In
its third round of QE, the Fed says it will buy
$40 billion in MBS every month for an
indefinite period. To do this, it will
essentially create money from nothing, paying for its purchases by crediting
the reserve accounts of the banks from which it buys them. The banks will get the dollars and the Fed will
get the MBS. But the banks' balance
sheets will remain the same, and the circulating money supply will remain the
same.
When
the Fed engages in QE, it takes away something on the asset side of the bank's
balance sheet (government securities or mortgage-backed securities) and replaces
it with electronically-generated dollars.
These dollars are held in the banks' reserve accounts at the Fed. They are "excess reserves," which cannot be
spent or lent into the economy by the banks.
They can only be lent to other banks that need reserves, or used to obtain
other assets (new loans, bonds, etc.).
As Australian economist Steve
Keen explains:
[R]eserves are there for settlement of accounts between banks, and for the government's interface with the private banking sector, but not for lending from. Banks themselves may . . . swap those assets for other forms of assets that are income-yielding, but they are not able to lend from them.
This was also explained by Prof. Scott Fullwiler, when he
argued a year ago for another form of QE--the minting of some trillion dollar
coins by the Treasury (he called it "QE3
Treasury Style"). He explained why the
increase in reserve balances in QE is not inflationary:
Banks can't "do" anything with all the extra reserve balances. Loans create deposits--reserve balances don't finance lending or add any "fuel" to the economy. Banks don't lend reserve balances except in the federal funds market, and in that case the Fed always provides sufficient quantities to keep the federal funds rate at its . . . interest rate target. Widespread belief that reserve balances add "fuel" to bank lending is flawed, as I explained here over two years ago.
Why, Then, Is the
Fed Bothering to Engage in QE3?
If
the Fed is doing no more than swapping bank assets, what is the point of this
whole exercise? The Fed's professed justification
is that by buying mortgage-backed securities, it will lower interest rates for
homeowners and other long-term buyers. As
explained in Reuters:
Massive buying of any asset tends to push up the prices, and because of the way the bond market works, rising prices force yields [or interest rates] down. Because the Fed is buying mortgage-backed bonds, the purchases act to directly lower the cost of borrowing to buy a home. In addition, some investors, put off by the rising price of the bonds that the Fed is buying, turn to other assets, like corporate bonds - which, in turn, pushes up corporate bond prices and lowers those yields, making it cheaper for companies to borrow - and spend.
Those
are the professed objectives, but politics may also play a role. QE drives up the stock market in anticipation
of an increase in the amount of money available to invest, a good political
move before an election.
Commodities
(oil, food and precious metals) also go up, since "hot money" floods into them. Again, this is evidently because investors
EXPECT inflation to drive commodities up, and because lowered interest rates on
other investments prompt investors to look elsewhere. There is also evidence that commodities are going
up because some major market players are colluding
to manipulate the price, a criminal enterprise.
The
Fed does bear some responsibility for the rise in commodity prices, since it
has created an expectation of inflation with QE, and it has kept interest rates
low. But the price rise has not been
from flooding the economy with money. If
dollars were flooding economy, housing and wages (the largest components of the
price level) would have shot up as well.
But they have remained low, and overall price increases have remained within
the Fed's 2% target range. (See chart
above.)
Some
Possibilities That Might Be More Effective at Stimulating the Economy
An
injection of money into the pockets of consumers would actually be good for the
economy, but QE3 won't do it. The Fed
could give production and employment a bigger boost by using its lender-of-last-resort
status in more direct ways than the current version of QE.
It
could make the very-low-interest loans given to banks available to state and
municipal governments, or to students, or to homeowners. It could rip up the $1.7 trillion in
government securities that it already holds, lowering the national debt by that
amount (as
suggested a year ago by Ron Paul). Or
it could buy up
a trillion dollars' worth of securitized student debt and rip those
securities up. These moves might require
some tweaking of the Federal Reserve Act, but Congress has done it before to
serve the banks.
Another
possibility would be the sort of "quantitative easing" first proposed by Ben
Bernanke in 2002, before he was chairman of the Fed--just drop hundred dollar
bills from helicopters. (This is roughly
similar to the Social Credit solution proposed by C. H. Douglas in the
1920s.) As Martin
Hutchinson observed in Money Morning:
With a U.S. population of 310 million, $31 billion per month, dropped from helicopters, would have given every American man, woman and child an extra crisp new $100 bill per month.
Yes, it would produce an extra $31 billion per month on the nominal Federal budget deficit, but the Fed would have printed the new bills, so there would have been no additional strain on the nation's finances.
It would be much better than a new social program, because there would have been no bureaucracy involved, just bill printing and helicopter fuel.
The money would nearly all have been spent, increasing consumption by perhaps $300 billion annually, creating perhaps 3 million jobs, and reducing unemployment by almost 2%.
None
of these moves would drive the economy into hyperinflation. According to the Fed's figures, as of July
2010, the money supply was actually $4 trillion LESS
than it was in 2008. That means that
as of that date, $4 trillion more needed to be pumped into the money supply
just to get the economy back to where it was before the banking crisis hit.
As
the psychological boost from QE3 wears off and the "fiscal cliff" looms, perhaps
Congress and the Fed will consider some of these more direct approaches to relieving
the economy's intractable doldrums.