If you read this little history lesson slowly, it should be
abundantly clear that it is impossible to stimulate the economy by
merely providing capital to the banks. It must be done by
underwriting the people and the infrastructure with cash and loans.
Obama's failure in this regard has generated an anemic recovery.
What is saving the day, happens to be the huge capital infusion
supporting the oil industry which is also single handedly making
north America energy independent. It could all have been far sooner
and millions could already be working.
In the meantime, the student loan system has been gamed to provide
hugely profitable loans that I am sure are simply dumped back onto
government when they fail.
Elizabeth Warren's
QE for Students: Populist Demagoguery or Economic Breakthrough?
17 June 2013 10:10
By Ellen Brown,
On July 1, interest
rates will double for millions of students – from 3.4% to 6.8% –
unless Congress acts; and the legislative fixes on the table are
largely just compromises. Only one proposal promises real relief –
Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s “Bank on Students Loan Fairness Act.”
This bill has been dismissed out of hand as “shameless populist
demagoguery” and “a cheap political gimmick,” but is it? Or
could Warren’s outside-the-box bill represent the sort of
game-changing thinking sorely needed to turn the economy around?
Warren and her
co-sponsor John Tierney propose that students be allowed to borrow
directly from the government at the same rate that banks get from the
Federal Reserve — 0.75 percent. They argue:
Some people say that
we can’t afford low interest rates for students. But the federal
government offers far lower rates on loans every single day — they
just don’t do it for everyone. Right now, a bank can get a loan
through the Federal Reserve discount window at a rate of less than
one percent. The same big banks that destroyed millions of jobs and
broke our economy can borrow at about 0.75 percent, while our
students will be paying nine times as much as of July 1.
This is not fair. And
it’s not necessary, either. The federal government makes 36 cents
on every dollar it lends to students. Just last week, the
Congressional Budget Office announced that the government will make
$51 billion on the student loans it issued this year — more than
the annual profit of any Fortune 500 company, and about five times
Google’s yearly earnings. We should not be profiting from students
who are drowning in debt while we are giving great deals to big
banks.
The archly critical
Brookings Institute says the bill “confuses market interest rates
on long-term loans (such as the 10-year Treasury rate) with the
Federal Reserve’s Discount Window (used to make short-term loans to
banks), and does not reflect the administrative costs and default
risk that increase the costs of the federal student loan program.”
Those criticisms would
be valid if the provider of funds were either a private bank or the
American taxpayer; but in this case, it is the U.S. Federal Reserve.
Warren and Tierney assert, “For one year, the Federal Reserve
would make funds available to the Department of Education to make
these loans to our students.” For the Fed, completely different
banking rules apply. As “lender of last resort,” it can
expand its balance sheet by buying all the assets it likes. The
Fed bought over $1 trillion in “toxic” mortgage-backed securities
in QE 1, and reportedly turned a profit on them. It could just
as easily buy $1 trillion in student debt and refinance it at 0.75%.
Which Is a Better
Investment, Banks or Students?
Students are
considered risky investments because they don’t own valuable assets
against which the debt can be collected. But this argument overlooks
the fact that these young trainees are assets themselves. They
represent an investment in “human capital” that can pay for
itself many times over, if properly supported and developed. This
was demonstrated in the 1940s with the G.I. Bill, which provided free
technical training and educational support for nearly 16 million
returning servicemen, along with government-subsidized loans and
unemployment benefits. The outlay not only paid for itself but
returned a substantial profit to the government and significant
stimulus to the economy. It made higher education accessible to all
and created a nation of homeowners, new technology, new products, and
new companies, with the Veterans Administration guaranteeing an
estimated 53,000 business loans. Economists have determined that for
every 1944 dollar invested, the country received approximately
$7 in return, through increased economic productivity, consumer
spending, and tax revenues.
Similarly in the 1930s
and 1940s, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation funded the New
Deal and World War II and wound up turning a profit, without
drawing on taxpayer funds. It’s an initial capitalization was only
$500 million; yet the RFC eventually lent out $50 billion – the
equivalent of about $500 billion today. It raised money by issuing
debentures, a form of bond. It got all of this money back, made a
profit for the government, and left a legacy of roads, bridges, dams,
post offices, universities, electrical power, mortgages, farms, and
much more that the country did not have before.
