Jim Grant-Fed Would Be Shut Down If It Were Audited


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On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 8:48 PM, Scott Fullwiler wrote:

(email exchange)

>   On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 8:48 PM, Scott Fullwiler wrote:
>   
>   Thanks, Ian.
>   
>   Warren . . . Ian was one of my students at your presentation last week . . . some people are
>   learning how this works, at least. I feel like a proud papa!

Yes, congrats!

I’m nominating this for both the stupidest article of the year and the stupidest article of all time in the category of ‘statements by economic experts:’

And it was only a few weeks ago Bernanke explained the Fed/government makes payments by simply changing numbers in bank accounts and that their spending is not operationally constrained in any way by revenues.

Fed Would Be Shut Down If It Were Audited, ‘Expert’ Says

June 10th (CNBC)—The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet is so out of whack that the central bank would be shut down if subjected to a conventional audit, Jim Grant, editor of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, told CNBC.

With $45 billion in capital and $2.1 trillion in assets, the central bank would not withstand the scrutiny normally afforded other institutions, Grant said in a live interview.

“If the Fed examiners were set upon the Fed’s own documents-unlabeled documents-to pass judgment on the Fed’s capacity to survive the difficulties it faces in credit, it would shut this institution down,” he said. “The Fed is undercapitalized in a way that Citicorp is undercapitalized.”


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Laffer WSJ opinion piece


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Get Ready for Inflation and Higher Interest Rates

The unprecedented expansion of the money supply could make the ’70s look benign.

By Arthur B. Laffer

June 10th (WSJ)— Rahm Emanuel was only giving voice to widespread political wisdom when he said that a crisis should never be “wasted.” Crises enable vastly accelerated political agendas and initiatives scarcely conceivable under calmer circumstances. So it goes now.

Here we stand more than a year into a grave economic crisis with a projected budget deficit of 13% of GDP. That’s more than twice the size of the next largest deficit since World War II. And this projected deficit is the culmination of a year when the federal government, at taxpayers’ expense, acquired enormous stakes in the banking, auto, mortgage, health-care and insurance industries.

Art knows the difference between purchasing financial assets (usually done by the Fed) and purchasing goods and services (and indirectly through transfer payments) but here elects to ignore it.

With the crisis, the ill-conceived government reactions, and the ensuing economic downturn, the unfunded liabilities of federal programs — such as Social Security, civil-service and military pensions, the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation, Medicare and Medicaid — are over the $100 trillion mark. With U.S. GDP and federal tax receipts at about $14 trillion and $2.4 trillion respectively, such a debt all but guarantees higher interest rates, massive tax increases, and partial default on government promises.

He also recognizes the demand leakages including pension fund contributions, insurance reserves, USD financial accumulations of non residents, IRA’s, other corporate reserves, etc. tend to compound geometrically and are thereby strong contractionary biases.

But as bad as the fiscal picture is, panic-driven monetary policies portend to have even more dire consequences. We can expect rapidly rising prices and much, much higher interest rates over the next four or five years, and a concomitant deleterious impact on output and employment not unlike the late 1970s.

He also knows causation runs from loans to deposits and reserves and not from reserves to anything at all.

I’ve had this discussion personally with him and I wrote ‘soft currency economics’ jointly with Mark McNary who worked at art’s firm with both involved.

About eight months ago, starting in early September 2008, the Bernanke Fed did an abrupt about-face and radically increased the monetary base — which is comprised of currency in circulation, member bank reserves held at the Fed, and vault cash — by a little less than $1 trillion. The Fed controls the monetary base 100% and does so by purchasing and selling assets in the open market. By such a radical move, the Fed signaled a 180-degree shift in its focus from an anti-inflation position to an anti-deflation position.

Bank reserves are crucially important because they are the foundation upon which banks are able to expand their liabilities and thereby increase the quantity of money.

He knows this is not the case. He knows that lending is in no case reserve constrained, and that it’s about price and not quantity.

Banks are required to hold a certain fraction of their liabilities — demand deposits and other checkable deposits — in reserves held at the Fed or in vault cash. Prior to the huge increase in bank reserves, banks had been constrained from expanding loans by their reserve positions.

There were no banks of any consequence constrained from lending by their reserve positions that I know of.

In fact, they all had excess collateral they could have taken to the discount window as needed.

There were some banks constrained by capital considerations but that’s an entirely different story.

