Bernanke
Channels Benchley
by
Gary North
Recently
by Gary North: The
#2 Port in the Academic Storm Is About to Close
Ben Bernanke
gave his second-ever press conference on June 22.
Before I offer
my assessment, I think it is wise to make you aware of a long-forgotten
film: a 1931 movie short by Robert Benchley, one of the supreme
humorists of his era. Benchley came on-screen as an economist. He
provided information on why the economy was about to turn around.
(It wasn't.) The depression was over. (It wasn't.) The recovery
was just around the corner. (It wasn't.) Then he offered the appropriate
evidence. The people in the theaters fully understood. Once
you see this video, so will you. Professor Bernanke will never seem
quite the same.
As soon as
Bernanke's press conference was over, the Dow fell 80 points. Asian
stocks fell. European stocks fell. He isn't as funny as Benchley.
There was no
published transcript, but his remarks did not vary much from the
press release issued by the Federal Open Market Committee, which
had been meeting for two days. What was significant was this: he
felt compelled to hold a press conference, yet he had nothing to
say beyond what the FOMC's press release said. Why? I think it was
because he wanted to be there in person to calm the members of the
press, because the FOMC's words were not cheery.
What the FOMC
said and Bernanke reiterated was this: economic growth is slowing.
Yet the FED has pumped in $600 billion of fiat money since November
2010. He offered no assessment of the relationship between this
huge increase in the monetary base and the slowdown in economic
growth. The Keynesian textbook account, including Bernanke's textbook,
says that monetary expansion and low interest rates are supposed
to increase economic growth. It's not happening.
They don't
know why. They don't say why.
A EUROPEAN
HAY RIDE
There is an
explanation, but no one at the FED is going to offer it. The
anonymous "Tyler Durden" of the Zero Hedge site made the connection.
The $600 billion never got into the economy. The money was used
to increase excess reserves of the dozen international banks that
make up the core of 20 banks that are the FED's primary dealers
the large multinational banks that buy the assets ordered
by the FOMC. The FOMC does not buy assets directly. It uses agents.
Durden speculated
that these 12 banks were in trouble. They needed to increase excess
reserves in order to offset the risk associated with the faltering
debt structure of Europe.
In summary,
instead of doing everything in its power to stimulate reserve,
and thus cash, accumulation at domestic (US) banks which would
in turn encourage lending to US borrowers, the Fed has been conducting
yet another stealthy foreign bank rescue operation, which rerouted
$600 billion in capital from potential borrowers to insolvent
foreign financial institutions in the past 7 months. QE2 was nothing
more (or less) than another European bank rescue operation!
He offered
three graphs that show how the increase in QE2 was matched almost
dollar for dollar by an increase in excess reserves at the FED held
by foreign banks.
Furthermore
the data above proves beyond a reasonable doubt why there has been
no excess lending by US banks to US borrowers: none of the cash
ever even made it to US banks! This also resolves the mystery of
the broken money multiplier and why the velocity of money has imploded.
I feel compelled
to add this: there is no evidence that U.S. banks would have done
anything different. Given the unwillingness of American commercial
bankers to lend the increased money provided by the FED since late
2008, I see no reason to believe that bankers would have lent this
QE2 money. They still refuse to lend the money that the monetary
base allows them by law to lend. If they did, we would be suffering
from a doubled price level.
The accumulation
of excess reserves by large European banks has created a problem
for the U.S. Treasury. The FED will cease the QE2 program at the
end of this month. Who will pick up the slack? Durden remarked:
. . . since
the bulk of the reserve induced bank cash has long since departed
US shores and is now being used to ratably fill European bank
balance sheet voids, and since US banks have benefited precisely
not at all from any of the reserves generated by QE 2, there is
exactly zero dry powder for the US Primary Dealers to purchase
Treasurys starting July 1.
This really
is the question of questions for the summer. The Treasury is paying
rates so low that nothing like this has been seen since the middle
of the 1930s. This indicates that demand for Treasury debt remains
strong. But will this continue? If not, then rates will climb, and
the economy will stall. But it is already slowing. If rates rise,
Durden's comment will prove to have been accurate: "QE 3 is a certainty."
SCARED
INVESTORS
The Treasury
can sell its debt at low rates. The figures on excess reserves indicate
that the FED's purchases of assets have not led to a booming economy.
The money winds up at the FED, not the Treasury. Then why are 90-day
T-bills paying an incredible one one-hundredth of a percent per
annum? The Treasury is borrowing at what is effectively zero. It
is borrowing free money. This is the mark of an economy in which
investors think nothing is safe, that the economy will falter, and
that it is better to lend to the Treasury even though investors
will be worse off at the end of the period, because price inflation
is increasing. Investors are reading negative real yields.
In the Great
Depression, prices fell by 30% from 1930 to 1933. Having money in
Treasury debt at slightly above zero interest was a good move. You
made 30% tax-free. But these days, rates as low as 1932 are not
accompanied by falling consumer prices. Prices are rising.
This indicates
real pessimism regarding the economy. Investors could buy corporate
bonds or stocks. The ones who buy T-bills are convinced that losing
purchasing power is preferable to putting money into the private
sector. The government is absorbing this money and borrowing more.
We are facing a bottomless pit of Federal debt, yet investors are
funding the government. They know that these debts will never be
paid off, only rolled over. Still, they will not stop lending money
to the Treasury.
Here is the
problem. It can end overnight. It did for Bear Stearns in 2008.
