The Fed's Campaign
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: The
QE Debate
This past Friday,
as Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke delivered his annual address from Jackson
Hole – the State of the Dollar, if you will – I couldn't help but
hear it as an incumbent's campaign speech. While Wall Street was
hoping for some concrete announcement, what we got was a mushy appraisal
of the Fed's handling of the financial crisis so far and a suggestion
that more 'help' is on the way.
It is important
to remember that it's not just President Obama's job on the line
in this election; in two years time, the next President will have
the opportunity to either reappoint Bernanke or choose someone else.
So we must understand what platform Bernanke is running on, as his
office has an even greater effect on global markets than the President's.
Bernanke has
been the perfect tag-team partner for George W. Bush and then Barack
Obama as they have pursued an economic policy of deficits, bailouts,
and stimulus. Without the Fed providing artificial support to housing
and US debt, Washington would have already been shut out of foreign
credit markets. In other words, they would have faced a debt ceiling
that no amount of bipartisan support could raise. Fortunately for
the politicians, Helicopter Ben was there to monetize the debts.
As
far back as his time as an academic, Bernanke made clear that when
the going got tough, he wouldn't hesitate to fire up the printing
presses. He specialized in studying the Great Depression and, contrary
to greater minds like Murray Rothbard, determined that the problem
was too little money printing. He went on to propose several ways
the central bank could create inflation even when interest rates
had been dropped to zero through large-scale asset purchases
(LSAPs). Sure enough, the credit crunch of 2008 gave the Fed Chairman
an opportunity to test his theory.
All told, the
Fed spent $2.35 trillion on LSAPs, including $1.25 trillion in mortgage-backed
securities, $900 billion in Treasury debt, and $200 billion of other
debt from federal agencies. That means the Fed printed the equivalent
of 15% of US GDP in a couple of years. That's a lot of new dollars
for the real economy to absorb, and a tremendous subsidy to the
phony economy.
This has bought
time for President Obama to enact an $800 billion stimulus program,
an auto industry bailout, socialized medicine, and other economically
damaging measures. In short, because of the Fed's interventions,
Obama got the time and money needed to push the US further down
the road to a centrally planned economy. It is also now much more
unlikely that Washington will be able to manage a controlled descent
to lower standards of living. Instead, we're going to head right
off a fiscal cliff.
The Fed Chairman
even admitted to this reality in his statement. Here are two choice
quotes:
"As I noted,
the Federal Reserve is limited by law mainly to the purchase of
Treasury and agency securities. ... Conceivably, if the Federal
Reserve became too dominant a buyer in certain segments of these
markets, trading among private agents could dry up, degrading liquidity
and price discovery." [emphasis added]
"...expansions
of the balance sheet could reduce public confidence in the Fed's
ability to exit smoothly from its accommodative policies at the
appropriate time. ... such a reduction in confidence might increase
the risk of a costly unanchoring of inflation expectations,
leading in turn to financial and economic instability."
[emphasis added]
So we all agree
that the prospect of inflationary depression was made worse by the
Fed's actions – but at least Ben Bernanke has pleased his boss.
As a guaranteed monetary dove, Ben Bernanke appears to be a shoo-in
if Obama is re-elected.
Meanwhile,
Mitt Romney has pledged to fire Bernanke if elected. While I am
not confident that Mr. Romney has the economic understanding to
appoint a competent replacement – let alone pursue a policy of restoring
the gold standard or legalizing competing currencies – he may well
be seen as a threat not only to the Fed Chairman's self-interest,
but also to his inflationary agenda.
Given this
background, let's look at Bernanke's quotes that have been the focus
of media speculation for the past week: the US economy is "far from
satisfactory," unemployment is a "grave concern," and the Fed "will
provide additional policy accommodation as needed." These comments
seem designed to reassure markets (and Washington) that there will
be no major shift toward austerity in the near future. The party
can go on. But they also hint that Bernanke might be planning to
double down again. I have long written that another round of quantitative
easing is all but inevitable. It now seems to be imminent.
In reality,
when the money drops may have more to do with politics than economics.
The Fed may not want to appear to be directly interfering in the
election by stimulating the economy this fall, but there are strong
incentives for Bernanke to try to perk up the phony recovery before
November and deliver the election to Obama. However, if Romney wins,
Bernanke can at least fall back on his appeal as a team player as
he lobbies for another term.
For gold and
silver buyers, either scenario is likely to continue to stoke our
market in the short- and medium-term. As the past week's rally indicates,
there is no longer a fear that the Fed has had enough of money-printing
– in fact, it looks prepared for much more.
September
8, 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
The
Best of Peter Schiff
|