Road to
Hyperinflation is paved with Market Accommodating Monetary Policy
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: A Crisis the Fed Helped
to Create but Helpless to Cure
Part II: Central Banking
History of Failing to Stabilize Markets
This article appeared in AToL
on January 30, 2008
It has been forgotten by many
that before 1913, there was no
central bank in the United States
to bail out troubled commercial and associated financial institutions
or to
keep inflation in check by trading employment for price stability. Few
want
inflation but fewer still would trade their jobs for price stability.
For the first 137 years of its history, the US
did not have a central bank. The nation then was plagued with recurring
business cycles of boom and bust. For the past 94 years that the
Federal
Reserve, the US
central bank, has assumed the role of monetary guardian for the nation,
recurring
business cycles of boom and bust have continued, often with the
accommodating
participation of the Fed. Central banking has failed in its fundamental
functions of stabilizing financial markets with monetary policy,
succeeding
neither in preventing inflation nor sustaining growth nor achieving
full
employment. Since the Fed's founding in 1913, US
inflation has registered 1,923%, meaning prices have gone up 20 times
on
average despite a sharp rise in productivity.
For the 18 years (August 11, 1987 to January
31, 2006) of
his tenure as chairman of the Fed, Alan Greenspan had repeatedly bought
off the
collapse of one debt bubble with a bigger debt bubble. During that
time,
inflation was under 2% in only two years, 1998 and 2002, both times not
caused by
Fed policy. Paul Volcker, who served as Fed Chairman from August 1979
to August
1987, had to raise both the fed funds rate and the discount to 20% to
fight
hyperinflation of 18% in 1980 back down to 3.66% in 1987, the year
Greenspan
took over the Fed just before the October 1987 crash when inflation
rose to
4.53%.
Under Greenspan’s market accommodating
monetary policy, US
inflation reached 4.42% in 1988, 5.36% in 1989 and 6.29% in 1990. US
inflation rate was moderated to 1.55% by the 1997 Asian financial
crisis when
Asian exporting economies devalued their currencies to lower their
export
prices, but Greenspan allowed US
inflation rate to rise back to 3.76% by 2000. The
fed funds rate hit a low of 1.75% in 2001
when inflation hit 3.76%;
it hit 1% when inflation hit 3.52% in 2004; and it hit 2.5% when
inflation hit
4.69% in 3005. For those years, US
real interest rate was mostly negative after inflation. Factoring in
the
falling exchange value of the dollar, the Fed was in effect paying US
transnational corporate borrowers to invest in non-dollar markets, and
paying
US financial institution to profit from dollar carry trade, i.e.
borrowing
dollars at negative rates to speculate in assets denominated in other
currencies with high yields.
Central Banks Prevent
Global Market Corrections with Hyperinflation
In recent years, the US
has been allowing the dollar to fall in exchange value to moderate the
adverse
effect of high indebtedness and use depressed wages, both domestic and
foreign,
to moderate US
inflationary pressure. This trend is not sustainable because other
governments
will intervene in the foreign exchange market to keep their own
currencies from
appreciating against the dollar to remain competitive in global trade.
The net
result will be a moderating of drastic changes in the exchange rate
regime but
not a halt of dollar depreciation. What
has happened is a global devaluation of all currencies with the dollar
as the
lead sinking anchor in terms of purchasing power. The sharp rise of
prices for
assets and commodities around the world has been caused by the sinking
of the
purchasing power of all currencies. This is a trend that will end in
hyperinflation while the exchange rate regime remains operational,
particularly
if central banks continue to follow a coordinated policy of holding up
inflated
asset and commodities prices globally with loose monetary policies,
i.e.
releasing more liquidity every time markets face imminent corrections.
Politics of Central
Banking
The circumstances that created the political
climate in the United States
for the adoption of a central bank
came ironically from internecine war on Wall Street that spread
economic
devastation across the nation during the recession of 1907-08, the
direct
result of one dominant money trust trying to cannibalize its
competition.
In 1906, the powerful Rockefeller interests in
Amalgamated
Copper executed a plan to destroy the Heinze combination, which owned
Union
Copper Co. By manipulating the stock market, the Rockefeller faction
drove down
Heinze stock in Union Copper from $60 to $10. The rumor was then spread
that
not only Heinze Copper but also the Heinze banks were folding under
Rockefeller
pressure. J P Morgan joined the Rockefeller enclave to announce that he
thought
the Knickerbocker Trust Co would be the first Heinze bank to fail.
Panicked
depositors stormed the teller cages of Knickerbocker to withdraw their
money.
Within a few days the bank was forced to close its doors. Similar fear
spread
to other Heinze banks and then to the whole banking world. The crash of
1907
was on.
Millions of depositors were sold out penniless
their savings
wiped out by bank failures and homeowners rendered homeless by bank
foreclosure
of their mortgages. The destitute, the hungry and the homeless were let
to fend
for themselves as best they could, which was not very well. Money still
in
circulation was hoarded by those who happened to still have some, so
before
long a viable medium of exchange became practically non-existent in a
dire
liquidity crisis. The 1907 depression was much severe for the average
family
than the one in 1930.
Many otherwise healthy businesses began
printing private
IOUs and exchanging them for raw materials as well as giving them to
their
remaining workers for wages. These “tokens” passed around as a
temporary medium
of exchange to keep the economy functioning minimally. At this critical
juncture, J P Morgan offered to salvage the last operating Heinze bank
(Trust
Co of America) on condition of a fire sale of the valuable Tennessee
Coal and
Iron Co in Birmingham to add to the monopolistic US Steel Co, which he
had
earlier purchased from Andrew Carnegie.
