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L. Randall Wray

L. Randall Wray

Posted: October 18, 2010 02:34 PM

QE2 Won't Save Our Sinking Ship

What's Your Reaction:

Fed Chairman Bernanke is signaling that a second round of quantitative easing will soon begin. In the first round, the Fed's balance sheet nearly tripled to nearly $2.3 trillion as it bought $1.7 trillion in Treasury securities and mortgage-related securities. Since the Fed appears to want to unwind its position in mortgages, QE2 will probably target federal government debt.

During Japan's long stagnation, Bernanke was famous for arguing that the Bank of Japan could have done far more to fight deflation. Since the BOJ's overnight interest rate target was effectively at zero, the conventional policy of lowering its interest rate target was not an option. Hence, Bernanke advocated quantitative, rather than price, activity -- the BOJ would purchase assets from banks, driving up their excess reserves, until they would finally make loans to stimulate spending that would reverse the trend of prices.

So when he had the opportunity, he put theory into practice in the US, driving short-term interest rates effectively to zero and filling bank balance sheets with excess reserves by purchasing their assets. So far, the impact has not been significantly different than Japan's experience. Indeed, Bernanke has been publicly warning of the dangers of a Japanese-style deflation, as US inflation has dropped nearly to zero, well below the Fed's informal target of two percent.

And so we are now set for round two of QE -- more of the same old, same old.

In truth, the Fed has done only two helpful things. First, during the liquidity crisis of 2007 and 2008, it lent reserves to financial institutions that faced a liquidity crisis. To be sure, it took the Fed far too long to figure out that in a liquidity crisis you must lend to any financial institution, and you should not look too closely at the quality of assets submitted as collateral. The Fed's bumbling made the liquidity crisis far worse than it should have been. But eventually we got through that phase.

We then moved on to the insolvency phase, as everyone discovered that banks were, and still are, holding assets whose value is far below the value of their liabilities. A flimsy "stress test" was concocted, designed to ensure that all institutions would pass. The government then injected a bit of capital into some of them and proclaimed the problem resolved. Next, banks cooked their books and showed healthy profits so that they could buy out Uncle Sam. More importantly, they wanted to party like it was 1999 so they could pay record bonuses to top management.

However, purchasing toxic assets from banks did help them -- the second useful thing done by the Fed. The problem is that the Fed did not and cannot buy enough of the waste to make banks healthy. There is simply too much of it. When the crisis hit, the US debt to GDP ratio was 500%, and that has hardly come down. A lot of the debt was bad even before the recession, but far more of it is bad now that we have lost 10 million jobs and half of homeowners are either underwater in their mortgages or soon will be. And there are tens of trillions of dollars of derivatives deals. To resolve the insolvency crisis would require that the Fed buy tens of trillions of dollars worth of questionable assets -- QE2 would have to be orders of magnitude larger than QE1. Putting a number on it is nothing but a guess, but it could be at least $20 trillion.

The Fed can certainly "afford" to buy up all the bad assets and take on any counterparty risk from the derivatives that might be triggered. As Bernanke has testified, the Fed buys assets by crediting bank accounts, through a simple keystroke, and there is no way the Fed can run out of keystrokes. But it is politically constrained in a number of ways.

First, there is no chance that inflation hawks would stomach Fed actions on that scale. They still believe that bank reserves generate loans that inevitably create inflation. Bernanke carefully tries to navigate these waters by agreeing with the hawks that in the long run, Fed creation of too many reserves would be inflationary, but argues that in current circumstances the greater danger is deflation. Still, he reassures markets that reserves creation is temporary, and that the Fed will "exit its accommodative policies at the appropriate time". Yet, if the Fed buys junk assets that will never have any value, it will not be able to sell these back to markets later -- so there is no way to remove the reserves it created when it buys trash.

Second, the Fed generally makes a profit on its operations and turns excess profit on equity over to the Treasury. Buying toxic assets will lead to losses, something Congress will not stomach. So the Fed is between the inflation rock and the hard place of losses. It cannot solve financial institutions' solvency problem without buying on a politically impossible scale.

This should come as no surprise. It has always been the central bank's role to deal with liquidity problems, and the Treasury's role to deal with insolvency problems. The difference is that US Treasury spending is directly controlled by Congress and accounted for in the federal budget. Bailouts by Treasury -- such as the rescue of the US auto industry -- inevitably generate a public debate. By contrast, bailouts by the Fed take place behind closed doors, and usually only come to light after the fact. Still, Congress and the public are fed up with the Fed and will tolerate such shenanigans no longer. That leaves the Treasury as the only chance for action, but President Obama claims it has already "run out of money". This is pure nonsense since Treasury also spends using "keystrokes", but it is a widely accepted myth.

So the Fed is left with the only option available to a central bank that has already pushed short-term interest rates to zero: buy longer maturity treasury bonds in order to push longer rates toward zero. It certainly can do this. It could, for example, buy all 10 year Treasuries, bidding up their prices until their yields fall to zero. Historically, 30 year fixed rate mortgages have tracked 10 year bonds fairly closely, so such an action could conceivably lower mortgage rates. But they are already below 4%, so it is not clear what could be gained. Dropping rates still further is not likely to bring forth any buyers except hedge funds that have been buying foreclosed homes. The "foreclosuregate" scandal has at least temporarily killed that demand.

