomes necessary. First, many of our lending
programs extend credit primarily on a short-term basis
and thus could be wound down relatively quickly. In
addition, since the lending rates in these programs are
typically set above the rates that prevail in normal
market conditions, borrower demand for these facilities
should wane as conditions improve. Translation: "The money we have created to bail out the
financial system will return to the FED and be mopped up. It
will not be lent out again." The word "many" means "we aren't
saying how much, and we will not tell you if you ask."
Second, the Federal Reserve can conduct reverse
repurchase agreements against its long-term securities
holdings to drain bank reserves or, if necessary, it
could choose to sell some of its securities. Of course,
for any given level of the federal funds rate, an
unwinding of lending facilities or a sale of securities
would constitute a de facto tightening of policy, and
so would have to be carefully considered in that light
by the FOMC. Translation: "The FED can adopt a policy of monetary
deflation for as long as it takes to revert back to the monetary
base that prevailed in . . . we aren't saying." The FED will
deflate. We will enter the Twilight Zone.
Third, some reserves can be soaked up by the Treasury's
Supplementary Financing Program. Translation: "The Treasury, which will run a $1.8 trillion
deficit in 2010, will somehow come up with enough money -- not
from the FED -- to buy back these loans. I am not at liberty to
say how the Treasury will accomplish this. Trust me."
Fourth, in October of last year, the Federal Reserve
received long-sought authority to pay interest on the
reserve balances of depository institutions. Raising
the interest rate paid on reserves will encourage
depository institutions to hold reserves with the Fed,
rather than lending them into the federal funds market
at a rate below the rate paid on reserves. Thus, the
interest rate paid on reserves will tend to set a floor
on the federal funds rate. Translation: "The floor is now at 0%. The depository
institutions are holding money at the FED. Raising interest
rates on excess reserves will keep them from lending to the
general public. This has the same effect as raising the reserve
requirement. This means that money will not get into the
economy." Then what happens to the recession? It will return,
along with its cousin, depression.
The FOMC will continue to closely monitor the level and
projected expansion of bank reserves to ensure that --
as noted in the joint Federal Reserve-Treasury
statement --the Fed's efforts to improve the workings
of credit markets do not interfere with the independent
conduct of monetary policy in the pursuit of its dual
mandate of ensuring maximum employment and price
stability. http://www.garynorth.com/snip/841.htm Translation: "The FED has not stabilized prices since 1955.
That is a given. So, ensuring maximum employment is the FED's
problem. Unemployment rises every month. We are inflating like
mad, yet the recession is getting worse." Problem: The FOMC can
monitor all it wants to. The FED's policy of mass monetary
inflation is not working. If the FED tries to keep banks from
lending in the recovery phase, the recovery will revert to
recession. If it maintains this policy, depression will replace
recession.
KOHN CHIMES IN The number-two member of the Board of Governors, Donald
Kohn, spoke on April 18 in Nashville: "Monetary Policy in the
Financial Crisis." He warned that the loans the FED has made will not be repaid
anytime soon. They are near-permanent components of the FED's
balance sheet, i.e., the monetary base.
However, our newly purchased Treasury securities and
MBS will not mature or be repaid for many years; the
loans we are making to back the securitization market
are for three years, and their nonrecourse feature
could leave us with assets thereafter. What can the FED to do reverse the expansion of M1 that the
monetary base has authorized banks to create through making
loans?
But we have a number of tools we can use to absorb the
resulting reserves and raise interest rates when the
time comes. There is is again: "Tools."
We can sell the Treasury and agency debt either on an
outright basis or temporarily through reverse
repurchase agreements, and we are developing the
capability to do the same with MBS. Kohn, unlike Bernanke, does not need a translator. Problem:
The FED had to buy Treasury debt in order to fund the deficit.
It has exchanged half of its Treasury debt for toxic assets at
face value. If it hadn't, the banks would have collapsed. There
is not much Treasury debt left to sell. As for agency debt, this
means Freddie and Fannie, which were nationalized. Nobody will
lend a dime on these assets at face value. As for "repurchase
agreements," they mean that the FED will have to buy them back
with newly created fiat money. Hello, inflation.