This arrangement violated then existing
anti-trust laws but
in the prevailing climate of depression crisis, the proposed
transaction was
quickly approved by a thankful Washington.
Morgan was also intrigued by the paper IOUs that various business
houses were
being allowed to circulate as temporary media of exchange. Using the
argument
of the need to create order out of monetary chaos, the same argument
that
Rockefeller used to build the Standard Oil Trust, Morgan persuaded
Congress to
let him put out $200 million in such “tokens” issued by one of the
Morgan
financial entities, claiming this flow of Morgan “certificates” would
revive the
stalled economy. The nominal GDP fell from $34 billion in 1907 to $30
billion
in 1908 and did not recover to $34 billion until 1911, even with an
average
annual inflation rate of over 7%.
Getting Rich from
Making Money
As these new forms of Morgan “money” began
circulating, the
public regained its “confidence” and hoarded money began to circulate
again as
well in anticipation of inflation. Morgan circulated $200 million in
“certificates” created out of nothing more than his “corporate credit”
with
formal government approval. This is the equivalent of $100 billion in
today’s
money. It was a superb device to get fabulously rich by literally
making money.
Eight decades later, GE Capital, the finance
unit of the
world’s largest conglomerate that incidentally also manufactures hard
goods,
did the same thing in the 1990s with commercial papers and derivatives
to
create hundreds of billions in profits. Soon, every corporation and
financial
entities followed suit and the commercial paper market became a
critical component
of the financial system. This was the market that seized in August 2007
that
started the current credit crisis. “The commercial paper market, in
terms of
the asset-backed commercial paper market, is basically history,” said
William
H. Gross, chief investment officer of the bond management firm Pacific
Investment Management Company, known as Pimco.
The commercial paper market historically was
best known as
an alternative market funding source for non-financial corporations, at
times
when bank loans were seen as too expensive or possibly not available
due to
tight monetary policy. Finance companies, especially those
affiliated with
major auto companies and well-known consumer-credit lenders have also
issued
paper tied to non-financial industrial entities. In the
mid-1990s,
non-financial corporate issues were still nearly 30% of total paper
outstanding. This share began to drop precipitously just before
the
recession of 2001 and has stabilized but not recovered. By March
2006,
the non-financial segment constituted a mere 7.8% of the total, the
lowest ever
in the 37-year history of the data. Financial companies have also
altered their
approach to the market. Some paper is still backed by companies’
general
financial resources, but other commercial paper is backed by specific
loans,
including automobile and credit card debt and home mortgages. Most
ominously, commercial paper is used to finance securitized credit
instruments
that move debt liabilities off the balance sheets of the borrowers.
Some conspiracy theorists assert that the
seeds for the
Federal Reserve System had been sown with the Morgan certificates. On
the
surface, J P Morgan seemed to have saved the economy - like first
throwing a
child into the river and then being lionized for saving him with a rope
that
only he was allowed to own, as some of his critics said. On the other
hand,
Woodrow Wilson wrote: “All this trouble [the 1907 depression] could be
averted
if we appointed a committee of six or seven public-spirited men like J
P Morgan
to handle the affairs of our country.” Both Morgan and Wilson were
elite
internationalists.
The House of Morgan then held the power of
deciding which
banks should survive and which ones should fail and, by extension,
deciding
which sector of the economy should prosper and which should shrink. The
same
power today belongs to the Fed whose policies have favored the
financial sector
at the expense of the industrial sector. At least the House of Morgan
then used
private money for its predatory schemes of controlling the money supply
for its
own narrow benefit. The Fed now uses public money to bail out the
private banks
that own the central bank in the name of preventing market failure.
The issue of centralized private banking was
part of the
Sectional Conflict of the 1800s between America’s
industrial North and the agricultural South that eventually led to the
Civil
War. The South opposed a centralized private banking system that would
be
controlled by Northeastern financial interests, protective tariffs to
help
struggling Northeast industries and federal aid to transportation
development
for opening up the Midwest and the West for investment intermediated
through
Northeastern money trusts backed by European capital.
Money as Political
Instrument
Money, classical economics’ view of it notwithstanding, is not neutral.
Money
is a political issue. It is a matter of deliberate choice made by the
state
with consequential implications in support of a strategic political and
geopolitical agenda. In a democracy, that choice should be made by the
popular
will, rather than by a small select group of political appointees. The
supply
of money and its cost, as well as the allocation of credit, have direct
socio-political
implications beyond finance and economics. Policies on money reward or
punish
different segments of the population, stimulate or restrain different
economic
sectors and activities. They affect the distribution of political
power.
Democracy itself depends on a populist monetary policy.
Economist Joseph A Schumpeter (1883-1950)
observed that in
the first part of the 19th century, mainstream economists believed in
the merit
of a privately provided and competitively supplied currency. Adam Smith
differed from David Hume in advocating state non-intervention in the
supply of
money. Smith, an early advocate of progressive taxation, argued that a
convertible paper money could not be issued to excess by privately
owned banks
in a competitive banking environment, under which the Quantity Theory
of Money
is a mere fantasy and the Real Bills doctrine was reality. Smith never
acknowledged or understood the business cycle of boom and bust. He
denied its
existence by proposing to forbid its emergence by the use of
governmental
powers. The policy of laissez-faire, or government non-intervention in trade,
broadly attributed by present-day market fundamentalists to Adam
Smith
who himself never used the term, nor did any of his British colleagues,
such as
Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo, requires government intervention to
be operative.
