Tuesday, February 3, 2009
GARY NORTH ARTICLE
Gary North's REALITY CHECK
Gold's price:
http://www.GaryNorth.com/snip/300.htm
The Federal debt:
http://www.GaryNorth.com/snip/544.htm
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Issue 829 February 3, 2009
THE FEDERAL RESERVE'S SELF-IMPOSED DILEMMA
The Federal Reserve System face a dilemma of its own
creation: the doubling of the monetary base. You can see it
here:
http://GaryNorth.com/public/4512.cfm
The only thing that is keeping this from creating mass
inflation is the decision of commercial bankers to deposit the
bulk of this increase with the Federal Reserve. The banks are
not lending out this money. Neither is the FED. This money does
not legally belong to the FED.
President Obama has said that banks that receive money from
the Federal government as part of the bailout operation are going
to be required to lend money. As to how this is going to be
enforced, he did not say. Rep. Barney Frank insists that there
will be specific legislation mandating that banks lend money to
the public.
http://GaryNorth.com/snip/785.htm
If the Federal government gets into the business of
allocating bank loans, the results will be disastrous. For a
nice survey of the bad effects that such intervention will cause,
read the article by Michael Rozeff, a retired professor of
finance.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rozeff/rozeff266.html
SUBSIDIZING EXCESS RESERVES
There is a reason why the banks are not lending money to the
public. Instead of taking the risk of lending, the banks are
depositing hundreds of billions of dollars with the Federal
Reserve. Beginning last October, the Federal Reserve began
paying low rates of interest on money above the legal reserve
requirement that banks must deposit at the Federal Reserve
system. This new policy was not to go into effect until October
of 2011, but the banking crisis forced the Federal Reserve to
speed up the legal timetable. Congress, of course, did nothing.
Because the banks place their money with the Federal
Reserve, this money is taken out of the fractional reserve
process. The Federal Reserve System does not lend this money to
borrowers. It is not part of the FED's balance sheet. The FED
keeps the money in reserve. The banks were initially paid only
1.25% for these deposits, and this was dropped to 1% before
October was over.
Because of the Federal Reserve's new target for the federal
funds rate, which is now approximately 0%, banks are not
receiving any interest on the money they have on deposit with the
FED. Yet they have to pay interest to depositors. So, the
excess reserves are causing banks to hemorrhage money. The money
is safe, but the losses are guaranteed. The banks have almost no
money coming in as interest payments from the Federal Reserve,
but they have money going out as interest payments to
depositories. This cannot go on forever.
The new Administration understands that something is wrong.
Advisors know the banks are not lending. They do not seem to
understand why the banks are not lending. They are not lending
because bankers are fearful that they will not be repaid. They
are so terrified by this economy that they would rather put the
money with the Federal Reserve System, receive essentially no
interest, and suffer losses on interest paid to depositors. They
would rather lose a little money, month by month, then put their
money at risk by lending it. This gives some indication of just
how bad the present economy is.
If bankers are afraid to lend money to senior American
corporations for 90 days, and if they are afraid to lend money to
the United States Treasury to buy long-term bonds, there appear
to be no profitable opportunities for investors, either. The
banks are certainly not going to put the money in the stock
market. Why should you? They are afraid to put in the corporate
bond market. I can hardly blame them. They are afraid of doing
anything with the money.
The Federal Reserve now faces a problem. It faces a series
of problems. We need to understand the nature of the problems
that the Federal Reserve is facing in order to understand what
Federal Reserve policy is today.
A ZERO-BOUND ECONOMY
The Federal Reserve wants to avoid price deflation. In the
terminology of Keynesian central bankers, this is called a zero-
bound condition. We are now in that condition. The federal
funds rate is so low that banks ought not to be lending to the
Federal Reserve. Nevertheless, they are lending to the Federal
Reserve at approximately one-tenth of 1% interest. They are not
lending to the general public.
