The crash of 2008 was a global banking
crash triggered by the floating of fraudulent paper into the global credit
markets by the US
investment banking fraternity. Time has proven their fraudulent nature although
the participants at the time possibly kidded themselves into believing they
could get away with what they were selling.
The result has been a huge global contraction of credit which is now
largely over.
The problem is to slowly reinflate
credit both in the US
and elsewhere. Japanese failure to
successfully do so is hanging over everyone’s shoulder. I suggested early on that the best avenue for
the USA
was to rewrite foreclosure laws and provide government guarantees were
appropriate. There is plenty more to say
in terms of details so that such simply does not become a raid on the treasury,
but the real problem is that nothing has been done at all.
In the short term inflationary
pressure can be driven by rising costs in terms of commodities, but these have
already been thoroughly factored in.
That leaves real increases in wage structures and that is really a slow
process that is only now becoming possible.
In short we are positioned for a
steady slow economic improvement pretty free of inflation for some time until
the US
housing market is fully restored.
The simple story is that the US housing
market hugely over financed itself on phony credit and naturally collapsed
itself and its buyers of such credit. This
took a real percentage of the US
economy with it however it is hidden today.
Failure to restore proper credit and to restore State financing will now
prolong the contraction unnecessarily.
Inflation - real or hysteria?
By Ellen Brown
Debate continues to rage between
the inflationists who say the United
States money supply is increasing,
dangerously devaluing the currency, and the deflationists who say we need more
money in the economy to stimulate productivity. The debate is not just an
academic one, since the Federal Reserve's monetary policy turns on it and so
does congressional budget policy.
Inflation fears have been fueled
since 2009, when the Fed began its policy of "quantitative easing"
(effectively "money printing"). The inflationists point to commodity
prices that have shot up. The deflationists, in turn, point to the housing
market, which has collapsed and taken prices down with it. Prices of consumer products
other than food and fuel are also down. Wages have remained stagnant, so higher
food and gas prices mean people have less money to spend on consumer goods.
The bubble in commodities, say
the deflationists, has been triggered by the fear of inflation. Commodities are
considered a safe haven, attracting a flood of "hot money" -
investment money racing from one hot investment to another.
To resolve this debate, we need
the actual money supply figures. Unfortunately, the Fed quit reporting M3, the
largest measure of the money supply, in 2006. Fortunately, figures are still
available for the individual components of M3. Here is a graph that is worth a
thousand words. It comes from ShadowStats.com (Shadow Government Statistics or
SGS) and is reconstructed from the available data on those components. The red
line is the M3 money supply reported by the Fed until 2006. The blue line is M3
after 2006.
The chart shows that the
overall US
money supply is shrinking, despite the Fed's determination to inflate it with
quantitative easing. Like Japan ,
which has been doing quantitative easing (QE) for a decade, the US is still
fighting deflation.
Here is another telling chart -
the M1 Money Multiplier from the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis :
Barry Ritholtz comments,
"All that heavy breathing about the flood of liquidity that was going to
pour into the system. Hyper-inflation! Except not so much, apparently."
He quotes David Rosenberg:
"Fully 100% of both QEs by the Fed merely was new money printing that
ended up sitting idly on commercial bank balance sheets. Money velocity and
money multiplier are stagnant at best." If QE1 and QE2 are sitting in
bank reserve accounts, they're not driving up the price of gold, silver, oil
and food; and they're not being multiplied into loans, which are still
contracting. The part of M3 that collapsed in 2008 was the "shadow
banking system", including money market funds and repos. This is the
non-bank system in which large institutional investors that have substantially
more to deposit than $250,000 (the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
insurance limit) park their money overnight.
Economist Gary Gorton explains:
[T]he financial crisis ... [was] due to a banking panic in which
institutional investors and firms refused to renew sale and repurchase
agreements (repo) - short-term, collateralized, agreements that the Fed rightly
used to count as money. Collateral for repo was, to a large extent, securitized
bonds. Firms were forced to sell assets as a result of the banking panic, reducing
bond prices and creating losses. There is nothing mysterious or irrational
about the panic. There were genuine fears about the locations of subprime risk
concentrations among counterparties. This banking system (the
"shadow" or "parallel" banking system) - repo based on
securitization - is a genuine banking system, as large as the traditional,
regulated banking system. It is of critical importance to the economy because
it is the funding basis for the traditional banking system. Without it, traditional
banks will not lend, and credit, which is essential for job creation, will not
be created. [Emphasis added.]
Before the banking crisis, the shadow banking system composed about
half the money supply, and it still hasn't been restored. Without the shadow
banking system to fund bank loans, banks will not lend; and without credit,
there is insufficient money to fund businesses, buy products, or pay salaries
or taxes. Neither raising taxes nor slashing services will fix the problem. It
needs to be addressed at its source, which means getting more credit (or debt)
flowing in the local economy.
When private debt falls off,
public debt must increase to fill the void. Public debt is not the same as
household debt, which debtors must pay off or face bankruptcy. The US federal debt
has not been paid off since 1835. Indeed, it has grown continuously since then,
and the economy has grown and flourished along with it.
As explained in an earlier
article, the public debt is the people's money. The government pays for goods
and services by writing a check on the national bank account. Whether this
payment is called a "bond" or a "dollar", it is simply a
debit against the credit of the nation. As Thomas Edison said in the 1920s:
If our nation can issue a dollar bond, it can issue a dollar bill. The
element that makes the bond good, makes the bill good, also. The difference
between the bond and the bill is the bond lets money brokers collect twice the
amount of the bond and an additional 20%, whereas the currency pays nobody but
those who contribute directly in some useful way.
... It is absurd to say our country can issue $30 million in bonds and
not $30 million in currency. Both are promises to pay, but one promise fattens
the usurers and the other helps the people.
That is true, but congress no
longer seems to have the option of issuing dollars, a privilege it has
delegated to the Federal Reserve. Congress can, however, issue debt, which as Edison says amounts to the same thing. A bond can be
cashed in quickly at face value. A bond is money, just as a dollar is.
An accumulating public debt owed
to the International Monetary Fund or to foreign banks is to be avoided, but
compounding interest charges can be eliminated by financing state and federal
deficits through state- and federally owned banks. Since the government would
own the bank, the debt would effectively be interest-free. More important, it
would be free of the demands of private creditors, including austerity measures
and privatization of public assets.
Far from inflation being the
problem, the money supply has shrunk and we are in a deflationary bind. The
money supply needs to be pumped back up to generate jobs and productivity; and
in the system we have today, that is done by issuing bonds, or debt.
Ellen Brown is an attorney and president of the Public Banking
Institute, PublicBankingInstitute.org. In Web of Debt, her latest of 11 books,
she shows how a private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the
people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites are
webofdebt.com and ellenbrown.com.
(Copyright 2011 Ellen Brown)
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