The anti-monopolistic and anti-regulatory Free
Banking School
found support in agrarian and proletarian mistrust of big banks and
paper
money. This mistrust was reinforced by evidence of widespread fraud in
the
banking system, which appeared proportional to the size of the
institution.
Paper money was increasingly viewed as a tool used by unconscionable
employers
and greedy financiers to trick working men and farmers out of what was
due to
them in a free market. A similar attitude of distrust is currently on
the rise
as a result of massive and pervasive corporate and financial fraud in
the brave
new world of banking fueled by structured finance in the
under-regulated
financial markets of the 1990s, though not focused on paper money as
such, but on
electronic money use in derivative transactions, which is paperless
virtue
money built on debt.
The $7 billion loss cause by alleged fraud
committed by a
low-level trader at Société Générale, one
of the largest and most respected
banks in France, was shocking not because it happened, but because
for a
whole year, the fraud was not discovered while the unauthorized trades
were
profitable. It would not be unreasonable for the counterparties that
had
suffered losses in these unauthorized but profitable trades to sue
SoGen for recovery.
Andrew Jackson who in 1835, managed to reduce
the federal
debt to only $33,733, the lowest it has been since the first fiscal
year of
1791, vetoed the bill to renew the charter of the Second Bank of the
United
States. In his farewell speech in 1837, Jackson addressed the
paper-money
system and its natural association with monopoly and special privilege,
the way
Dwight D Eisenhower in 1961 warned a paranoid nation gripped by Cold
War fears
against the domestic threat of a military-industrial complex at home.
The value
of paper, Jackson stated,
“is
liable to great and sudden fluctuations and cannot be relied upon to
keep the
medium of exchange uniform in amount.”
In his veto message, Jackson
said the Bank needed to be abolished because it concentrated excessive
financial strength in one single institution, exposed the government to
control
by foreign investors, served mainly to make the rich richer and
exercised undue
control over Congress. “It is to be
regretted that the rich and powerful too often bend the acts of
government to
their selfish purposes,” wrote Jackson. In
1836, Jackson issued the Specie Circular which required government
lands to be
paid in “specie” (gold or silver coins), which caused many banks that
did not
have enough specie to exchange for their notes to fail, leading to the
Panic of
1837 as the bursting of the speculative bubble threw the economy into
deep
depression. Jacksonian Democrat partisans to this day blame the severe
depression on bank irresponsibility, both in funding rampant
speculation and by
abusing paper money issuance to cause inflation. It remains to be seen
if the
credit crisis of 2007 would cause the elections of 2008 to revive the
Jacksonian populism that founded the modern Democrat Party.
Jackson’s farewell
message read: “....The planter, the farmer, the mechanic, and the
laborer all
know that their success depends upon their own industry and economy and
that
they must not expect to become suddenly rich by the fruits of their
toil. Yet
these classes of society form the great body of the people of the
United
States; they are the bone and sinew of the country; men who love
liberty and
desire nothing but equal rights and equal laws and who, moreover, hold
the
great mass of our national wealth, although it is distributed in
moderate
amounts among the millions of freemen who possess it. But, with
overwhelming
numbers and wealth on their side, they are in constant danger of losing
their
fair influence in the government, and with difficulty maintain their
just
rights against the incessant efforts daily made to encroach upon them.”
It is clear that the developing pains of the
credit crisis
of 2007 is not evenly borne by all, with a select few who had caused
the crisis
walking away with million in severance compensation and the few who are
selected to restructure the financial mess no doubt will gain millions
while
the mass of victims are losing homes, jobs and pensions, with no end in
sight.
The trouble with unregulated finance capitalism is not just that it
inevitably
produces boom and busts, but that the gains and pains are distributed
in
obscene uneven proportions.
Merit of Central
Banking Overstated
The monetary expansion that preceded and led
to the
recession of 1834-37 did not come from a falling bank reserve ratio,
but rather
from the bubble effect of an inflow of silver into the United States in
the
early 1830s, the result of increased silver production in Mexico, and
also from
an increase in British investment in the United States. Thus a case
could be
made that the power of central banking in causing or preventing
recessions
through management of the money supply is overstated and oversimplified.
Libertarians hold the view that the state had
neither the
right nor the skill to regulate any commercial transactions freely
entered into
between consenting individuals, including the acceptance of paper
currency.
Thus all legal tenders, specie or not, are government intrusions. Yet
the key
words are “freely entered into”, a condition most markets do not make
available
to all participants. Market conditions invariably compel participants
to enter
into disadvantaged transactions for lack alternatives because of uneven
market
power.
For example, family must buy food regardless
of price set by
agribusiness, since inflation is not a matter that the average consumer
can
control. When it comes to money, a
medium of exchange based on bank liabilities and a fractional reserve
system
and/or government taxing capacity is essential to an industrializing
economy.
But today, when bank liability can be masked by off-balance sheet
securitization, the credibility of money is threatened. Back in 1837,
instead
of eliminating abuse of the fractional reserve system, the hard-money
advocates
had merely unwittingly removed a force that acted to restrain it.