If the economy continues to contract, as Keynesian theory
says it will contract if the banks do not lend, then prices will
fall, and interest rates on Treasury debt will remain essentially
zero at the short maturities. This will make it difficult for
the Treasury to get foreign investors to lend money to it.
The Federal government is facing a $1.2 trillion deficit,
and foreign central banks are unlikely to lend to the Treasury at
a quarter of a percent interest, the rate for 90-day T-bills.
Foreign central banks are also saying that they no longer wish to
lend on long-term T-bonds.
According to Keynesian economic theory, when interest rates
fall to zero, increases in central bank purchases of debt
obligations, which would otherwise stimulate the economy, no
longer occurs. Why not? Because banks refused to lend. This
stops the fractional reserve banking expansion process. The
economy stagnates. Economic growth contracts. Prices fall. The
process accelerates. It is a downward economic spiral. This is
what Milton Friedman said caused the Great Depression. Almost
everybody today believes Friedman. So, they are frightened that
we have reached a situation where Federal Reserve expansion of
the monetary base will not lead to an expansion of the money
supply. This means that the economy will continue to fall even
faster.
AN EASY SOLUTION WITH DISASTROUS CONSEQUENCES
There is an easy solution to this problem. The Federal
Reserve knows exactly what the solution is. Nobody mentions it.
The suggestion that the Federal Reserve would attempt it would
probably bust the bond market. The Federal Reserve would
announce that, from this point on, all money deposited by banks
as excess reserves will be charged a storage fee. This fee could
be 2%.
Not only would banks not make any interest on the money
deposited with the Federal Reserve, they would begin suffering a
loss of 2% per annum on the money held as excess reserves. These
losses would be in addition to the losses sustained by the banks
because they have to pay interest to depositors.
The banks would find that the guaranteed loss of the
combined payments would be so great that it would be safer to
lend the money to the general public. Banks would then start
lending to corporations and to the Federal government. They
would certainly buy Treasury bills at quarter of a percent per
annum rather than holding excess reserves at -2%. The Treasury
would spend the money into circulation. This money would then
multiply through the fractional reserve banking process.
This would create another grim scenario for the Federal
Reserve. The Federal Reserve has more than doubled the monetary
base since September 2008. This has been offset by the decline
in the money multiplier, which has been caused by bankers'
decisions to hold money as excess reserves with the Federal
Reserve. If the Federal Reserve begins charging a storage fee to
banks that deposit excess reserves with the FED, the money
multiplier will immediately reverse. It will go back to
something approaching normal. At that point, the increase in M-1
will begin to affect the economy. There will be more money
available for consumers to spend.
Some people are afraid that consumers will save money. Why?
Bad economic theory. Thrift does not have any effect on the
money supply in a fractional reserve banking system. If one
group of consumers saves more money, this does not affect the
money supply. These thrifty people will increase the amount of
money that they have deposited at their local bank. This does
not change the monetary base.
When a small percentage of consumers stops spending on
consumer goods and increases holdings of bank accounts or money
market funds, this will have no effect on the total money supply.
It means that one group of consumers will cut back on spending,
but it means that other groups of consumers will increase
spending.
People who borrow money at a bank intend to spend it. Maybe
they are going to spend it on business activities. Maybe they
are going to spend it on consumer goods. But they are going to
spend it. Nobody increases his debt in order to put it in a bank
account. Nobody pays a bank 7% or 10% per annum in order to put
it in a bank account that pays 2% per annum. If he does, he is
doing this only for very brief time until he spends the money.
FEAR OF PRICE INFLATION
Why hasn't the Fed adopted this policy of a penalty payment?
I think this should be obvious. Banking theory teaches that when
the monetary base doubles, the money supply will double. If the
money supply doubles, consumer prices will also come close to
doubling. There will usually be a time lag, but the process is
clear. An increase in the monetary base, which is called
high-powered money, multiplies through the fractional reserve
banking system. All schools of economic opinion agree on this
point.