That’s why adding the excess reserves didn’t change anything with regards to lending.

Art knows this as well.

They weren’t able to inject liquidity into the economy, which had been so desperately needed in response to the liquidity crisis that began in 2007 and continued into 2008. But since last September, all of that has changed. Banks now have huge amounts of excess reserves, enabling them to make lots of net new loans.

Yet a chart of lending shows no changes as functions of reserve positions.

The way a bank or the banking system makes new loans is conceptually pretty simple. Banks find an entity that they believe to be credit-worthy that also wants a loan, and in exchange for the new company’s IOU (i.e., loan) the bank opens up a checking account for the customer. For the bank’s sake, the hope is that the interest paid by the borrower more than makes up for the cost and risk of the loan. The recently ballyhooed “stress tests” on banks are nothing more than checking how well a bank can weather differing levels of default risk.

Correct. And these loans are not reserve constrained.

And even if they were somehow constrained by reserves, innovations in sweep accounts have reduced reserve requirements to near 0.

What’s important for the overall economy, however, is how fast these loans are made and how rapidly the quantity of money increases.

Most important is the level of spending which may or may not be a function of the lending that creates the ‘quantity of money’ as defined by Art. And he knows that as well.

For our purposes, money is the sum total of all currency in circulation, bank demand deposits, other checkable deposits, and travelers checks (economists call this M1). When reserve constraints on banks are removed, it does take the banks time to make new loans. But given sufficient time, they will make enough new loans until they are once again reserve constrained.

He knows they are never reserve constrained.

The expansion of money, given an increase in the monetary base, is inevitable, and will ultimately result in higher inflation and interest rates. In shorter time frames, the expansion of money can also result in higher stock prices, a weaker currency, and increases in commodity prices such as oil and gold.

In general the causation runs in the other direction, as he also knows.

At present, banks are doing just what we would expect them to do. They are making new loans and increasing overall bank liabilities (i.e., money). The 12-month growth rate of M1 is now in the 15% range, and close to its highest level in the past half century.

He also knows a lot of this simply replaced commercial paper issuance and other forms of non bank lending, and that total credit is the more useful indicator of lending activity.

With an increased trust in the overall banking system, the panic demand for money has begun to and should continue to recede. The dramatic drop in output and employment in the U.S. economy will also reduce the demand for money. Reduced demand for money combined with rapid growth in money is a surefire recipe for inflation and higher interest rates. The higher interest rates themselves will also further reduce the demand for money, thereby exacerbating inflationary pressures. It’s a catch-22.

He also knows interest rates are voted on by the fed and that term rates reflect anticipated Fed moves.

It’s difficult to estimate the magnitude of the inflationary and interest-rate consequences of the Fed’s actions because, frankly, we haven’t ever seen anything like this in the U.S.

He knows there are no consequences. The Fed is like the kid in the car seat with a steering wheel who thinks he’s driving.

To date what’s happened is potentially far more inflationary than were the monetary policies of the 1970s, when the prime interest rate peaked at 21.5% and inflation peaked in the low double digits. Gold prices went from $35 per ounce to $850 per ounce, and the dollar collapsed on the foreign exchanges. It wasn’t a pretty picture.

He knows that was caused by cost push from Saudi price setting that was broken by the deregulation of natural gas in 1978 that resulted in a 15 million barrel per day supply response as our utilities switched from oil to natural gas.

Now the Fed can, and I believe should, do what it must to mitigate the inevitable consequences of its unwarranted increase in the monetary base. It should contract the monetary base back to where it otherwise would have been, plus a slight increase geared toward economic expansion.

All that would do is raise rates some due to the fed selling its securities.

Or the Fed could repo its position so the banks would hold overnight collateral rather than over night reserves. Functionally that changes nothing except for creating a lot more book keeping work.

Absent this major contraction in the monetary base, the Fed should increase reserve requirements on member banks to absorb the excess reserves.

This is just plain silly.

Art knows there is no remaining ‘monetary purpose’ of reserves since we went off the gold standard, which he understands as well as anyone.

Canada and others dropped reserve requirements long ago with no consequences beyond a reduced accounting burden.

Given that banks are now paid interest on their reserves and short-term rates are very low, raising reserve requirements should not exact too much of a penalty on the banking system, and the long-term gains of the lessened inflation would many times over warrant whatever short-term costs there might be.

No penalty and no inflation consequences either.