After 1837, the reserve ratio of the banking
system was much
higher than it had been during the period of the Second Bank of the
United
State (BUS2). This reflected public mistrust of banks in the wake of
the panic
of 1837 when out of 850 banks in the United
States, 343 closed entirely, 62 failed
partially. This lack of confidence in the paper-money system led to the
myth
that it could have been ameliorated by central-bank liquidity, which
would have
required a lower reserve ratio, more availability of credit and an
increase of
money supply during the 1840s and 1850s. The myth contends that with
central
banking, the evolution of the US
banking system would have been less localized and fragmented in a way
inconsistent with large industrialized economics, and the US
economy would have been less dependent on foreign investment. This did
not
happen until 1913 because central banking was genetically disposed to
favor the
center against the periphery, which conflicted with democratic
politics.
President Martin Van Buren was harshly judged
and lost
reelection because of his ideologically commitment of keeping the
government
out of banking regulation. Many economic historians feel Van Buren
extended the
effects of the Panic which lasted until 1843, while others consider his
approach to have minimized potentially destructive interference.
This problem continues today with central
banking in a
globalized international finance architecture. It remains a truism that
it is
preferable to be self-employed poor than to be working poor. Thus
economic
centralism will be tolerated politically only if it can deliver wealth
away
from the center to the periphery to enhance economic democracy. Yet
central
banking in the past two decades has centralized wealth. Central banking
carries
with it an institutional bias against economic nationalism or
regionalism as
well as a structural bias in favor of economic centralism. It obstructs
the
delivery of wealth created at the periphery back to the periphery.
After 1837, the US
federal government had no further connection with the banking industry
until
the National Bank Act of 1863. Although the Independent Treasury that
operated
between 1846 and 1921, to pay out its own funds in specie money and be
completely independent of the banking and financial system of the
nation, did
restrict reckless speculative expansion of credit, it also created a
new set of
economic problems. In periods of prosperity, revenue surpluses
accumulated in
the Treasury, reducing hard-money circulation, tightening credit, and
restraining even legitimate expansion of trade and production. In
periods of
depression and panic, on the other hand, when banks suspended specie
payments
and hard money was hoarded, the government's insistence on being paid
in specie
tended to aggravate economic difficulties by limiting the amount of
specie
available for private credit. The Panic of 1907 exposed the inability
of the
Independent Treasury to stabilize the money market and led to the
passage of
the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, which allowed the Federal Reserve
Bank, a
private corporation, to coin money and regulate the value of the common
currency.
The Right to Make
Money Taken From the People
The 1863 US National Bank Act amended and
expanded the provisions
of the Currency Act of the previous year. Any group of five or more
persons
with no criminal record was allowed to set up a bank, subject to
certain
minimum capital requirements. As these banks were authorized by the
federal
government, not the states, they are known as national banks, not to be
confused with a national bank in the Hamiltonian sense. To secure the
privilege
of note issue they had to buy government bonds and deposit them with
the
comptroller of the currency.
When the Civil War began in 1861, newly
installed President
Abraham Lincoln, finding the Independent Treasury empty and payments in
gold
having to be suspended, appealed to the state-chartered private banks
for loans
to pay for supplies needed to mobilize and equip the Union Army. At
that time,
there were 1,600 private banks chartered by 29 different states, and
altogether
they were issuing 7,000 different kinds of banknotes.
Lincoln
immediately induced the Congress to authorize the issuing of government
notes
(called greenbacks) promising to pay “on demand” the amount shown on
the face
of the note, not backed by gold or silver. These notes were issued by
the US
government as promissory notes authorized under the borrowing power
specified
by the constitution. The total cost of the war came to $3 billion. The
government raised the tariff, imposed a variety of excise duties, and
imposed
the first income tax in US
history, but only managed to collect a total of $660 million during the
four
years of Civil War. Between February 1862 and March 1863, $450 million
of paper
money was issued. The rest of the cost was handled through war bonds,
which
were successfully issued through Jay Cooke, an investment banker in Philadelphia,
at great private profit. The greenbacks were supposed to be gradually
turned in
for payment of taxes, to allow the government to pay off these
greenback notes
in an orderly way without interest. Still, during the gloomiest period
of the
war when Union victory was in serious doubt, the greenback dollar had a
market
price of only 39 cents in gold.
Undoubtedly these greenback notes helped Lincoln
save the Union. Lincoln
wrote: “We finally accomplished it and gave to the people of this
Republic the
greatest blessing they ever had - their own paper to pay their own
debts.” The
importance of the lesson was never taught to Third World
governments by neo-liberal monetarists.
In 1863, Congress passed the National Bank
Act. While its
immediate purpose was to stimulate the sale of war bonds, it served
also to
create a stable paper currency. Banks capitalized above a certain
minimum could
qualify for federal charter if they contributed at least one-third of
their
capital to the purchase of war bonds. In return, the federal government
would
give these banks national banknotes to the value of 90 percent of the
face
value of their bond holdings. This measure was profitable to the banks,
since
with the same initial capital, they could buy war bonds and collect
interest
from the government, and at the same time put the national banknotes in
circulation and collect interest from borrowers. As long as government
credit
was sound, national banknotes could not depreciate in value, since the
quantity
of banknotes in circulation was limited by war-bond purchases. And
since war
bonds served as backing for the notes, the effect was to establish a
stable
currency.
