The QE Debate
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Republicans
Hope, but Don't Change
There is an ongoing three way debate between those who believe the
Fed should do more to strengthen the recovery, those who believe
that the recovery is strong enough to continue on its own, and those
who believe that the economy has been so fundamentally altered by
the recession that no amount of stimulus can succeed in pushing
unemployment down to pre-crash levels. As usual, they all have it
wrong (although some are more wrong than others).
The false conclusions
are being made by the likes of bond king Bill Gross, who has suggested
that the economic fundamentals have changed. They argue that a "new
normal" is now in place that sets an 8% unemployment rate as
a floor below which we will never fall. This is absurd. America
can once again prosper if we put our trust in first principles and
let the free markets work. Unfortunately, that is not happening.
Government is taking an ever greater role in our economy where its
efforts will continue to stifle economic growth. A close second
in cluelessness comes from those who believe that we are currently
on the road to a real recovery. I'm not sure what economy they are
looking at, but in just about every important metric, we continue
to be essentially comatose.
More accurate
are the opinions of those who believe that without a more serious
intervention from the Fed, which can only mean another round of
quantitative easing (QE III), the current quasi-recovery will soon
fade and the tides of recession will overtake us once again. They
are correct. And even though this time the water will be rougher
and deeper than it was four years ago, it does not mean that the
Fed will do the economy any good by breaking out its heavy artillery
once again.
In his widely
anticipated speech at Jackson Hole last week, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
sounded a supremely optimistic note: "It seems clear, based
on this experience, that such (easing) policies can be effective,
and that, in their absence, the 2007-09 recession would have been
deeper and the current recovery would have been slower than has
actually occurred."
The simple
truth however, is that our economy has a disease that all the quantitative
easing in the world can't cure. And while the wrong medicine may
make us appear healthier in the short term, we will continue to
deteriorate beneath the surface. Not only should the Fed not provide
additional QE, but it should remove the accommodation currently
in place. Although these moves would most certainly send us back
into recession, it would simultaneously provide a needed course
correction that would put us finally on the road to a sustainable
recovery.
The recession
the Fed is trying so desperately to prevent must be allowed to run
its course so that the economy that we have developed over the last
decade, the one that is overly reliant on low interest rates, borrowing
and consumer spending, can finally restructure itself into something
healthier. By enabling this diseased economy to overstay its welcome,
QE does more harm than good. To recover for the long haul, the market
must be allowed to correct the misallocations of resources that
resulted from prior stimulus. Additional stimulus inhibits this
process, and exacerbates the size of the misallocations the markets
must eventually correct.
In the interim,
any GDP growth or employment gains that result from stimulus actually
compounds the difficulty in restructuring the economy. Any jobs
created as a result of cheap monetary stimulus are jobs that won't
be able to survive absent that support. They will require a continual
misallocation of resources in order to survive. Unfortunately, these
jobs must ultimately be lost before a real recovery can actually
begin.
Holding rates
of interest far below market levels (which is the goal of stimulus)
alters patterns of consumption, savings, and investment. Fed intervention
short-circuits the market driven process that resolves misallocations.
The more stimulus that is provided, the harder market forces must
work to try to restore equilibrium. As the misallocations grow over
time, the efficacy of monetary measures diminishes. In the end,
the market will overwhelm the Fed. The only question is how long
it will take.
The Fed is
trying to build skyscrapers on a bad foundation. Each subsequent
structure it builds not only collapses, but also weakens the foundation
that much more. The result is that subsequent structures collapse
at increasingly lower heights and require more effort to build.
Instead of trying to build, the Fed could concentrate on repairing
the underlying foundation. That might delay construction, but in
the end the buildings will be much sturdier.
Because the
Fed has kept interest rates too low for too long, Americans have
saved too little and borrowed too much; consumed too much and produced
too little; and imported too much and exported too little. Too much
of our labor is devoted to the service sectors and not enough to
goods production. Too much capital goes to Wall Street speculators
and not enough to Main Street entrepreneurs. We built too many homes
but not enough factories. We have developed too many shopping centers,
and not enough natural resources. The list of Fed induced misallocations
goes on.
By trying to
preserve the jobs associated with this old economy, the Fed prevents
the market from creating the ones we actually need. Unfortunately
no one seems to understand that, and we continue to chase blindly
after failed economic models. Look for such misunderstanding to
be on high display this week in Charlotte as Democrats gather to
call for even greater intervention to perpetuate a failed economic
model.
September
6, 2012
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
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