The Cons and Cons of Debt Monetisation
by Steve Saville
321 Gold
Below is
an excerpt from a commentary originally posted at www.speculative-investor.com
on 8th July 2012.
Although it
probably won't happen within the next couple of months, it's a good
bet that the ECB will eventually be prodded into monetising a large
amount of European government and commercial bank debt. It is therefore
appropriate for us to discuss the pros and cons of such a development,
but since we can't think of any pros we'll have to focus on the
cons.
A critical
point to understand is that monetary inflation carried out by the
central bank is a problem for the same reason that private counterfeiting
is a problem. It results in an exchange of nothing for something
and is therefore a form of theft. Nobody would argue that a private
counterfeiter was providing a valuable service to the economy if
he printed-up money to buy the bonds of financially-stressed governments,
so why do many people believe that the central bank can do some
good when it buys bonds with money conjured out of nothing?
Even believing
that under certain conditions the central bank does no harm (rather
than does some good) when it creates new money requires disabling
the part of the brain devoted to logic and common sense. Of course
it does harm! Adding to the supply of money cannot possibly add
to the total wealth in the economy, and yet some people get richer
as a result of the monetary injection. If some people get richer
while the total wealth is not increased, then other people must
be made poorer and what we are dealing with is a forced transfer
of wealth.
We now get
to the essence of what central bank debt monetisation is: a means
of transferring wealth from some people to other people. In the
specific case of the ECB using new euros to buy-up the bonds of
insolvent governments and banks, it would be a transfer of wealth
to the investors in these bonds from everyone with euro-denominated
savings. In effect, the costs of making a bad investment in bonds
would be shifted from those who made the ill-conceived investment
decision to those who had nothing to do with the decision. Furthermore,
the shifting of costs would be done surreptitiously. If all euro
savers were sent a bill for their share of the wealth transfer there
would be an uprising, but when the transfer is done via monetary
inflation not even one person in one hundred will be able to figure
out why he/she has become poorer.
The costs to
euro savers are hidden from view because rather than there being
an immediate transfer of money there is a gradual transfer of purchasing
power. Bondholders and banks see an immediate boost in purchasing
power because they are the first receivers of the new money, but
savers see a gradual decrease in purchasing power as the new money
works its way through the economy. It should also be understood
that the price-related effects of the new money will be lumpy, in
that some prices will be affected more than other prices. This leads
to mal-investment and means that the debt monetisation not only
brings about an unethical transfer of wealth, it also brings about
a reduction in the overall pool of wealth.
All of which
prompts the question: Why do it? Why would a central bank monetise
debt when doing so helps a small number of speculators at the expense
of a large number of savers and brings about a reduction in the
total amount of wealth?
Read
the rest of the article
July
23, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 321 Gold
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