The system did not work perfectly. The
currency it provided
was not sufficiently elastic for the needs of an expanding economy. As
the
government redeemed war bonds, the quantity of notes in circulation
decreased,
causing deflation and severe hardship for debtors. Money seemed to be
concentrated in the Northeast, while Western and Southern farmers
continued to
suffer chronic scarcity of cash and credit, not unlike current
conditions faced
by Third World debtor economies.
After the Civil War, the Independent Treasury
continued in
modified form, as each administration tried to cope with its weaknesses
in
various ways. Treasury secretary Leslie M Shaw (1902-07) made many
innovations;
he attempted to use Treasury funds to expand and contract the money
supply
according to the nation’s credit needs. The panic of 1907, however,
finally
revealed the inability of the system to stabilize the money market;
agitation
for a more effective banking system led to the passage of the Federal
Reserve
Act in 1913. Government funds were gradually transferred from
sub-treasury
"vaults" to district Federal Reserve Banks, and an act of Congress in
1920 mandated the closing of the last sub-treasuries in the following
year,
thus bringing the Independent Treasury System to an end.
Populism and Monetary
Politics
John P Altgeld, a German immigrant populist
who became the
Democratic governor of Illinois
in 1890, attacked big corporations and promoted the interest of farmers
and
workers, to give the state an able, courageous and progressive
administration.
The question of currency was central to the US
populist movement. Farmers knew from first-hand experience that the
fall in
farm prices was caused by the policy of deflation adopted by the
federal
government after the Civil War and only ineffectively checked by the
Bland-Allison Act of 1878, coining silver at a fixed ratio of 16:1 with
gold,
and the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890. The Treasury’s redemption
of
silver with gold increased the value of money and deflated prices.
Despite the rapid growth of business, the
government
engineered a sharp fall in the per capita quantity of money in
circulation. The
National Bank Act of 1863 also limited banks’ notes to the amount of
government
bonds held by banks. The Treasury paid down 60% of the national debt
and
reduced considerably the monetary base, not unlike the bond-buyback
program of
the Treasury in 1999. To farmers, it was unfair to have borrowed when
wheat sold
for $1 per bushel and to have to repay the same debt amount with wheat
selling
for 63 cents a bushel, when the fall in price was engineered by the
lenders. To
them, the gold standard was a global conspiracy, with willing
participation by
the US Northeastern bankers - the money trusts who were agents of
international
finance, mostly British-controlled.
President Grover Cleveland, despite winning
the 1892
election with populist support within the Democratic Party, gave no
support to
populist programs. Cleveland
saw
his main responsibilities as maintaining the solvency of the federal
government
and protecting the gold standard. Declining business confidence caused
gold to
drain from the Treasury at an alarming rate. The Treasury then bought
gold at
high prices from the Morgan and Belmont banking houses at great profit
to them.
Populists saw this effort to save the gold standard as a direct
transfer of
wealth from the people to the bankers and as the government’s
capitulation to
international finance capital. Cleveland
even sent federal troops to Illinois
to break the railroad strike of 1894, over the vigorous protest of
governor
Altgeld.
The election of 1896 was about the gold
standard. Cleveland
lost control of the Democratic Party, which nominated 36-year-old
William
Jenning Bryan, who declared in one of the most famous speeches in US
history (though mostly shunned these days): "You shall not press down
upon
the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind
upon a
cross of gold." The banking and industrial interests raised $16 million
for William McKinley to defeat Bryan,
who suffered a defeat worse than Jimmy Carter’s by Ronald Reagan. With
the
McKinley victory, the Hamiltonian ideal was firmly ordained, but with
most of
its nationalist elements sanitized and replaced with a new finance
internationalism. It was not dissimilar to the Reagan victory over
Carter in
1980 in many respects.
The 16th amendment to the US
constitution calling for a “small” income tax was enacted to compensate
for the
anticipated loss of revenue from the lowering of tariffs from 37 to 27%
as
authorized by the Underwood Tariff of 1913, the same year the Federal
Reserve
System was established. “Small” now translates into an average of 50%
with
federal and state income taxes combined. Free trade is only free in the
sense
that it is funded by the income tax.
The supply-side argument that corporate tax
cuts stimulate
economic growth only holds if the at least half of the benefits of the
tax cut
are channel toward rising wages, instead of higher return on capital
with the
additional benefit of lower capital gain tax. Thus a case can be made
to couple
all corporate tax cuts with an index on wage rise to match or exceed
corporate
earnings. One of the reasons why strong corporate earnings have not
help the
current credit crisis can be traced to the disproportional rise in
equity
prices having come from stagnant wages in the same corporations.
The Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act was passed
in December
1913 under the administration of President Woodrow Wilson. The system
set up
five decades earlier by the National Bank Act of 1863 had two major
faults: 1)
the supply of money had no relation to the needs of the economy, since
the
money in circulation was limited by the amount of government bonds held
by
banks; and 2) each bank was independent and enjoyed no systemic
liquidity
protection. These problems were more severe in the South and the West,
where
farmers were frequently victimized by bank crises often created by
Northeastern
money trusts to exploit the seasonal needs of farmers for loans. To
this day,
the Fed operates a seasonal discount rate to handle this problem of
farm
credit.
The Northeastern money elite in 1913 wanted a
central bank
controlled by bankers, along Hamiltonian lines, but internationalist
rather
than nationalist to make the US
an global financial powerhouse. But the Wilson
administration, faithful to Jacksonian tradition despite political
debts to the
moneyed elite, insisted that banking must remain decentralized, away
from the
control of Northeastern money trusts, and control must belong to the
national
government, not to private financiers with international links, despite
the
internationalist outlook of Wilson.
