The Meaning of Quantitative Easing
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
I begin by
describing quantitative easing in technical terms. I go on to describe
what it means when a central bank and its government engage in quantitative
easing.
What is quantitative
easing? It is a central bank’s "purchase" of government
securities (bills, notes, bonds) directly from the government.
The term "purchase"
does not capture the essence of the actual transaction. The government
issues a Treasury bill, say. This is a liability of the government.
The central bank takes this bill and holds it as its asset. It provides
the government with its own official and legal State money or notes
(or a checking account for such). The central bank accounts for
this note issue as its liability. It is an IOU transferred to the
government (or State). In the usual setup, these notes cannot be
redeemed for anything. That is, if the government brought these
notes to the central bank, it would get nothing in return for them.
Hence, the money issue is not really a liability of the central
bank. The government accounts for the receipt of these central bank
notes as an asset.
The net result
of the transaction is that the government succeeds in transforming
a liability (its issue of Treasury bills) into a new asset
(its holding of central bank notes). If a person issues a debt and
receives an asset from someone else in return, there is no new asset
involved. If a baker issues an IOU and gets an oven in return, the
oven is not an increment to the stock of ovens in the world. But
when the government issues its IOU (the Treasury bill), it gets
an entirely new asset, the central bank money. In the U.S., the
government pays interest to the FED that holds the bill, but the
FED returns this interest to the Treasury. Hence, the Treasury bill
held by the FED is really no liability to the government. The net
result of the transaction is that the government has a new asset
that it can spend, namely, the FED’s Federal Reserve notes.
There will
be further effects on the banking system and the economy when the
government circulates the notes. These occur through the fractional-reserve
banking system, but it is not my aim here to discuss these as plenty
of other sources have done this already.
The main technical
point is that the government has a new asset that is made an asset
by coercion, since the money has, by the power of law, been made
legal tender. If we had t-accounts for the government and FED and
the government issued $1,000 in t-bills, we’d see the following:
- The government
debits its asset: $1,000, Federal Reserve notes.
- The government
credits its liability: $1,000, Treasury bill outstanding.
- The central
bank debits its asset: $1,000, Treasury bill.
- The central
bank credits its liability: $1,000, Federal Reserve notes.
When we consolidate
the accounts, we end up with the Treasury bill disappearing. The
combined entity has Federal Reserve notes (money) as an asset and
as a liability. Since it is a phantom liability that can be exchanged
for nothing, the government has a new asset with no real liability
connected to it. This completes the technical description of quantitative
easing.
The term "quantitative
easing" has propaganda value. The implied proposition is that
"something" is being eased that is currently "tight"
or "restricted." This makes it sound as if something positive
and good is being accomplished. What is actually going on, however,
is a form of seizure or taxation. It is also called
inflation, when the focus is on the additional means of spending
that has been created.
The Congress
lifts the debt limit of the government. Suppose the government then
gets money via quantitative easing. All currency in the U.S. and
other states is typically forced currency that is made to pass as
means of payment by law. Since this currency is imposed by force
on the society, the government spending that uses these notes is
tantamount to using force to extract goods and services from society.
Hence, quantitative easing is seizure and taxation. It is not direct
seizure from citizens using soldiers and weapons, nor is it direct
taxation by means of tax rates and payments made by citizens. Instead
the government takes what it wants by spending its new asset – the
newly-manufactured money. This reduces what is available for everyone
else to spend on. The reduction in available goods in the private
sector is the tax. One result is that society finds that the prices
it pays for everything else rise (albeit unevenly). The government’s
absorption of goods and services measures the seizure.
Whoever participates
in the consumption or receipt of those goods and services is the
beneficiary of the seizure. If the government gives money to some
farmers, they benefit. If it gives the money to Blackwater, it benefits.
If it pays off Afghan warlords or Sunni soldiers, they benefit.
The government
rationales for its seizure and taxation by quantitative easing are
all false. They vary according to the situation and what appeal
sounds most appealing to a population that does not understand what
is actually going on. There are usually some simple slogans that
have a marked appeal, because of their simplicity and superficiality.
Disposing of them takes more argument than the public is ordinarily
used to or wants to hear. For example, the rationale may be that
government spending is needed to get the economy moving. This is
a total deception, since all that is happening is that goods and
services are being shifted from one set of hands to another. When
there is excess capacity, such as in the automobile industry at
present, the government can buy new autos and stimulate auto demand
for a time. But since the private society has already shown that
it does not want these autos, a collective purchase by the government
adds less to social welfare than it subtracts by the seizure of
the goods and services that is necessary to build the autos.
Discussing
all this in depth is also beyond my limited purpose here. The main
point to be made is that when a government resorts to quantitative
easing, it shows that it has run out of other means to finance its
endeavors. It has reached the end of the line. A government finances
itself by taxes. Borrowing is a hidden form of taxation; it defers
the taxes to the future. Taxes are more or less visible to the population.
They are voted on by Congress or a similar body. They are coercive,
but they have at least the partially redeeming feature of being
somewhat in the open and somewhat controllable by the citizens who
vote for their representatives. Inflationary seizure or coercion
via quantitative easing means that the government wants to spend
more than it can raise by taxation and borrowing. Its ambition
exceeds its grasp. "Ordinary" coercive means of finance
no longer suffice. The government resorts to the printing press.
Quantitative
easing is a resort to the money printing press. It means seizure
and coercion of goods and services from the inhabitants of a country.
But it also means either a government that is spending beyond its
means, or one whose economy is not strong enough to generate financing
by the usual means, or both.
Suppose that
a company could no longer issue debt to finance its purchases of
assets. The capital market (investors) would be vetoing any further
corporate expansion. This happens when a company is badly run or
has problems that must be addressed or has run out of good investment
projects. The governments that resort to quantitative easing are
analogous to such companies, except that they can force the society
to finance their spending.
The
term "quantitative easing" is a relatively new term. It
is one of those modern euphemisms that disguises the use of brute
force. Even the term "inflation," which is what quantitative
easing is, fails to capture the human impact of such government
acts that invade life, liberty, and property.
All such money
manipulations, which, of course, are accepted widely by economists
as the norm, are the antithesis of a free market. The results cannot
be good if society sets up a body with power to inject purchasing
power if, when, and as it pleases and to whom it pleases. This is
too much power without control over the consequences. This power
simply augments government, giving it an uncontrollable option to
seize the society’s goods and services. This cannot be a good idea.
The supposed benefits of central banking are all illusory and impossible.
Standing beside those imagined good effects are the inevitable bad
consequences for many, many people, such as the now millions of
unemployed whose trades and occupations are now found to be not
in demand and who will now be years making the adjustments to find
new work and incomes.
May
11, 2009
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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