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On Wednesday, March 18, another handsome gift was delivered by the Fed to
the bond bulls. It was the announcement that the Open Market Committee has
made a unanimous decision for the central bank to buy $300 billion in long-term
Treasury bonds and notes over the next six-month period. The yield on the 30-year
Treasury bond immediately fell from 3.8% to 3.5%, while the yield on the benchmark
10-year Treasury note fell more: from 3% to 2.53%, increasing the price of
the note by 42/32 from 9726/32 to 10128/32, the biggest one-day rise in years.
The gift of risk-free profits is granted to the bond bulls through courtesy
of the Fed, in telling them in advance about its intention of buying long-dated
government debt.
Note that in the past Fed purchases of long-term Treasurys have been exceedingly
rare. The last time the Fed resorted to it was in 1959. But half-a-century
ago it was not meant to be a permanent fixture of monetary policy. This time
is different. Wednesday's announcement is the opening salvo in a brand new
game of serial interest-rate cuts in the high-end of the yield-curve now that
the Fed has chewed up the low end. It has used up all its ammunition in the
short-term T-bill market where the rate is only microscopically greater than
zero, rendering the Fed helpless and impotent. A new bag of tricks is coming
into play: the monetization of long-term government debt. The market tells
it all. The dollar index fell 3%, the biggest drop in more than two decades.
Actually, as I have suggested in several earlier articles, 'serial cutting of
interest rates' is a misnomer. The correct phrase is 'serial halving of
interest rates'. The nuance is important. Serial cutting comes to an end when
you have cut it to the bare bones: all the way back to zero. Not so serial
halving that can be fine-tuned like water-torture. It can continue indefinitely,
while each halving causes the same devastation in the economic landscape as
it doubles the liquidation value of total debt.
Central banks in Japan and the United Kingdom have announced similar monetary
policies. The Bank of Japan has said that it will increase its volume of bond
purchases by 30%. According to Mr. Shiraskawa, the governor of the bank, "bond
purchases are not intended to finance the Japanese government's spending. That
would be too dangerous." Who is the governor kidding? As long as the Japanese
government spends more than its revenue from taxes, every act of buying a government
bond is an act of financing the government. Even in Switzerland, the paragon
of monetary and fiscal rectitude, where the Swiss National Bank is hard put
to find a government bond it can buy, they have to do something to enter the
mad race to find out which country can increase the money supply at the fastest
rate. The Swiss are resourceful: since they cannot increase the money supply
through purchases of bonds, they will increase it through sales of Swiss francs.
All masks are off. The Swiss will not let others outbid them in the game of
bidding down the value of national currencies around the globe. This
is competitive currency debasement at its most vicious. It is a cover-up for
the underlying trade war.
* * *
Why should we worry about a monetary policy that depends on risk-free profits
offered to speculators betting on higher bond values? Because it reflects the
utter corruption of the profit-and-loss system on which capitalist production
is based. It makes the businessman appear foolish who takes risks in the producing
sector while trying to satisfy the needs of the consumers - when risk-free
profits are available in the financial sector. As a matter of fact, the risk-free
profits of the bond bulls do not come out of nowhere. They come right out of
the capital accounts of the producers. These gains are the flipside of the
capital losses suffered by the real risk-takers, the sitting ducks in this
shoot-out.
I have been in a minority of one in my quest to inform the public about the single cause
of the present economic disaster. In fact I have been predicting it for the
past eight years. The single cause is the Fed's deliberate policy to drive
down interest rates through serial halving. This policy is animated by the
economic theories of John Maynard Keynes, according to which interest ought
to be abolished so that the stone can be turned into bread and water into wine.
The miracle is worked by a central bank well-equipped with printing presses
and a factory to produce green cheese in unlimited quantities, to shove it
down the throats of savers who are trying to provide for their twilight years,
or for the education of their offspring, or just for a rainy day.
Continuing or even accelerating that disastrous monetary policy of unlimited
green cheese production will not alleviate the crisis. It will make it worse.
Much worse.