Alas, I doubt very much that the Fed will do what is necessary to guard against future inflation and higher interest rates. If the Fed were to reduce the monetary base by $1 trillion, it would need to sell a net $1 trillion in bonds. This would put the Fed in direct competition with Treasury’s planned issuance of about $2 trillion worth of bonds over the coming 12 months. Failed auctions would become the norm and bond prices would tumble, reflecting a massive oversupply of government bonds.

Yes, yields would go higher, though not as disorderly as he forecasts.

And, as previously discussed, there’s no reason to do that unless the fed wants higher rates.

In addition, a rapid contraction of the monetary base as I propose would cause a contraction in bank lending, or at best limited expansion. This is exactly what happened in 2000 and 2001 when the Fed contracted the monetary base the last time. The economy quickly dipped into recession.

He knows the contraction of the base back then did not cause anything.

While the short-term pain of a deepened recession is quite sharp, the long-term consequences of double-digit inflation are devastating. For Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke it’s a Hobson’s choice. For me the issue is how to protect assets for my grandchildren.

The best gift he could give his grand children is to tell the story right way around as he knows is the case.

Mr. Laffer is the chairman of Laffer Associates and co-author of “The End of Prosperity: How Higher Taxes Will Doom the Economy — If We Let It Happen” (Threshold, 2008).


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China News


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In case anyone thought fiscal policy doesn’t ‘work’

Highlights

China Car Sales Jump ‘Beyond Imagination,’ Bring Wait
China economy poised for ‘sustainable’ growth
China’s consumer prices fall for 4th month
China Still Faces Net Capital Inflow Pressure, Market News Says
China’s Property Sales Surge, Add to Recovery Signs
China Should Prepare to Counter Stagflation, Researchers Say
China’s Industrial Output Climbed 8.9% in May, Ming Pao Says


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BOE: rates could stay low for “quite some time”


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Yes, as previously discussed, announcing a term structure of Fed funds levels would be far more effective in bringing rates down than securities purchases.

But that closes the door to rate hikes for that period of time, which is exactly what markets discount with the current term rate structure.

Especially with crude and commodities going up and the dollar going down, as markets discount that at some point the Fed will react to that ‘imported inflation’ with rate hikes.

Meanwhile the current ‘mercantalist’ Fed is fine with a lower dollar hoping it will help the US export its way to trend GDP growth rather than get there by domestic debt and consumption. Or at least reduce the marginal propensity to import that they fear could drain demand and abort the recovery. Unfortunately the preference for exports over domestic consumption translates to a lower standard of living via a reduction in real terms of trade.

That’s what was happening last year about this time when the great Mike Masters inventory liquidation hit and it all went bad. This time around there isn’t any excess inventory to break prices and cap utilization/employment is way down and still falling some, and rest of world economies appear too weak to absorb substantial US exports.

And the Saudis are back in control of crude prices after a very surprisingly small fall in world consumption given the size and scope of the international slowdown.

BoE’s Barker says rates could stay low for “quite some time”

MPC member Kate Barker told the Leicester Mercury newspaper that there
remained question marks over the sustainability of the recovery and that
interest rates “could stay low for quite some time”. Ms Barker echoed
Paul Tucker’s comments yesterday in saying that it would take some
months yet for the MPC to judge how robust the turnaround in activity
was: “The really important question is (whether) there’s a pick up in
the economy and if people can sustain that so it continues on to autumn.
That would be one of the most encouraging signs,” she said.


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‘Legacy of Debt’ Gives Fiscal Stimulus Bad Name: Caroline Baum


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This article gives Baum a bad name.

‘Legacy of Debt’ Gives Fiscal Stimulus Bad Name: Caroline Baum

Commentary by Caroline Baum

June 5(Bloomberg) — By the time the U.S. government unveiled its Public Private Investment Partnership in March, the toxic loans and securities clogging bank balance sheets had become “legacy assets.”

What if deficit hawks took the same tack and marketed the $787 billion fiscal stimulus as “legacy debt?”

They would be making yet another error. This is no basis for an article unless one is intent on being part of the problem rather than part of the answer.

“The $787 billion the U.S. Treasury will be borrowing or confiscating from you via taxation will saddle future generations with a legacy of debt,” the press release might read. “Your children and grandchildren can look forward to higher taxes, a lower standard of living and minimal government support in their old age.”

Wonderful, another deficit terrorist spewing counterproductive rhetoric and irresponsible journalism.

