The
Fiscal Cliff Is a Diversion: The Derivatives Tsunami and the Dollar Bubble
by
Paul Craig Roberts
PaulCraigRoberts.org
Recently
by Paul Craig Roberts: Obdurate
Washington
The fiscal
cliff is another hoax designed to shift the attention of policymakers,
the media, and the attentive public, if any, from huge problems
to small ones.
The fiscal
cliff is automatic spending cuts and tax increases in order to reduce
the deficit by an insignificant amount over ten years if Congress
takes no action itself to cut spending and to raise taxes. In other
words, the fiscal cliff is going to happen either way.
The problem
from the standpoint of conventional economics with the fiscal cliff
is that it amounts to a double-barrel dose of austerity delivered
to a faltering and recessionary economy. Ever since John Maynard
Keynes, most economists have understood that austerity is not the
answer to recession or depression.
Regardless,
the fiscal cliff is about small numbers compared to the Derivatives
Tsunami or to bond market and dollar market bubbles.
The fiscal
cliff requires that the federal government cut spending by $1.3
trillion over ten years. The
Guardian reports that means the federal deficit has to
be reduced about $109 billion per year or 3 percent of the current
budget. More simply, just divide $1.3 trillion by ten and it comes
to $130 billion per year. This can be done by simply taking a three
month vacation each year from Washingtons wars.
The Derivatives
Tsunami and the bond and dollar bubbles are of a different magnitude.
Last
June 5 in Collapse
At Hand I pointed out that according to the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currencys fourth quarter report for
2011, about 95% of the $230 trillion in US derivative exposure was
held by four US financial institutions: JP Morgan Chase Bank, Bank
of America, Citibank, and Goldman Sachs.
Prior to financial
deregulation, essentially the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act and
the non-regulation of derivativesa joint achievement of the
Clinton administration and the Republican PartyChase, Bank
of America, and Citibank were commercial banks that took depositors
deposits and made loans to businesses and consumers and purchased
Treasury bonds with any extra reserves.
With the repeal
of Glass-Steagall these honest commercial banks became gambling
casinos, like the investment bank, Goldman Sachs, betting not only
their own money but also depositors money on uncovered bets on interest
rates, currency exchange rates, mortgages, and prices of commodities
and equities.
These bets
soon exceeded many times not only US GDP but world GDP. Indeed,
the gambling bets of JP Morgan Chase Bank alone are equal to world
Gross Domestic Product.
According to
the first quarter 2012 report from the Comptroller of the Currency,
total derivative exposure of US banks has fallen insignificantly
from the previous quarter to $227 trillion. The exposure of the
4 US banks accounts for almost of all of the exposure and is many
multiples of their assets or of their risk capital.
The Derivatives
Tsunami is the result of the handful of fools and corrupt public
officials who deregulated the US financial system. Today merely
four US banks have derivative exposure equal to 3.3 times world
Gross Domestic Product. When I was a US Treasury official, such
a possibility would have been considered beyond science fiction.
Hopefully,
much of the derivative exposure somehow nets out so that the net
exposure, while still larger than many countries GDPs, is
not in the hundreds of trillions of dollars. Still, the situation
is so worrying to the Federal Reserve that after announcing a third
round of quantitative easing, that is, printing money to buy bondsboth
US Treasuries and the banks bad assetsthe Fed has just
announced that it is doubling its QE 3 purchases.
In other words,
the entire economic policy of the United States is dedicated to
saving four banks that are too large to fail. The banks are too
large to fail only because deregulation permitted financial concentration,
as if the Anti-Trust Act did not exist.
The purpose
of QE is to keep the prices of debt, which supports the banks
bets, high. The Federal Reserve claims that the purpose of its massive
monetization of debt is to help the economy with low interest rates
and increased home sales. But the Feds policy is hurting the
economy by depriving savers, especially the retired, of interest
income, forcing them to draw down their savings. Real interest rates
paid on CDs, money market funds, and bonds are lower than the rate
of inflation.
Moreover, the
money that the Fed is creating in order to bail out the four banks
is making holders of dollars, both at home and abroad, nervous.
If investors desert the dollar and its exchange value falls, the
price of the financial instruments that the Feds purchases
are supporting will also fall, and interest rates will rise. The
only way the Fed could support the dollar would be to raise interest
rates. In that event, bond holders would be wiped out, and the interest
charges on the governments debt would explode.
With such a
catastrophe following the previous stock and real estate collapses,
the remains of peoples wealth would be wiped out. Investors
have been deserting equities for safe US Treasuries.
This is why the Fed can keep bond prices so high that the real interest
rate is negative.
The hyped threat
of the fiscal cliff is immaterial compared to the threat of the
derivatives overhang and the threat to the US dollar and bond market
of the Federal Reserves commitment to save four US banks.
Once
again, the media and its master, the US government, hide the real
issues behind a fake one. The fiscal cliff has become the way for
the Republicans to save the country from bankruptcy by destroying
the social safety net put in place during the 1930s, supplemented
by Lyndon Johnsons Great Society in the mid-1960s.
Now that there
are no jobs, now that real family incomes have been stagnant or
declining for decades, and now that wealth and income have been
concentrated in few hands is the time, Republicans say, to destroy
the social safety net so that we dont fall over the fiscal
cliff.
In human history,
such a policy usually produces revolt and revolution, which is what
the US so desperately needs.
Perhaps our
stupid and corrupt policymakers are doing us a favor after all.
December
18, 2012
Paul
Craig Roberts, a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2012 Paul
Craig Roberts
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