Look at it this way. The present contraction of the world economy is not due
to a glut in global savings for which businessmen can find no good use, and
which consequently has to be mopped up through expanding the balance sheet
of the central banks all over the world, as "explained" by Paul Krugman and
his friend, mentor, and former boss Ben Bernanke. The contraction is due to
the lethargy of businessmen who see their past investments turn sour one after
another at each interest-rate cut. Businessmen will not make new investments,
no matter how badly central bankers want to force-feed them at the trough of
newly created money, as long as the mad driving-down of interest rates continues. Would
you buy a car today if you were told that its price will be cut tomorrow? Of
course you wouldn't. Well, it is the same with businessmen. They would not
make an investment today if they were told that tomorrow they could finance
it at a cheaper rate and, the day after tomorrow at a rate cheaper still.
It is as simple as that.
Now the Fed is saying that it has got a new toy-grenade to try on the economy:
the T-bond purchase plan. Businessmen conclude that this is time to go into
hibernation-mode. They just want to survive with their remaining capital intact
until this madness runs its full course. They will come back and start investing
again in saner times, when interest rates are stabilized at their natural level.
Those who listen to the siren song from the Fed and other central banks, and
invest at today's teaser-rate will get massacred at the next halving, when
even lower teaser rates will be offered.
* * *
What we are witnessing is the closing of Keynes' system. This system is based
on the worst fallacy ever embraced by pretenders and impostors in science:
the fallacy, inspired by Karl Marx, of over-saving and under-consumption. It
was under this banner that the Fed introduced its illegal policy of open market
purchases of government bonds that would be legalized retroactively later.
But with this coup d'etat the Fed shot itself in the foot. It has forgotten
to take the reaction of bond speculators into account. Of course, speculators
would not sit idly by when they are told that, as a matter of high monetary
policy, the Fed will have to make periodic trips to the bond market to purchase
its quota of government bonds. Of course speculators would want to pre-empt
the Fed. Of course they wanted to buy first so that they could dump their bonds
on the Fed at a profit later. Of course bond speculators would lie in wait
for the Fed and ambush it at the moment it was ready to pick up its next quota
of government bonds in the open market.
The present monetary system promises risk-free profits to bond speculators.
This guarantees that the interest rate structure will keep falling indefinitely.
Astute businessmen who understand the interaction between finance and production
will stay on the sidelines. They will not join the mad tea party of teaser
rates whether offered in the subprime mortgage market or whether offered on
loans to finance future production. Teaser rates are there to tempt individuals
and businesses to commit hara-kiri.
This raises the question just how sound a monetary system is that wants to
create money, lots of it, but can only do it through bribes and blackmails.
This also raises the question how it is possible to treat Keynes' system with
respect.
* * *
Mine is a cry in the wilderness. You had thought that the political system
was rotten as it was a system of bribes, blackmails, and vote-buying facilitated
by irredeemable currency. You had thought that the judiciary was rotten as
no complaint about the fraud involved in the check-kiting conspiracy between
the Treasury and the Fed would ever be heard in a court. You had thought that
victims of the Ponzi-scheme whereby the government would sell bonds, which
it had neither the means nor the intention to pay off, could have their day
in court.
But look: the educational system, our only hope for the future, is equally
rotten. Its faculties of criticism are so badly disabled that one can no longer
hope for an open discussion of burning issues. Keynesians, in concert with
their Friedmanite comrades, control everything: monetary policy, fiscal policy,
the judiciary, appointments and the research agenda at universities and other
think-tanks, the publication programs in the editorial offices of scholarly
journals. A Cassandra such as myself would never get a hearing before the disaster
struck.
Now, as it turns out, I won't get a hearing even after disaster hasstruck.
Keynesians and their Friedmanite cronies want to control the rescue effort
and they certainly do not want to see their past errors and misdeeds, that
lie at the root of the problem, exposed to public scrutiny.
The economic and financial crisis that is plaguing the world is extremely
serious. Damage to the social fabric could be even greater than that during
the Great Depression. But a reasoned, high-level discussion on the genesis
of the crisis is ruled out. You have to buy the official crap on the global
savings glut. You are not allowed to challenge the official dogma of under-consumption
even after the most wasteful episode of over-consumption in history, running
up private and public debt to stratospheric heights.