First, there is no intergenerational transfer of debt in real terms. Whatever goods and services our children produce will be consumed by whoever happens to be alive at that time. And a nominal government deficit does not keep them from operating at less than full employment.

Second, government securities function as benefits for investors, not costs. One buys them voluntarily and, at the macro level, directly or indirectly, as an alternative to holding reserve balances at the Fed. This means they are purchased at prices where they are preferred to holding balances at the Fed. Nothing is ‘taken away’ by sales of treasury securities and total (non government)holdings of financial assets remain unchanged.

Third, taxes function to reduce aggregate demand. Taxes need be raised in the future when aggregate demand is deemed too high, and not the deficit per se. That is a scenario of low unemployment and high consumption relative to available resources. Not ‘a lower standard of living’ or ‘minimal government support in their old age.’

Maybe the public would balk. And maybe some member of Congress would be bold enough to sponsor a measure to call off the still-uncommitted expenditures.

And thereby contribute to even lower output and employment.

After all, the economy appears to be recovering without fiscal stimulus.

??? The relative improvement has come only after the (non TARP) deficit got over 6% of GDP
And it has barely slowed the collapse.

The 9.4% unemployment is clear evidence aggregate demand is grossly deficient.

The rate of decline in real gross domestic product has slowed from an average 6 percent in the fourth quarter of last year and first quarter of 2009. Real GDP is expected to fall 1.9 percent in the current quarter, according to the median forecast of 61 economists in a Bloomberg News survey from early May. Less negative is the first step toward positive.

Yes, due to the ‘automatic stabilizers’ increasing the deficit, as above.

And only when GDP grows faster than productivity does the output gap fall.

And that’s before any real money gets spent. So far $36.7 billion has been distributed via various government agencies, according to Recovery.gov, the Web site that tracks where your tax dollars are going. That’s 7.4 percent of the $499 billion of outlays ($288 billion of the $787 billion is “tax relief”) and 29 percent of the funds that have been committed to a purpose or a project.

Patient, Heal Thyself

Tax relief comes in the form of larger monthly paychecks for workers and tax credits — for investment in renewable sources of energy, for first-time home buyers — that are encouraging activity now even though the benefit is in the future.

Still, it’s a trickle, not a waterfall.

So if fiscal stimulus can’t take credit for the improvement in the economy, what can? The answer is a combination of monetary policy and self-healing (an economy’s natural tendency is to grow).

Wrong. It’s been all fiscal to this point. Yes, its healed itself, via the very ugly automatic fiscal stabilizers of falling revenue and rising transfer payments with rising unemployment. This could have been avoided with proactive fiscal measures last July.
The Federal Reserve has thrown the kitchen sink at the economy, using traditional and non-traditional means to provide liquidity and credit when the banking system wasn’t up to the task.

Lower rates have drained aggregate demand as savers lost a lot more income than borrowers gained. The Fed’s portfolio alone has removed over $50 billion of annual interest income from savers and investors.

Fed’s CPR

Even before the Fed lowered the overnight interbank lending rate to 0 to 0.25 percent in December,

Savers have seen rates fall by about 5%, reducing aggregate demand, while most borrowers have seen little, if any, drop in rates as bank net interest margins widened to over 4%. And this additional bank income has a marginal propensity to consume of near 0.

the central bank was already ministering to markets and institutions outside its normal discount window customers, otherwise known as depository institutions. It was supporting the commercial paper market; had committed to purchase mortgage-backed securities and agency debt; had agreed to finance investor purchases of asset-backed securities; and had leant support to specific institutions, taking on some of Bear Stearns’s toxic, I mean, legacy, assets in March 2008 and bailing out American International Group in September.

Yes, and all of this has served to lower the term structure of rates and reduce saver’s incomes.

That’s the beauty of monetary policy. It can be implemented instantaneously. The Fed’s challenge is to be as quick on the return trip.

And, as per Bernanke’s 2004 paper, said rate cuts reduce aggregate demand via the ‘fiscal channel’ which means it reduces interest paid by government which needs to be offset by easier fiscal policy to not be a drag on output and employment.

The problem with fiscal stimulus, aside from the fact that it’s a misnomer, is that it arrives too late.

And further delayed by articles like.

Also, a payroll tax cut is instant, as would be per capita revenue sharing checks to the states.

