Was the Fed
Just Nationalized?By Ellen Brown
April 06, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Did Congress just
nationalize the Fed? No. But the door to that result
has been cracked open.
Mainstream politicians have long insisted that
Medicare for all, a universal basic income, student
debt relief and a slew of other much-needed public
programs are off the table because the federal
government cannot afford them. But that was before
Wall Street and the stock market were driven onto
life-support by a virus. Congress has now suddenly
discovered the magic money tree. It took only a few
days for Congress to unanimously pass the
Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security
(CARES) Act, which will be doling
out $2.2 trillion in crisis relief, most of
it going to Corporate America with few strings
attached. Beyond that, the Federal Reserve is making
over $4 trillion available to banks, hedge
funds and other financial entities of all stripes;
it has dropped the fed funds rate (the rate at which
banks borrow from each other) effectively to zero;
and it has made
$1.5 trillion available
to the repo market.
It is
also the Federal Reserve that will be picking up the
tab for this bonanza, at least to start. The US
central bank has opened the sluice gates to
unlimited quantitative easing, buying Treasury
securities and mortgage-backed securities “in the
amounts needed to support smooth market functions.”
Last month, the Fed bought $650 billion worth of
federal securities. At that rate, notes Wall
Street on Parade, it will
own the entire Treasury market
in about 22 months. As Minneapolis Fed President
Neel Kashkari acknowledged on 60 Minutes, “There
is an infinite amount of cash at the Federal Reserve.”
In
theory, quantitative easing is just a temporary
measure, reversible by selling bonds back into the
market when the economy gets back on its feet. But
in practice, we have seen that QE is a one-way
street. When central banks have
tried to reverse it
with “quantitative tightening,” economies have
shrunk and stock markets have plunged. So the Fed is
likely to just keep rolling over the bonds, which is
what normally happens anyway with the federal debt.
The debt is never actually paid off but is just
rolled over from year to year. Only the interest
must be paid, to the tune of
$575 billion in 2019.
The benefit of having the Fed rather than private
bondholders hold the bonds is that
the Fed rebates its profits
to the Treasury after deducting its costs, making
the loans virtually interest-free. Interest-free
loans rolled over indefinitely are in effect free
money. The Fed is “monetizing” the debt.