Other potential buyers are waiting for house prices to fall further, or for a real economic recovery to begin -- one with job creation and rising wages. In short, the problem in real estate markets is not that mortgage rates are too high, but rather that prospects for real estate and job markets are too poor. The Fed is in a Catch 22: Interest rate policy will not spur borrowing until economic recovery is underway, but recovery will not begin until spending picks up. Only jobs and income will stimulate spending, but the Fed cannot do anything in those areas.

The Fed believes that it might spur bank lending by lowering returns on safe, liquid assets like Treasuries. If banks cannot generate sufficient returns by holding these assets, then they might have no choice but to take greater risks. But it takes two to tango -- banks need good and willing borrowers in order to make loans.

Recent data indicate that banks are instead trying to increase revenues through "churning" -- trading existing assets, which generates no new spending -- and by increasing fees and penalties. Conventional wisdom is that it costs banks up to 400 basis points (four percentage points) to operate the payments system that relies on checking deposits and credit cards. If Treasuries are paying less than half that, and mortgages are below that, the only way that banks can turn a profit is by charging customers for their deposits, debits, and charges. That is why they have been busy jacking up their charges. Yet if Elizabeth Warren is effective, she is going to make it harder for banks to gouge customers.

No matter how mad at banks we might be, we have got to leave them with a way to return to profitability that does not rely on speculative bubbles, pump-and-dump schemes, and accounting fraud. Pushing returns on relatively safe assets toward zero is not the answer. Pumping banks full of reserves that pay very low interest will not help, either. What Bernanke might understand, but most in the mainstream media do not, is that banks do not and cannot lend reserves. Reserves are just an entry on the Fed's balance sheet -- a liability of the Fed and an asset of banks. Rather, banks make loans by accepting the IOU of the borrower and issuing a demand deposit. Only financial institutions have access to the Fed's balance sheet, so it is literally impossible for a bank to lend out reserves.

So anyone who thinks that pumping banks full of reserves while driving interest rates toward zero is a way to encourage lending simply does not understand banking. (This also means, of course, that whether banks have $100 billion or $100 trillion of reserves has no implications for prospective inflation.)

Note that if we really wanted to use our central bank to resolve this economic crisis, it would be far better to have it directly buy houses and create jobs for the unemployed. But it makes far more sense to use our fiscal authorities for that.

QE2 does not represent a solution to our current quagmire. No, this Titanic is still headed underwater. The sooner that the Obama administration recognizes that what we need is jobs, more jobs, and mortgage relief, the sooner we can get this ship afloat.

Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0.

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04:10 AM on 10/19/2010
America overconsumed. It is now selling off assets, and pieces, to pay the bills.

in 1975 , americans spent, on average, $70 a year on all consumer electronics
by 2007, it was over $2000 - most of it disposable in a year or two

time for ten years of underconsumption, or longer
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antaeus
Full-Cream Marriage Now
01:49 AM on 10/19/2010
Define "profitability."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bushguy
A plague on both your houses
10:08 PM on 10/18/2010
Takes a very complex topic and explains it in a clear and concise way. Very enjoyable if not particularly encouraging.
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antaeus
Full-Cream Marriage Now
01:52 AM on 10/19/2010
"Not encouraging"? I feel the floor dropping away from beneath my feet after reading this piece.
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bushguy
A plague on both your houses
09:04 AM on 10/19/2010
For me the floor dropped away quite awhile ago. But I get your point.
07:44 PM on 10/18/2010
Great article, but I think that there is already inflation, but not hyperinflation. Look at food prices,utilities and insurance payments. I also don't see a case for hyperinflation, but do see one for a seriously debased currency, which entails it's own unique problems. The implications of the QE2 policy has international implications. There are credible reports surfacing that China, Russia and India's leading businessmen are going to start dumping their dollars. To me it appears that they already have started. Oil will also be more expensive sending a lot of those overseas dollars back home.

Our markets are not attractive because of fraud and countries are looking to exit their dollar holdings. It would be wise for America to realize this and know that the reserve currency status of the dollar is pretty much the only thing holding this country's economy together. By purposefully devaluing it, a clear message is sent and international investors will act accordingly. There will be no benefit to this country. Mark to Market of these toxic assets is the only way forward and out of this mess. It's ridiculous and criminal this wasn't done during the bailout.

By the way, I love the ND 2.0 website and visit it weekly.
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Romeover
Civilization is for weaklings.
07:04 PM on 10/18/2010
Banks were running wild, skimming money from the economy without contributing commensurately. We should emphatically NOT let them return to their previous parasitic level of profitability.
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OldCowboy
Against stupidity the Gods contend in vain.
08:46 PM on 10/18/2010
What he said.
06:42 PM on 10/18/2010
How about a proposal for Banking: And now for something entirely different.