Twelve Federal Reserve Banks were set up in different regions across
the
country, while supervision of the whole system was entrusted to a
Federal
Reserve Board, consisting of the Treasury secretary, the comptroller of
the
currency and five other members appointed by the president for 10-year
terms.
All nationally chartered banks were required and state-chartered banks
were
invited to be members of the new system. All private banknotes were to
be
replaced by Federal Reserve notes, exchangeable at regional Federal
Reserve
Banks not only for bonds or gold, but also for top-rated commercial
paper, with
the hope of causing the money supply to expand and contract along with
the
volume of business. With the reserves of all banks deposited with the
Federal
Reserve, systemic stability was supposed to be assured. Unfortunately,
systemic
stability has been an elusive objective of the Fed throughout its
history of 94
years, largely due to the Fed fixation on the market rather than the
economy.
To the Fed’s thinking, even today, the market drives the economy, not
the other
way around. Take care of the market, and the economy will take care of
itself.
Unfortunately for the Fed, this fixation has been proven wrong
throughout
history. The market is but a gauge on the economy. If the economy is
running
empty, fixing the gauge does not fix the real problem.
The Fed’s Ineffectual
Response to the August 2007 Credit Crisis
The equity market’s decade-long joy ride on
the Fed’s easy
money policy came abruptly to an end in August 2007. Having lowered the
discount rate 50 basis points to 5.75% but kept the Fed Funds rate
target
unchanged at 5.25% on August 17 in response to the outbreak of the
credit
crisis, which the Fed adamantly but mistakenly thought to be
containable, the
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) was forced on September 18 to
again lower
the discount rate another 50 basis point to 5.25% and the fed funds
rate target
50 basis points to 4.75% as the credit market continued to deteriorate.
Six
weeks later, on October 31,
2007,
the FOMC, trying to correct a massive credit market failure, once again
lowered
the discount rate another 25 basis points to 5% and the fed funds rate
target
another 25 basis points to 4.5% to try to inject liquidity into the
severely
distressed banking system.
In an accompanying statement on October 31,
the Fed
continued to paint a comforting picture that economic growth was solid
in the
third quarter of 2007, and strains in financial markets had eased
somewhat on
balance since August. However, the Fed qualified its denial by
saying:
“the pace of economic expansion will likely slow in the near term,
partly
reflecting the intensification of the housing correction.” That
action,
combined with the policy action taken in September, was expected “to
help
forestall some of the adverse effects on the broader economy that might
otherwise arise from the disruptions in financial markets and promote
moderate
growth over time.”
By November 27, the DJIA intraday low had
dropped 1,000
points to 12,711.98 from the October 31 intraday low of 13,711.59,
having
reached an intraday high of 14.168.51 on October 12. Market
anticipation of
more Fed interest rate cuts to lift the market pushed the DJIA back up
to
13,727.03 by December 11, on which day a panicked Fed again lowered the
discount rate by 25 basis points to 5.75% and the fed funds rate target
by 25
basis points to 4.25%. A disappointed market which had expected a 50
basis
point cut saw the DJIA drop 295 points to close at 13,432.77.
The Fed was reduced to playing short-term
yo-yo with
interest rates driven by the stock market at the expense of its mandate
to
guard against long-term inflation. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
reported that the Headline Consumer Price Index (HCPI) for November
2007 was
4.3% higher than November 2006, and 5 basis points higher than the Fed
Funds
rate target of 4.25%.
Fed Interest Rate
Cuts Puts Downward Pressure on the Dollar
The Fed’s interest rate actions put continued
downward
pressure on the both the exchange rate and the real purchasing power of
the
dollar, thus further increasing inflation in import and domestic
product
prices, especially oil for which the US is both an importer and a
producer.
January oil price futures for April 2008 delivery jumped $1.35, to
$88.75 a
barrel. Since April 2006, core inflation has remained within the 2.2 -
2.3%
range, higher than the unofficial targeted inflation rate of 1.6% to
1.9%. This
hampers the Fed’s ability to lower interest rates further without
unleashing
inflation down the road.
Core and Headline
Inflation
For the typical household, the total or
headline inflation,
which includes volatile food and energy price components, is what
counts
because headline inflation measures the rate at which the cost of
living is
rising against relatively stagnant household income. A high headline
inflation rate
relative to income growth causes household standard of living to fall.
For the purpose of calibrating monetary
policy, however,
the Fed focuses on the core rate of inflation: the total excluding food
and
energy prices, on account that the core is less volatile and is deemed
a better
reflection of the interplay of supply and demand in domestic product
markets.
Thus, the core traditionally is a better gauge of the underling rate of
inflation
in the absence of external supply shocks.
By contrast, food and energy prices can be
extremely
volatile from month to month due to temporary supply disruptions
related to
weather or to political crises. In those instances, headline inflation
tends to
be less representative of the underlying rate of inflation. Headline
inflation
has relatively minor macroeconomic impact; it tends to shift revenue
from one
sector to another. When oil prices rise, oil company revenue increases
while
consumer expenditure rises. The net result is a higher GDP figure but
not
necessarily a larger economy. Yet this rationale is less operative in
the
current situation where both energy and food prices have risen
dramatically
with volatility along an upward curve and imported oil payment has
become a
major item in the US
trade deficit.