If the Federal Reserve is unwilling to impose a penalty
payment on excess reserves, it is afraid that banks are going to
do the rational thing: lend money to the general public. It is
clear that the Federal Reserve System's policy-makers are afraid
that banks are going to do would banks are supposed to do with
reserves: lend money to the general public. The Federal Reserve
is attempting to sterilize the increase of the monetary base,
which it created.
Federal Reserve economists know that if banks start lending
reserves that are being held the Federal Reserve beyond the 10%
legal limit, there is going to be mass inflation in the United
States. The Consumer Price Index will double.
Any additional spending by the Federal Reserve to prop up
the Treasury bond market will be immediately reflected in an
increase in M-1. Long-term interest rates will soar. The market
for Treasury bonds will collapse. At that point, the Federal
Reserve will have to intervene and purchase Treasury bonds. This
will drastically raise interest rates on corporate bonds and
mortgages.
The Federal Reserve is now trapped by its own policies. It
has dramatically increased the monetary base, and it does not
want this money to be spent into circulation. Federal Reserve
economists understand the fractional reserve banking process.
They know that the only way that the M-1 money supply will not
match the doubling of the monetary base is for the Federal
Reserve to impose an increase in the reserve requirement. It has
not done this. Instead, it has paid a small amount of interest
to banks to persuade backers to see keep money on deposit with
the Fed, which sterilizes the increase in the monetary base.
If banks begin lending money to the general public, the
Federal Reserve will have to sell assets in order to offset the
increase in its balance sheet, which is a result of the big bank
bailouts and buying T-bills. The problem is, the Federal Reserve
is running out of Treasury debt certificates to sell. The only
asset that the Federal Reserve now holds in its balance sheet
that can be sold at face value to the general public is Treasury
debt. There is no way for the Federal Reserve to unload the
toxic assets that block from the banks.
Furthermore, with the proposal of the so-called bad bank,
which is one of those rare circumstances where the name given to
it is appropriate for what the organization is, somebody has got
to buy the toxic assets that are unloaded by the banks, so that
the banks can get their balance sheets solvent again. Who is
going to put up the money to buy all of this debt? The Treasury
can buy it, but then the Treasury then must sell a comparable
amount of debt to the general public. Who is going to buy that?
Whoever does will invest money in a government-guaranteed bailout
rather than in the private sector. Kiss the recovery goodbye.
Once the banks get their balance sheets in good shape again,
by unloading hundreds of billions of dollars of junk assets onto
the bad bank, they will start lending again. They will reduce
their holdings of excess reserves at the Federal Reserve system.
At that point, the money multiplier will start multiplying again,
M-1 will grow dramatically, and we will be into mass inflation.
I don't mean 10% or 20% or 30% price inflation. I mean 50%, 60%,
or 100% per annum.
The vast increase of the monetary base, once it is
translated into an increase in M-1, will create mass inflation in
the United States. That money will be spent. Anyone who thinks
the US Treasury will not send money to Social Security
recipients, Medicare insurance programs, and all the other groups
that are clamoring for bailouts, has been smoking something
funny.
DELIBERATE POLICY
The reason why the banks are not lending is because a
Federal Reserve policy has been established that pays banks not
to lend. But now that the expansion of the money supply has been
so great that the federal funds rate has been dropped to a tenth
of a percent, the Federal Reserve's plan to sterilize its own
expansion of the monetary base is threatened by constant losses
to commercial banks, because they have to pay interest on
deposits. Furthermore, the plan to sterilize the monetary base
is also threatened by Congress and by the President, who insist
that legislation is going to be passed which forces the banks to
lend money.
People who are predicting price deflation, meaning
significant price deflation of 5% to 10% per annum or more,
operate on an assumption that the fractional reserve banking
system no longer expands the money supply. They are assuming
that banks will not lend. They are therefore assuming that the
expansion of the monetary base which is already taken place is
not going to be translated into an expansion of the money supply,
because the Federal Reserve's program of asset sterilization by
paying interest on excess reserves is going to be successful.