The present crisis is about past, present, and future destruction of capital
due to the Keynesians' deliberate policy of driving down interest rates. Education
of public opinion about these matters is sorely needed. Keynesians have been
successful in convincing the public that their monetary policy to drive down
interest rates is a blessing. But the truth is that falling interest rates
erode capital, because the return from earlier investments proves insufficient
to amortize debt contracted at higher rates. At the end of the capital erosion
road comes the realization that production and finance stands bereft of any
capital. The result is a credit collapse that can no longer be covered up with
the usual Keynesian nostrums
My conclusion is that the latest move of the Fed is going to entrench deflation
through entrenching the trend of falling interest rates. The mechanism works
through bond speculation, making risk-free capital gains available to speculators,
who will then bid up bond prices unopposed to any high level.
Other observers may violently disagree with this view. For example Clive Maund
had this to say: "So Treasuries spiked yesterday [on March 18], but the large
gains were almost entirely erased by the drop in the dollar... So in an environment
where the Fed and the Treasury are going to have to create dollars, i.e., to
dilute the currency, to prop up financial instruments... who but a complete
imbecile is going to buy them?... The Treasury market will collapse in due
course anyway despite, and perhaps even because of, the Fed's desperate and
reckless attempts to backstop it."
Not so fast, please. Ultimately the market for Treasury bonds will collapse
in a hyper-inflationary scenario, but this may be years down the road. In the
meantime we have to face the music that keeps the game of musical chairs going:
the serial halving of interest rates to enable bond speculators to earn risk-free
profits. This stokes the fires of deflation, not the fires of inflation. Obituaries
of the dollar are written prematurely. The death throes of the Dollar Almighty,
as the U.S. currency was known not so long ago, will continue for quite a while
yet and, unfortunately, will cause a lot more damage to the world economy,
and a lot more economic pain to ordinary people.
It is an inane and malicious Keynesian propaganda that falling interest rates
are good for the economy, for you, for me, for business. On the contrary, they
are lethal. Only low and stable interest rates can help us to get out
of the present mess - an unachievable goal under the regime of irredeemable
currency.
Reference:
By the same author: That Accursed Propensity To Save,
March 9, 2009,
www.professorfekete.com.
Calendar of events:
Szombathely, Martineum Academy, Hungary, March 27-29, 2009
Encore Session of Gold Standard University Live.
Topics: When Will the Gold Standard Be Released from Quarantine?
The Continuing Vaporization of the Derivatives Tower
Labor and Great Depression II
Silver in Backwardation: What Does It All Mean?
Further details: GSUL@t-online.hu
This conference is the swan song of GSUL which has been succeeded by the
Gold Standard Institute. For information about the latter contact: philipbarton@goldstandardinstitute.com
Instituto Juan de Mariana, Madrid, Spain, June 18, 2009
Gold & Silver Meeting Madrid 2009. This one-day conference will
be followed by a three-day seminar. For more information, contact: gcalzada@juandemariana.org
San Francisco School of Economics, July 15-August 31, 2009
Money and Banking, a ten-week course based on the work of Professor
Fekete who will be delivering 18 of the 20 lectures. Enrolment is limited;
first come, first served.
TheSyllabus for this course can be seen on the website: www.professorfekete.com as
well as that of the school: www.sfschoolofeconomics.com
National University of Australia, Canberra, November, 2009
Peace and Progress through Prosperity: Gold Standard in the 21st Century
This is the first conference organized by the newly formed Gold Standard Institute.
For information please e-mail: feketeaustralia@gmail.com
Professorfekete on DVD: Professionally produced DVD recording
of the address before the Economic Club of San Francisco on November 4, 2008,
entitled The Revisionist History of the Great Depression: Can It Happen
Again? plus an interview with Professor Fekete, is available from www.Amazon.com and
from the Club www.economicclubsf.com at
$14.95 each.
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