The historical record of the US economy is that headline and core inflation
have averaged
about the same over the long run. Over the past two decades, annual
inflation
as measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) deflator
averaged 2.6%,
while price increases as measured by the core PCE deflator averaged
2.5%. Data
from the past ten
years pose
a challenge to the rationale for focusing on the core. Over that
period, crude
oil prices have been volatile, rising from below $10 per barrel in
early 2000
to near $100 currently. Food prices and that of other commodities are
also
rising at an above normal rate. Such rise is no longer expected to be
temporary. They tend to stay high for long periods because of the
long-term
decline of the dollar, which has become the main factor behind global
hyperinflation trends. Thus even if the headline inflation rate
eventually
moderates from month to month, prices can stay high relative to income.
Inflation readings from price levels independent of income levels are
not
informative on the health of the economy.
Readings on core
inflation were interpreted by the Fed as having improved modestly in
October
2007, but increases in energy and commodity prices in the second half
of the
year, among other factors, might put “renewed upward pressure on
inflation.”
In that context, the FOMC judged that “some inflation risks
remained, and
it would continue to monitor inflation developments
carefully.” The FOMC,
after its October 31 action, judged “the upside risks to inflation
roughly
balance the downside risks to growth.” The Committee would
“continue to
assess the effects of financial and other developments on economic
prospects
and will act as needed to foster price stability and sustainable
economic growth.”
The single dissenting vote against the FOMC
easing action
was Thomas M. Hoenig, who argued for no cuts in the federal funds
rate at
the meeting. In a related action, the Board of Governors unanimously
approved a
25-basis-point decrease in the discount rate to 5%. In taking
this
action, the Board approved the requests submitted by the Boards of
Directors of
the Federal Reserve Banks of New York, Richmond,
Atlanta, Chicago,
St. Louis,
and San Francisco.
Market Disappointment
On December 11, the Fed again cut the discount
rate at which
it lends directly to banks by 25 basis points to 4.75%, and the Fed
Funds rate
25 basis points to 4.25%, halving the normal interest penalty on
discount
window. The market was visibly disappointed. US
stocks fell sharply after the central bank cut the Fed Funds rate by
only 25
basis points to 4.25% rather than the expected 50 basis points, and the
market
interpreted Fed language as failing to offer a clear signal of more
cuts to
come. The DJIA dropped 295 points to close at 13,432.77. The S&P
500 closed
down 2.5% at 1,477.65, after being up 0.4% before the decision was
released.
Still, the yield on the two-year Treasury note fell to 2.92%, down from
3.14%,
exerting downward pressure on the dollar. By January 8, 2008, the DJIA had fallen 843
points to
12,589.07.
The Fed said the deterioration in financial
market
conditions had “increased the uncertainty surrounding the outlook for
economic
growth and inflation.” But while it dropped its assessment that the
risks to
growth and inflation are “roughly balanced”, the Fed did not say that
it now
believed the risks to growth outweigh the risks to inflation. It
offered no
assessment of the balance of risks, saying it would act “as needed” to
foster
price stability and sustainable economic growth. This formula in effect
meant
the Fed was keeping its options open pending incoming data which are
notoriously inaccurate and inevitably have to be revised in subsequent
months.
Some market participants still inferred a
willingness on the
part of the Fed to consider future rate cuts, but the signal was weaker
than
many had expected. This reflected the fact that the Fed remained more
concerned
about the risks to inflation than most market participants who are more
concerned with short-term profitability than the long-term health of
the
economy.
Once market sentiment starts to turn negative
and more
market participants anticipating a slowing economy if not a recession,
market
dynamics will shift the smart money toward new profit opportunities,
such as
going short on shares that depend on growth and going long on shares
that will
flourish in a recession. This will exert further negative pressure on
the
market in a self-reinforcing downward spiral.
Also not mentioned was the effect of further
interest rate
cuts would have on the exchange value of the dollar which had been
falling,
particularly against the euro. The Fed is always cautious regarding
pronouncement on the dollar’s exchange rate because that is the
exclusive
mandate of the Treasury which the Fed is required by law and
constitution to
support as a matter of national economic security.
Rise of the Euro
The International Monetary Fund reports that
the euro’s
share of known foreign exchange holdings rose to 26.4% in the third
quarter of
2007, reflecting its increasing strength in foreign exchange markets.
That was
up from 25.5% in the previous three months and from 24.4% in the third
quarter
of 2006. The dollar’s share of known official foreign reserves,
calculated in
dollar terms, fell to 63.8% in the third quarter, down from 66.5% in
the same
three months of 2006. The trend of rising preference of the euro will
strengthen the illusion held by European policymakers that the euro is
maturing
into a significant rival to the dollar while in fact the euro remains
only a
derivative currency of the dollar. The euro has been losing purchasing
power
along with the dollar, and the rise in its exchange value against the
dollar
merely signifies that the euro is depreciating at a slightly slower
rate than
the dollar. Dollar hegemony is a geopolitical phenomenon with a
financial
dimension, by virtue of the fact that all key commodities are
denominated in
dollars. When the European Central Bank
(ECB) intervenes to halt the rise in exchange value of the dollar, it
in effect
accelerates the decline of the euro’s purchasing power. The same holds
true for
the Japanese yen or the Chinese yuan.
