End of QE? – I don’t buy it.
by DETLEV SCHLICHTER
A new meme is spreading in financial markets: The Fed is about to turn
off the monetary spigot. US Printmaster General Ben Bernanke announced that he
might start reducing the monthly debt monetization program, called
‘quantitative easing’ (QE), as early as the autumn of 2013, and maybe stop it
entirely by the middle of next year. He reassured markets that the Fed would
keep the key policy rate (the Fed Funds rate) at near zero all the way into
2015. Still, the end of QE is seen as the beginning of the end of super-easy
policy and potentially the first towards normalization, as if anybody still had
any idea of what ‘normal’ was.
Fearing that the flow of nourishing
mother milk from the Fed could dry up, a resolutely unweaned Wall Street threw
a hissy fit and the dummy out of the pram.
So far, so good. There is only one
problem: it won’t happen.
Now I am the first to declare that the
Fed SHOULD abolish QE, and not only in the autumn of this year or the summer of
next, but right now. Pronto. Why? –Because a policy of QE and zero interest
rates is complete madness. It distorts markets, sabotages the liquidation of
imbalances, prohibits the correct pricing of risk, and encourages renewed debt
accumulation. It numbs the market’s healing powers – by enabling more ‘pretend
and extend’ in the financial industry – and it adds new imbalances to the old
ones that it also helps to maintain.
This policy may have prevented – for now
– debt deflation but maybe debt deflation is what is needed.
QE is nothing but heavy-handed market
intervention. It is destructive. It doesn’t solve the underlying problems. It
creates new ones.
Larry Summer’s getaway car
However, none of these objections even
register at the Fed. The Fed has a completely different perspective: This
policy was a roaring success and as it has worked so well it can now be faded
out. Soon there will be no need for it. Larry Summer’s dreadful phrase captures
that thinking probably best: The economy will soon have achieved ‘escape
velocity’.
Most analogies are somewhat poor but
this one is particularly inept. Ironically, though, the reference to mechanics
captures beautifully the logic of Keynesians and other interventionists: the
economy is like a physical object moving through space and is occasionally in
need of a little push to get moving again at an appropriate speed. Policy
provides the push.
Bernanke doesn’t use these terms but his
thinking is similar. He explained QE to the American public in 2010 by announcing that his job was to occasionally manipulate interest rates
and asset prices to encourage lending, borrowing, spending, shopping, and other
healthy economic activities, and that once his machinations had stimulated
enough of those activities, the economy would again enter a virtuous cycle (his
words) of self-sustained growth. Escape velocity has been restored.
I think this is nonsense – however
appealing it may sound to many laypersons. The economy is not an object that
needs a push, or a machine that needs to be jump-started, or a lazy mule that
needs a gentle slap on its behind to get going again (of course, you should
never hurt an animal!). The economy is a complex process of coordination, an
elaborate tool that allows an extensive and diverse group of actors with
different and frequently conflicting goals and interests to co-operate with one
another peacefully toward the best possible realization of their own material
aims. A crisis is a failure of that coordination process. It is a cluster of
errors. The only explanation for the occurrence of such a cluster of errors is
a systematic distortion of the market’s coordinating properties, such as occurs
when monetary expansion distorts interest rates and other relative prices, and
leads to imbalances that unhinge the economy.
The economy went into recession because
of massive financial deformations. Easy money had led to excessive
indebtedness, a housing bubble and dangerous levels of leverage. The problems
were such distortions, not lack of momentum. The real question is not whether
the GDP statistics exhibit the right velocity but if the underlying
dislocations – which, to the chagrin of the econometricians, cannot be easily
ascertained from the macro-data – have now dissolved.
No Escape
The Fed believes it has healed an
economy that was sick from easy money with more easy money. The patient is
feeling better and can soon be released from intensive care. In my view, the
patient is still sick and now suffers from a dangerous addiction to boot. The
‘feeling-better’ bit maybe, just maybe, a lingering drug high from Dr.
Bernanke’s generous medication. Withdrawal symptoms may surface soon. If they
do, Dr. Bernanke will simply open the medicine cupboard again. Don’t forget,
only a few weeks ago the man appeared on TV and tried to talk up the Russell
3000 stock index.
I do not doubt that, if measured by
overall GDP, the US economy is presently doing better. I would be foolish to
take on the Fed on this point. The Fed has a staff of 200-plus economists, most
of them, I assume, from America’s finest universities, which doesn’t mean they
are good economists but at any rate probably good statisticians. If they say
there are signs of life in the economy, that’s good enough for me.
Where I disagree is on the narrative.
The deformations are largely still there. How can they not, given the enormous
policy effort to suppress the very market forces that would – in a free market
– have exposed and liquidated these deformations? They are still visible, among
other indicators, in high degrees of indebtedness. And they matter. That is why
I am mistrustful of the Fed’s projections. Their theories compel them to
believe in virtuous cycles and ‘escape velocity’ and to disregard imbalances
and distortions. Any sustained removal of super-easy money will allow these deformations
to resurface and immediately cloud the near term cyclical outlook. According to
my worldview, this should be allowed to happen as it is part of the essential
healing process. But it runs counter to the Fed’s worldview and the Fed’s view
of its own mission.
The one institution that lacks ‘escape
velocity’ is the Fed. It will remain hostage to the financial monsters it
created and the dangerous misconception of its own grandeur.
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