At least that was the standard criticism prior to the enactment of the $787 billion American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009 in February. The government’s tax and spending policies require the approval of a majority of the 100 senators and 435 members of the House of Representatives. And as we know, these 535 individuals sometimes confuse the people’s business with their own: getting re-elected.

True, which includes dealing with public opinion that is further jaded by unintentionally subversive articles like this one.

Preferred Stimuli

This time around, a new president with solid majorities in both Houses of Congress was able to saddle future generations with trillions of dollars of debt less than a month after he took office. The Congressional Budget Office projects the debt- to-GDP ratio rising to 70 percent in 2011, the highest since the early 1950s, when the U.S. was winding down the war effort.

You are including purchases of financial assets which is highly misleading and shows a further lack of understanding of public accounting.

If you believe, as I do, that monetary policy is the more potent of the stimuli, that fiscal “stimulus” just transfers spending from tomorrow to today and from the private sector to the government, with no net long-term gain, then maybe it’s time to stand up for the next generation.

And stand against the accounting identities.

Government deficits add directly non government savings of financial assets. To the penny.

Changes in interest rates only shift incomes between savers and investors.

And all the econometric evidence shows ‘monetary policy’ does little or nothing while fiscal policy is directly traced to changes in GDP.

Besides, where is it written that the ill effects of years of over-consumption and under-saving have to be repaired in a year? Instant gratification means future deprivation.

Over consumption? Did we consume more than we produced? No, investment remained positive during the growth years, which were years of high investment as well. That is not over consumption.

Now, with the recession and consumer pull back, is when investment is falling and we can be said to be thereby over consuming.

Word Choice

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke used part of his June 3 testimony to the House Budget Committee to warn of the consequences of unchecked spending, even in the face of recession and financial instability.
“Unless we demonstrate a strong commitment to fiscal sustainability in the longer term, we will have neither financial stability nor healthy economic growth,” he said.

Yes, sadly, he’s in that camp as well. As is the entire administration if you believe their current rhetoric.

If it takes a marketing gimmick — labeling fiscal stimulus a “legacy of debt” — to convey the message to the public and Congress, so be it.

How about taking the effort to get it right and trying to undo the damage you’ve done…

(Caroline Baum, author of “Just What I Said,” is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are her own.)

Opinions are her own, as selectively published by Bloomberg News.


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Frank Sends Letter on TARP Repayments to Committee Members


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Barney Frank’s letter to members of the House Financial Services Committee

To: Members, Financial Services Committee

From: Barney Frank, Chairman

Today the Treasury announced that 10 of the largest financial institutions participating in the Capital Purchase Program (CPP) will be allowed to repay the $68 billion investment made by American taxpayers.

That does not alter ‘taxpayer’ risk. They lose once private capital is gone in either case.

That is good news on three fronts. First, it means the program is working and has begun to help restore stability to our vital financial system.

The ‘improvement’ had nothing to do with TARP. It may have been helped by the FDIC not closing down these institutions when capital was deemed deficient, but the FDIC could have kept those institutions open under those same terms and conditions as imposed by TARP.

Second, it means that the government will have additional resources to address continuing needs without having to ask taxpayers for more money or increasing borrowing.

Functionally the FDIC can impose the same terms and conditions. The difference is that the FDIC is ‘funded’ by a tax on banks, rather than TARP being an obligation of ‘general revenues.’ However, the FDIC is guaranteed by the government and the FDIC tax on banks that is passed through to the general public might be more regressive than the average IRS tax.

Also, regarding ‘borrowing’ the TARP funds advanced to banks add the reserves that are used to buy the additional government securities.

And, third, it means that that the taxpayer protections and compensation restrictions that Congress insisted be included in the original legislation are having the intended effect – taxpayers are participating in the upside as these institutions recover and raise additional private capital in order to exit the government program.

Again, functionally the FDIC could have imposed the identical terms and conditions.

In sum, today’s announcement means that over one third – approximately $70 billion – of the $199 invested through the CPP has been, or will soon, be repaid. In addition CPP recipients have already paid an additional $4.5 in preferred stock dividends during the past seven months. That means that almost $75 billion has already been earned or repaid. Further those who repay have the right to repurchase the warrants held by Treasury at current market value – further increasing the return to taxpayers.

Yes, it has functioned as a tax on banks and the private sector in general, thereby reducing aggregate demand during a punishing recession that has resulted from government’s failure to sustain aggregate demand.

Congratulations- job well done!!!


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