Quantitative
easing, the program of asset buying initiated by the US Federal Reserve
Bank in 2008, represents the most profound monetary experiment in the
history of the world. Between fall of 2008 and fall of 2014, three successive
rounds of QE quadrupled the monetary base of the world's most-used
and dominant currency, from less than $1 trillion to more than $4 trillion.
The Fed literally created new money, bought Treasury debt and mortgage-backed
debt (of dubious character) from commercial banks, and credited them with new
reserves.
It
was a great trick. If QE can be done without adverse effects or with few
adverse effects, it represents nothing short of monetary alchemy (h/t Nomi
Prins). Everything we thought we knew about the Fed as backstop
lender of last resort to commercial banks, as
hallway monitor of inflation and unemployment, is out the window.
If
QE works, then every government on earth must take notice of the
opportunity to effectively recapitalize their own banks and industries
free of charge. QE turns central banks into kings of capital markets,
into active participants in the economy. As one twitterati put it, expansionary
QE created the biggest untold American story of the last twenty years: the
Fed can now inflate and deflate assets, devalue savings,
influence wages and productivity, encourage corporate malfeasance, and
engineer balance sheets—all the while creating economic winners and
losers.
What
politician or central banker could resist?
Recall
how defenders of QE not only argued it was necessary, but beneficial. Paul Krugman was
among the worst offenders, insisting that low interest rates would mitigate any
harms from such rapid monetary expansion. These defenders dismissed, and
continue to dismiss, what is now obvious: since 2008 the US economy has
experienced significant asset inflation in equity markets and certain housing
markets, plus a creeping but steady rise in many consumer
prices.
This
is no surprise. Did it never occur to QE cheerleaders that
1% money market yields might chase money into the stock market? Or that 2%
interest rates might not encourage US businesses, households, and individuals
to get solvent?
But
monetary stimulus, like fiscal stimulus, is a heady drug for politicians
and their central bank enablers. Once you accept consumption rather than
production as the basis for a healthy economy, creating new money starts to
sound like a good idea. And if creating money is a good idea, why not
create a lot of it—especially in the midst of an economic
crisis?
In
2008 Ben Bernanke was at least honest about the radical nature of what the Fed
had embarked upon. He used the term "extraordinary monetary policy"
for the unprecedented expansionary QE program, a program he insisted
was made necessary by a potentially catastrophic global financial crisis.
But
there were dissenters. David Stockman, for one, strongly disputes whether Main
Street needed to save Wall Street. Chapter 26 of The Great Deformation lays
out Stockman's case against more debt and credit in an
already overleveraged corporate landscape, not to mention the moral
hazard of bailing out investment banks by creating money. And of
course virtually all Austrian economists, plus plenty of non-Austrians, loudly opposed QE
from the start: new bank reserves don't magically create new goods and
services in the economy. Low interest rates discourage capital formation and encourage
malinvestment. More debt is not the answer for too much debt. And why
should banks, flush with QE reserves, lend at all in a shaky economy when
(since 2008) the Fed pays them interest on those excess reserves?
So
here's a modest proposal for the Federal Reserve officials, and a
challenge to economists who reject Austrian views on QE and
business cycles in general:
Return the Fed's balance
sheet to its pre-2008 level, by selling assets and/or letting assets mature. Do
this over an identical six year period that mirrors the timeline
for QE 1, 2, and 3. Do so at a rate and volume similar to
which purchases were made during that period. For transparency, and to
calm markets, announce this plan ahead of time.
In
other words, return the country to "ordinary" monetary policy. After
all, the crisis is over and the economy is healthy, right? If Austrians are
wrong, if in fact QE saved the country and wasn't merely an
artificial process of juicing the economy and monetizing debt, it can and
must be fully unwound.
In
fact the St. Louis Fed president James Bullard nearly promised as much back
in those quaint days of 2010:
The (FOMC) has often stated its intention to return the Fed
balance sheet to normal, pre-crisis levels over time. Once that occurs, the
Treasury will be left with just as much debt held by the public as before the
Fed took any of these actions.
So
how about it, Mr. Powell? A real economy operates without ultra-low interest
rates and activist central bank stimulus. You've wavered lately;
suggesting even the painfully slow process of QE tapering may be halted.
Don't make Mr. Bullard a liar, or at least a bad prognosticator. And don't make
Mr. Bernanke your permanent silent partner when it comes to Fed governance. Do
what must be done, take the patient off its feeding tube, and make history as
the first modern Fed Chair who allowed the US economy to rebuild itself on
real capital instead of debt.
Shrink the Fed's balance
sheet and we can talk about whether QE "worked." Until then, we
can't know if economic growth is real or artificial.
Jeff
Deist is president of the Mises Institute. He previously worked
as chief of staff to Congressman Ron Paul, and as an attorney for private
equity clients. Contact: email; twitter.