Finally, we are working with the Treasury to promote
legislation that would further enhance our toolkit for
absorbing reserves. What does this mean? He refused to say. Absorbing reserves
means selling off assets. To whom? At what interest rate? With
what guarantees? Silence.
Already the FOMC has extended its forecast horizon to
indicate where the Governors and Reserve Bank
presidents would like to see inflation coming to rest
over time. Somewhere, over the rainbow, way up high.
And we are continuing to discuss within the Committee
whether an explicit numerical objective for inflation
would be beneficial. You can sense the terror at the FED. They may set actual
price index targets. He did not mention the possibility of
making these targets public knowledge.
Under current circumstances, those benefits would
include underscoring our understanding that our
legislative mandate for promoting price stability
encompasses both preventing inflation from falling too
low in the near term and from rising too far as the
economy recovers. We have heard this before. It is the story of three bears
and a girl who breaks into the bears' house and tastes two bowls
of porridge and eats the third.
The Federal Reserve's actions over the past 20 months
have been consistent with the principles of central
banking that have been developed over the course of
centuries. True. The FED intervened to save the big banks and the
investment banks. That is what central banks have done for
centuries.
But the greatly increased complexity of our financial
institutions and markets, as well as the virulence of
the financial crisis in choking off the flow of credit
through a broad range of channels, has meant that in
applying these principles, the Federal Reserve and
other central banks have had to extend their reach and
adopt new measures to preserve financial stability and
to counter the effects of financial turmoil on the
economy. In my view, these actions have been necessary,
safe, and effective and will not lead to adverse
aftereffects. http://www.garynorth.com/snip/843.htm It is one thing to have a goal. It is something else to
have a program that will achieve it. He offered no idea of how
the banks can achieve it. We know only this: nothing is working
so far. Two days later, he gave another speech. It was a masterful
presentation of what Harry Truman called the two-armed economist.
Harry asked to talk with a one-armed economist.
On the one hand, we cannot rule out the possibility
that adverse economic conditions will cause deeper cuts
in prices, a greater softening in wages, and a steep
decline in inflation expectations. Substantial
declines in inflation would raise real interest rates,
thereby restraining the recovery even more. Moreover,
the risk that inflation could be lower will be
exacerbated to the extent that economic activity falls
short of the path that I have described. In these
circumstances, the Federal Reserve would continue to
look for ways to relieve financial pressures and
encourage spending. This is what the FED has been facing. Banks are parking
their money in the equivalent of Yuma. They are not lending.
The recession is accelerating.
On the other hand, the Federal Reserve's actions to
ease credit conditions have resulted in a tremendous
increase in its assets and in bank reserves. Some
observers have expressed concern that these actions, if
not reversed in a timely manner, are sowing the seeds
of a sharp pickup in inflation down the road. Some observers have the ability to read the FED's balance
sheet or understand a graph that is going straight up: the
adjusted monetary base. They see what is about to happen: mass
inflation.
As I just noted, near-term prospects appear to be for a
decline in inflation rather than an increase. But my
colleagues and I are acutely aware of the risk of
higher inflation as the economic recovery gains speed.
We are firmly committed to acting in a way that
preserves price stability, and we believe we have the
tools to absorb reserves and raise interest rates when
needed. Moreover, we are working with the Treasury to
introduce legislation that would enlarge our tool kit
for moving away from the extraordinary degree of
financial stimulus we have put in place when the time
arrives. http://www.garynorth.com/snip/844.htm This man has great faith in new tools. These tools,
whatever they are, have never been tried. Meanwhile, the
international economy is headed lower.
CONCLUSION Bernanke and Kohn assured their listeners that these tools
will save the day. Economic cause and effect will be overcome.
There will be a widespread recovery without price inflation. The
FOMC will monitor this. The Treasury will authorize a new bag of
tools for the FED to use. Specifics? Nothing that isn't preposterous, such as selling
toxic assets back to the banks at face value, or even less
likely, selling them to investors at face value. The FED can always sell Treasury debt, we are told. The
Treasury will then sell its debt at low, low rates to domestic
investors who will decide to buy Treasury debt -- a defensive
investment -- instead of stocks, commodities, and corporate bonds
during a recovery. None of this makes sense to me. But, then again, I am not a
Keynesian. I am the author of The Gold Wars.
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