It did for Lehman Brothers. One day, they could borrow. The next
day, they couldn't. This is the modern form of bank run. Depositors
do not withdraw their funds. Lenders simply refuse to roll over
the debts. There are no lines of frightened depositors in front
of banks. There are simply no bidders for the debts of the issuers.
What would
happen to the Treasury in such a scenario? The FED would buy. The
public knows this, which is why the Treasury can roll over its debt.
We see fear,
not optimism. We see a refusal to take risks, not entrepreneurship.
We hear a giant sucking sound: the money going into the sink hole
of the U.S. government and not coming out. That capital is lost
forever. It will fund boondoggles that Congress and the President
agree to bankroll. It will not fund economic growth. It will not
be amortized by increased productivity.
With this in
mind, let us consider the press release of the FOMC.
WHO'S
IN CHARGE HERE?
The
press release begins:
Information
received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in April
indicates that the economic recovery is continuing at a moderate
pace, though somewhat more slowly than the Committee had expected.
The committee,
being Keynesians, all believe that a stimulus on the scale of QE2
is supposed to goose the economy. But the economy resembles a cooked
goose. They have no explanation.
"Also, recent
labor market indicators have been weaker than anticipated." When
the unemployment rate goes back up to 9.1% two years after the supposed
recovery began, the Keynesians have a problem. They are beginning
to sound like Robert Benchley.
The slower
pace of the recovery reflects in part factors that are likely
to be temporary, including the damping effect of higher food and
energy prices on consumer purchasing power and spending as well
as supply chain disruptions associated with the tragic events
in Japan.
Energy prices
are slightly lower this month, but food prices continue their steady
upward move. As to the Japanese recovery, there is no evidence of
it yet. How temporary is temporary?
However,
investment in nonresidential structures is still weak, and the
housing sector continues to be depressed.
The "however"
indicates that this factor will not be temporary. What about price
inflation?
Inflation
has picked up in recent months, mainly reflecting higher prices
for some commodities and imported goods, as well as the recent
supply chain disruptions. However, longer-term inflation expectations
have remained stable.
Price inflation
has picked up, true, but not to worry. Longer-term EXPECTATIONS
have remained stable. In other words, while consumer prices are
rising, Keynesian economists have not changed their assessment of
lower price inflation ahead, one of these days, Real Soon Now.
Conclusion:
They are all Robert Benchley!
"Consistent
with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum
employment and price stability." I see. The Committee SEEKS to foster
its mandate. And how well is the Committee doing? Not very.
The
unemployment rate remains elevated; however, the Committee expects
the pace of recovery to pick up over coming quarters and the unemployment
rate to resume its gradual decline toward levels that the Committee
judges to be consistent with its dual mandate. Inflation has moved
up recently, but the Committee anticipates that inflation will subside
to levels at or below those consistent with the Committee's dual
mandate as the effects of past energy and other commodity price
increases dissipate.
So, the opposite
of the Committee's mandate is taking place: rising unemployment
and rising prices. This was not considered possible four decades
ago. The Phillips curve the trade-off between price inflation
and unemployment was supposed to take care of that. Then
came stagflation under Nixon, Ford, and Carter. It has reappeared.
The Committee
says it ANTICIPATES that price inflation will subside. This raises
a question: How is stable pricing compatible with an increase of
$600 billion in the monetary base? The Committee did not ask this
question, so there was no necessity of answering it.
To promote
the ongoing economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation,
over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate, the Committee
decided today to keep the target range for the federal funds rate
at 0 to 1/4 percent.
And how, pray
tell, does the Committee keep the FedFunds rate this low? It increased
the monetary base, 2008-9. It decreased the monetary base in 2010.
It increased the monetary base in 2011. The FedFunds rate has not
budged. So, monetary inflation keeps the FedFunds rate low. On the
other hand, monetary deflation keeps the FedFunds rate low.
They are all
Robert Benchley.
The FedFunds
rate has not budged because it is the rate at which commercial banks
lend overnight to any bank that has exceeded its reserve limit.
But when the banking system is sitting on $1.5 trillion in excess
reserves, no banks are borrowing overnight money from each other.
So, the Committee cannot affect the FedFunds rate one way or the
other. The Committee announces that it will keep the rate low. This
is supposed to persuade the financial press that the Committee is
still in charge. Amazingly, the announcements are taken seriously.
The Committee
continues to anticipate that economic conditions including
low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation
over the medium run are likely to warrant exceptionally
low levels for the federal funds rate for an extended period.
In short, the
lousy economy is going to remain lousy. The QE2 pumping was accompanied
by a reduced rate of economic growth. Now that QE2 will stop, the
Committee thinks things will slow down even more.
Then what,
exactly, does the Committee intend to do? It will reinvest earnings
on its portfolio. That is to say, it will keep buying Treasury debt.
But its policy will be in maintenance mode.
What else will
it do? It will monitor its portfolio. It will keep an eye on its
basket of debt.
The Committee
will regularly review the size and composition of its securities
holdings and is prepared to adjust those holdings as appropriate.
Monitor. Watch.
Observe.
"You can
observe a lot just by watching." ~ Yogi Berra
The
Committee ended its press release with this inspirational sentence:
The Committee
will monitor the economic outlook and financial developments and
will act as needed to best foster maximum employment and price
stability.
Presumably,
it has been doing this all along. And what have been the results?
Rising unemployment and rising prices.
Bernanke's
press conference added little to the Committee's press release.
So, the Dow sank 80 points.
CONCLUSION
The nation
is being centrally planned by the spirit of Robert Benchley.
June
25, 2011
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2011 Gary North
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