The Fed said on December 11, 2007 that “incoming information
suggests that economic growth
is slowing” reflecting an “intensification of the housing correction”
and “some
softening in business and consumer spending.” It acknowledged that
“strains in
financial markets have increased in recent weeks”. However, the US
central bank still had made almost no changes to its cautionary
language on
inflation, reiterating that “energy and commodity prices, among other
factors,
may put upward pressure on inflation.”
Six weeks later, on January 22, in response to
sharp
declines in all markets around the world from the bursting of the debt bubble, the Fed reversed itself
diametrically and dramatically to announce a cut of 75 basis points of
the fed
funds rate target to 3.50%, throwing inflation concern to the wind. Yet
the
DJIA closed on January 22,
2008
at 11,973.06, down 126.24 points, or 1.04% from the previous Friday,
but still
higher than the October 17,
2006
close of 11,950.02, and 4,586.79 points, or 63% higher than the October 9, 2002 close of
7,286.27.
Evidently, the Fed cast a visible vote for inflation to sustain the
bursting
debt bubble.
Fed Introduces
Discount Loan Auction to Reduce Stigma
The Fed is not expected to eliminate the
discount rate
borrowing penalty altogether because such a step would allow a large
number of
small banks to obtain funds at less than their usual spread over the
fed funds
rate, and would complicate efforts to manage the fed funds rate through
the
open market. At the same time, the Fed was considering ways to try to
reduce
the “stigma” associated with using the discount window for the big
banks, in
order to make it more effective as a backstop to the money markets.
As a solution, the Fed overhauled the way it
provides
liquidity support to financial markets, following a negative market
reaction to
the timid December 11 interest rate cut. The overhaul took the shape of
a new
liquidity facility that will auction loans to banks. This would allow
the Fed
to provide liquidity directly to a large number of financial
institutions
against a wide range of collateral without the stigma of its existing
discount
window loans. The idea is that this would ease severe strains in the
market for
interbank loans, and help restore more normal conditions in credit
markets
generally as banks were getting reluctant to lend to each others for
fear of
counterparty default.
In a speech in early December, Fed
vice-chairman Donald L.
Kohn said “the effectiveness of the direct lending operation was still
being
undermined by banks’ fear that using it would be seen as a sign that
they
needed emergency funds. The problem of stigma is even greater in the UK
where, following the Northern Rock debacle, banks are afraid of tapping
funds
from the Bank of England.”
Kohn said all central banks – not just the Fed
– had to find
new ways to ensure that their liquidity support facilities remained
effective
in times of crisis. “Making the Fed discount window more usable is
particularly
important because all banks can pledge a wide range of securities in
return for
cash at this facility. Only a small number of primary dealers can
access cash
from the Fed through its main market liquidity facility – open market
operations to control the fed funds rate – and the list of collateral
that can
be pledged is much narrower,” Kohn said.
Coordinated Effort by
Central Banks
Euro money market rates tumbled
after the European Central
Bank (ECB)
injected an unprecedented $500 billion equivalent into the banking
system
on December 18, 2007
as
part of a global effort to ease gridlock in the credit market. The
amount banks
charge each other for two-week loans in euros dropped a record 50 basis points to 4.45%.
The rate
had
soared 83 basis points in the previous two weeks as banks hoarded cash
in
anticipation of a squeeze on credit through year-end. The ECB loaned a record
348.6 billion euros ($501.5 billion) for two weeks at 4.21% on that day,
almost 170 billion euros more than it estimated was needed. Bids were received from
390 banks, ranging from 4% to 4.45%.
A coordinated effort by central bankers helped
the credit
markets and specifically the London Interbank Offer Rate (LIBOR) which
had
drifted to an 85-basis-point spread from the fed funds rate. That
widening
spread was a clear signal of distress in the credit markets. It showed
that
banks were risk averse in their lending habits and were reluctant to
lend to
each other out of concern for counterparty risk. Getting
LIBOR back in line, within 10-12
basis points of the fed funds rate historically, was a top priority to
soothing
the pain in the credit markets. The
Financial Times quoted Goldman Sachs
economist Erik Nielson: “This is basically Father Christmas to those
who have
access to central bank funds]. They are bailing out people who have not
really
adjusted their balance sheets to the new reality.”
Fighting Deflation
with Negative Interest Rates
Low and frequently negative real interest
rates over long
periods of time had created the debt bubble, the bursting of which
resulted in
the credit crisis of August 2007. Central banks are now responding to
the
bursting of the debt bubble by cutting interest rates yet again.
Central banks
seem to be letting unreliable incoming raw economic data on the
previous month
to drive interest rate policy which at best can only have longer term
effect.
The addiction to negative real interest rate to sustain the debt bubble
will
eventually lead to a toxic financial overdose.
Lessons of the Great Depression of the 1930s
and the
protracted Japanese recession of the 1990s have left all central banks
with a
phobia about asset deflation, against which monetary policy of zero
nominal
interest rate can have little effect. Since nominal rates cannot go
below zero,
deflation, or negative inflation, implies positive real interest rates
even as
nominal rate is zero, causing central banks to lose their ability to
provide needed
economic stimulus by monetary means. In a deflationary environment,
borrowers
will find it more costly to repay loans of even zero interest rate. The
history
lesson learned by central bankers is that when an asset-price bubble
bursts
with threats of deflationary recession, monetary policy therapy has to
be
dramatic, timely and visible to be effective.
Next: Inflation
Targeting
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