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"Just how can the Fed credibly promise to be irresponsible...?"
HERE'S A THOUGHT - that tiny handful of investors and analysts warning
how Fed policy risks hyper-inflation are in fact doing the central bank's work.
The Fed wants you to believe hyperinflation is looming. Or at least,
it should want that, if doubling its balance-sheet - purchasing and
lending against investment junk - is going to work the wonders that modern
central-bank theory says it can. And the Fed certainly wants you to believe
it will stop at nothing to avoid deflation ("whatever means necessary" as the
chairman put it back
in 2002).
So anyone touting the hyperinflation
risk in public is playing the shill, a decoy - seemingly unconnected
- proclaiming the miracle powers of Dr.Ben Bernanke's snake oil to CNBC anchors
at every chance.
In fact, they're doing the Fed's work better than the Federal Reserve itself.
Really.
"The major danger with a zero lower bound for the interest rate," said Swedish
policy-wonk Lars
Svensson (also a Princeton colleague of the Fed chief and his credit-bubble
associate Paul Krugman) in a speech earlier this year, "is that inflation
expectations will be too low and even negative, and that the real interest
rate will thus become too high."
With it so far? Slashing interest rates to the very minimum of 0% suggests
inflation has vanished, at least in the central bank's eyes. But that, in turn,
reduces the rate of inflation expected by consumers, investors and business.
Central banks are credible forecasters, you see. At least in central-bank eyes.
So in Svensson's philosophy, the zero-rate solution to falling inflation proves
self-fulfilling as people hoard cash and sit tight in bonds.
"It is thus necessary to...to counteract expectations of falling inflation,
and preferably to create expectations of higher inflation," Svensson went on.
But "as Paul Krugman put it" says the Riksbank's deputy governor, "How will
the central bank 'credibly promise to be irresponsible'...?
Heaven knows the Fed's trying. (So's Krugman,
to no one's surprise.) But while it's embraced credible recklessness, the Fed's
stop short of French kissing it.
Why so coy...?
"We have a very serious recession, we have a 9.4% unemployment rate," said
San Fran Fed governor Janet
Yellen in a speech in California on Tuesday. "If we were not at zero, we
would be lowering the funds rate...We should want to do more."
Just how much further would the Fed go - all the way to hyperinflation perhaps?
Racing to first base, "The vigorous policy actions of the Fed and other central
banks, combined with sizable fiscal stimulus here and abroad, have sent a clear
message that deflation won't be tolerated," Yellen said.
"Based on measures of inflation expectations," she went on, an apparently
reading straight from Svensson, "the public appears confident that the Fed
will adopt policies that will maintain a low, positive rate of inflation. Evidently,
the credibility that the Fed and other central banks have built over the past
few decades in bringing inflation down has spilled over into a belief that
we won't allow inflation to get too low either."
Steady on, cheeky! Second base next, and "A glance at history shows that many
countries with massive structural deficits and without an independent central
bank turned to the printing press to pay off their debts," Yellen continued.
Straight to third then, and "That's a recipe for high inflation and, in some
cases, hyperinflation."
Gulp, almost home! But then, somewhere between third and fourth base, the
Fed's gone shy and rebuttoned its blouse. Because "I don't believe the United
States faces that threat," Yellen said, showing the come-on to be just one
big tease.
"Looking back in history, runaway fiscal deficits have often been accompanied
by high inflation," she explained in Tuesday's speech in the bankrupt state
of California. "But, since World War II, such a relationship has only held
in developing countries. In countries with advanced financial systems and histories
of low inflation, no such connection is found."
Oh man, what a let down! Who's gonna put out hyperinflation if not the Fed...?
"In order to make up for the collapse of credit, we are effectively creating
money," said George
Soros, the legendary if only occasionally accurate hedge funder, at a Washington
forum in March. "If and when credit is restarted, you would then have an incredibly
swollen monetary base, which, if it were leveraged, you would have an explosion
of inflation."
The trouble comes, as Lars Svensson guessed back in January, with that "if
and when". Because it opens the door to the idea that a central bank might
opt instead to withdraw all this new money after the deflation panic has ended.
And that in itself is enough to make creating it useless. Pointing to Japan's
five-year experiment with 'Quantitative
Easing' between March 2001 and March 2006, said Svensson, boosting the
monetary base by some 70% failed to "noticeably affect expectations of inflation
and the future price level.
"For example, the Yen did not depreciate as it should otherwise have done.
Firms and households clearly believed that the expansion of the monetary base
was temporary and not permanent, which subsequently proved to be true. The
monetary base fell back to normal levels when the interest rate was later raised
to above zero."
Sure, the Bank of Japan's trillions did triple Japanese Gold
Prices. But even with gold refusing to drop back against the Dollar right
now, eagle-eyed readers will note that, quite apart from the urgent debate
in Europe, the US authorities are at pains to deny they need an 'exit plan'
any time soon. White House advisor Christina Romer made that much plain in
last week's Economist magazine,
blaming the double-dip depression of 1937 on "an unfortunate, and largely
inadvertent, switch to contractionary fiscal and monetary policy." Yellen
said it again Tuesday.
So Team Bernanke have got the right idea - at least on Planet Svensson - if
not the right level of irresponsibility just yet. Slip a little vodka into
their juice though, and they might start talking up inflation like Alan Greenspan,
Bernanke's predecessor and the Maestro himself, writing last week in the Financial
Times. He tried to spook everyone out of cash and into the stores by
warning of a decade of inflation ahead!
"A pending avalanche of government debt is about to be unloaded on world financial
markets," Sir Alan of Greenspan warned sagely, almost visibly winking from
behind those enormous spectacles. "The need to finance very large fiscal deficits
during the coming years could lead to political pressure on central banks to
print money to buy much of the newly issued debt."
Or given enough sauce to get really loose, the Fed might even get crazy like
Asia-based doomster Dr.Marc Faber. (He's been known to enjoy the odd
cocktail or two.) Stop warning on hyperinflation. Just come out and say
it instead.
"I am 100% sure that the US will go into hyperinflation," as Faber told Bloomberg
in late May, and again on June
29th. "The US central bank has structured and introduced policies without
considering exponential credit growth and its consequences," added the Gloom,
Boom & Doom author in an interview with the Korea
Times on Wednesday.
See what I mean about being a shill? It's like he's on the payroll...
"The United States will not raise interest rates for many years to come because
it needs to pay off its huge debts," he went on, recommending inflation-friendly
assets such as equities and Gold
Bullion. "In turn, too much money in the economy will raise costs of everything,
including healthcare and education, giving rise to hyperinflation."
There, now that's the way to do it! Greenspan and Faber on song, while the
Bernanke Fed tip-toes around stating its aim:
Spark inflation and leave it to burn. Because putting it out worsened
both the Great Depression and Japan's "lost decade" - the one that started
two decades ago and hasn't yet ended. Everyone who's anyone in monetary theory
knows that.
And if they claim otherwise, maybe they're the ones kidding.
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