If success is defined as "falling prices and a collapsing
economy," success is not going to be allowed by the United States
Congress and the Obama Administration. They have made it clear
that they are going to mandate that the banks lend. As soon as
the banks start lending, the fractional reserve banking process
takes over, and the money supply will double.
I think we are beyond the point of no return. I think the
expansion of the monetary base by the Federal Reserve System
cannot be sterilized much longer. Congress is going to force the
un-sterilization of bank reserves. The Federal Reserve System
can do this on its own authority, simply by imposing a penalty
payment on excess reserves. This is not rocket science. This is
simply a matter of the Board of Governors passing a new rule that
imposes a 2%, 3%, or 4% penalty payment on excess reserves.
If I understand this, you can be certain that Federal
Reserve officials understand this. You can also be certain that
Ben Bernanke understands this. If Bernanke and the Federal
Reserve's Board of Governors have refused to impose such a
penalty payment, there is a reason for this. It is the same
reason that the Federal Reserve began paying interest on excess
reserves last October. The reason is clear: the Federal Reserve
is terrified by its own policies. It knows exactly what is going
to happen, once banks lend excess reserves into the general
economy.
It does not matter one way or the other who gets the money.
It can be the United States Treasury. It can be large
corporations. It can be people borrowing money to buy real
estate. It can be any or all of these recipients of money. The
public is willing to borrow whatever the banks are willing to
lend area at some interest rate. Contrary to John Maynard
Keynes, the money will be borrowed, and the money will be spent.
My belief is that the banks will pull money out of excess
reserves, either because they are forced to by the Federal
government or because the Federal Reserve System begins imposing
a penalty payment on excess reserves. Why would the FED do this?
In order to forestall Congress. Also, in order to escape the
zero-bound crisis that Keynesian economics says is the result of
central bank policies that lower interest rates to zero.
The thought that nobody in the general public is willing to
borrow money at 1% or 2% is ludicrous. Tens of millions of
Americans have credit cards, and they pay 10%, 15%, or more on
these cards. Americans will rush to buy houses if they can get
mortgage rates at 2% or 3%.
The idea that the interest rate does not balance the supply
and demand of credit is so utterly ludicrous that it takes a
Ph.D. in economics to believe it. This idea has been a dominant
idea among economists all over the world ever since Keynes wrote
the "General Theory." It is a preposterous concept, and it is
universally held. This is why economists throughout America are
now clamoring for more bailouts by the Federal government. This
is why they are demanding that the Federal government spend the
money on anything and everything in order to make certain that
the money gets spent by consumers.
---------------------
CONCLUSION
The case for price deflation rests on one primary idea:
banks will not lend, even though they have reserves to lend. So
far, this has proven to be the case. Banks are keeping excess
reserves with the Federal Reserve, thereby refusing to lend money
to the general public.
Congress is not willing to accept this much longer. Neither
is the Obama administration. So, the Federal Reserve System is
going to have to fish or cut bait. It is going to have to decide
whether or not it is going to subsidize the banking system: the
decision of bankers to hold reserves with the Federal Reserve,
thereby sterilizing the expansion of money that the Federal
Reserve has produced since last September. I don't think the
Federal Reserve wants either outcome. On the one hand, it is
terrified by the zero-bound economy that it has created. On the
other hand, it is terrified by the thought of what the expansion
of the Federal Reserve's monetary base will do the money supply,
and from there do to consumer prices.
I feel their pain. I prefer not to.
We are all going to feel a great deal of pain over the next
few years. The basis of this pain is already in the monetary
pipeline. The relevant question now is this: "How soon will the
FED decide to un-sterilize its monetary base?"
This raises a practical question: "What can a small minority
of investors do to beat the rush to the lifeboats, before they
fill up?" The majority will not be able to escape the sinking
ship of state.
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