Were I an Obama economic advisor, I'd advocate Tiered Banking Regulation. What's that? It's something I just thought up. Try it on for size and see if you think I'm nuts.
1) Tier One: Regulations for "local banks" with a reach no further than 6/8/10 counties in each state. Essentially, would reflect historic reserve requirements and a separation between investment and retail banking.
2) Tier Two: Regulations for "statewide banks" with a reach including the entire state. Regulated by the state but to include state authority to place holds on moves that may endanger a states financial well-being, including looser investment/retail banking regulatory firewalls.
3) Tier Three: Regulations for "national banks" with a reach across states. Would include oversight by Federal agencies to ensure no ability to endanger national financial well-being. Federal oversight of investment/banking entities/transactions.

This is pretty basic, I admit. But, if implemented correctly, could correct the abuses of the banking industry without granting government too much power over markets.

Crazy idea?
05:27 PM on 10/18/2010
Thanks for comments.
Jerry: I have previously advocated that treasury just stop issuing bonds. What is the point of issuing them only to have Fed buy them? So I concur. But only so that Congress etc will stop fretting about govt debt--as you note, no one counts Reserves as govt debt (altho they are) but they all count Treasuries as debt.

Warren: No, a job guarantee program (think New Deal) is the quickest way to create jobs. And doesn't have all the ugly implications of creating a trade war. The US is a rich and highly productive nation--no need to engage in beggar thy neighbor policy.
07:27 PM on 10/18/2010
We cannot fix our economy without fixing our trade deals. China slaps new tariffs on our products weekly and nationalizes American companies on an increasing basis. They have a right to value their currency where they want and we have a right to counteract those measures with our own tariffs etc., so I think the currency valuation argument is a red herring. We are already in a trade war. The sooner this country admits that, the sooner we can get effective policy to help our own country and stop worrying about China. They certainly don't worry about this country.
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RichChinaMan
Variety is the spice of life!
07:29 PM on 10/18/2010
Correct!
04:49 PM on 10/18/2010
This is a very good post. It is obvious that we need jobs jobs jobs. What would be the fastest way to create real private sector jobs? The answer is both easy and obvious. We must end all trade with China. Whatever price increases that results from this will be more than offset by employment and wage gains. We are in the dangerous area of deflation. We are not Japan. Japan could not save itself by ending all imports because the only thing it imports are raw materials and oil that it needs. We could easily substitute domestic production for all of the things that we import including oil. In the end this is what will happen. The only question is how much pain will it take before our leaders accept this fact.
04:01 PM on 10/18/2010
""""""And there are tens of trillions of dollars of derivatives deals.""""""

all derivatives deals ought to be cancelled ,rescinded , nullified

they are nothing more than side bets -------they add nothing to the economy -----and the government and the fed should not be involved in settling gambling chits
03:32 PM on 10/18/2010
I think you and the Federal Reserve are missing the real opportunity. With asset valuations down by about $15 Trillion and net Federal debt at around $9 Trillion (as little as $4 Trillion if you count the government's gold stockpile), the Federal Reserve had and continues to have the capability to fully monetize the current national debt. The Fed could buy up enough Treasuries to pay the debt off by giving them back to the governmnet as soon as they are purchased. By doing this, the deficit hawks argument is obliterated and the Congress can create jobs without all the crocodile tears about debts and deficits. This is a very real way out of the unemployment crisis with little real pain for the Middle Class. Of course a dramatic tax increase on the wealthy would go a long way toward restoring a more reasonable distribution of wealth, while simultaneoulsly filling the Treasury's coffers.
09:56 PM on 10/18/2010
What debt? The "debt" is nongovernment savings of net financial assets created by deficit expenditure due to the dollar for dollar offset that Congress requires. It is not an operational requirement. It just looks like the government is borrowing when it is not. The federal government as currency issuer does not fund itself with taxes or finance itself with debt in a nonconvertible floating rate monetary system. The federal government is the currency issuer, while households (individuals), firms (businesses), and US states are currency users. Currency users are revenue constrained, while the currency issuer is not.

If you want to say that the government "borrows" then it borrows back at interest the money it created for its expenditures. There is no operational necessity for this, and it can be eliminated anytime Congress chooses. The interest is just a subsidy for bondholders.

The money used to purchase the bonds was provided by the deficits. The deficits increases deposit accounts. This money was spent purchasing the bonds (in aggregate). Bank reserves are used only for interbank settlement. The deposit accounts were debited for the bonds and the purchasers's banks exchanged reserves for the bonds, transferring them to the customers. Then when the Fed buy the bonds for its book, the reserves it exchanges for the bonds are just returned to the interbank system and then credited to the seller's accounts (in aggregate). All this is just a transformation of asset composition at the macro level.
12:31 AM on 10/19/2010
Fanned for understanding how the modern monetary system works!

Although I think Jerry Lammers was saying it makes job creation more politically possible, not functionally possible.
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usna73
We are all in this together
03:22 PM on 10/18/2010
You have nailed it. I will follow your site.