In 1944, President
Franklin Roosevelt proposed an Economic Bill of Rights, in which
higher education would be provided by the government for free; and in
the progressive 1960s, tuition actually was free or nearly free at
state universities. Some countries provide nearly-free higher
education today. In Norway, Denmark, France and Sweden, the cost
of college is less than 3% of median income, as compared to 51%
in the U.S.
Other countries make
loans available to their students interest-free. For more than twenty
years, the Australian government has successfully
funded students by giving out what are in effect interest-free
loans. They are “contingent loans,” which are repaid only if and
when the borrower’s income reaches a certain level. New
Zealand also offers 0 percent interest loans to New Zealand
students, with repayment to be made from their incomes after they
graduate.
Banks Are Good Credit
Risks Only Because They Are Backed by the Government
In a National Review
article titled “Warren’s Student-loan Demagoguery,” Ian Tuttle
argues that the discount window should not be available to students
because the Fed defines that resource as “an instrument of monetary
policy that allows eligible institutions to borrow money, usually on
a short-term basis, to meet temporary shortages of liquidity caused
by internal or external disruptions,” and because the discount
window is “an emergency measure used to prevent runs on banks.”
It may be true that
the Fed’s discount window is open only to banks, but the Federal
Reserve Pact was passed by Congress and can be modified by Congress.
The reasoning behind the policy needs to be re-examined.
The question is, why
do banks routinely have “shortages of liquidity”? What
does that mean? It means they have lent out depositor funds
that don’t properly belong to them, gambling that they will be able
to replace the money before the depositors demand it back. The banks
have a binding commitment to return customer money “on demand.”
They can make good on that commitment because, and only because, the
Fed and the FDIC back them up in a massive shell game, in which they
borrow from each other or the Fed overnight – just long enough
to make their books appear to balance – and then give the money
back the next day. Banks are good credit risks only because they have
the backstop of the Fed and the government behind them. Without those
guarantees, we would be back to the cycle of endless bank runs of the
19th and early 20th centuries.
“Our students are
just as important to our recovery,” says Warren, “as our banks.”
What if students, too, were backed by the government’s guarantee?
What if, as in Australia and New Zealand, students were not required
to repay the investment in human capital represented by their
educations until the economy provided them with jobs? What if the
government made it a policy to provide them with jobs? This too has
been done before, quite successfully. It was part of Roosevelt’s
New Deal. As detailed by Prof. Randall Wray, citing N.
Taylor’s The Enduring Legacy of the WPA:
The New Deal jobs
programs employed 13 million people; the WPA was the biggest program,
employing 8.5 million, lasting 8 years and spending about $10.5
billion. It took a broken country and in many important respects
helped to not only revive it, but to bring it into the 20th century.
The WPA built 650,000 miles of roads, 78,000 bridges, 125,000
civilian and military buildings, 700 miles of airport runways; it fed
900 million hot lunches to kids, operated 1500 nursery schools, gave
concerts before audiences of 150 million, and created 475,000 works
of art. It transformed and modernized America.
In the 1930s, the
government was in a worse financial position to achieve all this than
it is now; but the commitment and the will were there, and the means
were found. In World War II, the means were found again. The
government always seems to be able to find the means to fund a war.
We can just as easily find the means to fund our economic recovery.
And if the funding comes from the Federal Reserve, the government
need not be propelled into a mounting debt owed at mounting interest.
The funds can be provided interest-free; and because they represent
an investment in productive capital, the debt itself can be repaid
with the fruits of the investment – the jobs that create the
salaries that generate taxes and consumer demand.
The default rate on
student loans is close to 10% today because there are no jobs
available to repay the loans, and because the interest rate is so
high that the debt is doubled or tripled over the life of the loan.
Give students loans and jobs, and the default problem will cure
itself.
Investing in our young
people has worked before and can work again; and if Congress orders
the Fed to fund this investment in our collective futures by
“quantitative easing,” it need cost the taxpayers nothing at
all. The Japanese have finally seen the light and are using
their QE tool as economic stimulus rather than just to keep their
banks afloat, and we need to do the same.
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