Time for the Nuclear Option: Raining Money on Main
Street
By Ellen Brown
September 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Predictions are that we will soon be seeing the “nuclear option” —
central bank-created money injected directly into the real economy.
All other options having failed, governments will be reduced to
issuing money outright to cover budget deficits. So warns a
September 18 article on ZeroHedge titled “It Begins: Australia’s
Largest Investment Bank Just Said ‘Helicopter Money’ Is 12-18 Months
Away.”Money reformers will say it’s about
time. Virtually all money today is
created as bank debt, but people can no longer take on more
debt. The money supply has shrunk along with people’s ability to
borrow new money into existence. Quantitative easing (QE) attempts
to re-inflate the money supply by giving money to banks to create
more debt, but that policy has failed. It’s time to try dropping
some debt-free money on Main Street.
The Zerohedge prediction is based on a release
from Macqurie, Australia’s largest investment bank. It notes that
GDP is contracting, deflationary pressures are accelerating, public
and private sectors are not driving the velocity of money higher,
and central bank injections of liquidity are losing their
effectiveness. Current policies are not working. As a result:
There are several policies that could be and
probably would be considered over the next 12-18 months. If
private sector lacks confidence and visibility to raise velocity
of money, then (arguably) public sector could. In other words,
instead of acting via bond markets and banking sector, why
shouldn’t public sector bypass markets altogether and inject
stimulus directly into the ‘blood stream’? Whilst it might
or might not be called QE, it would have a much stronger impact
and unlike the last seven years, the recovery
could actually mimic a conventional business cycle and investors
would soon start discussing multiplier effects and positioning
in areas of greatest investment.
Willem Buiter, chief global economist at
Citigroup, is also
recommending “helicopter money drops” to avoid an imminent
global recession, stating:
A global recession starting in 2016 led by
China is now our Global Economics team’s main scenario.
Uncertainty remains, but the likelihood of a timely and
effective policy response seems to be diminishing. . . .
Helicopter money drops in China, the euro
area, the UK, and the U.S. and debt restructuring . . . can
mitigate and, if implemented immediately, prevent a recession
during the next two years without raising the risk of a deeper
and longer recession later.
Corbyn’s PQE
In the UK, something akin to a helicopter money
drop was just put on the table by Jeremy Corbyn, the newly-elected
Labor leader. He proposes to give the Bank of England a new mandate
to upgrade the economy to invest in new large scale housing, energy,
transport and digital projects. He calls it “quantitative easing for
people instead of banks” (PQE). The investments would be made
through a National Investment Bank set up to invest in new
infrastructure and in the hi-tech innovative industries of the
future.
Australian blogger Prof. Bill Mitchell agrees
that PQE is economically sound. But he says it should not be called
“quantitative easing.” QE is just an asset swap – cash for federal
securities or mortgage-backed securities on bank balance sheets.
What Corbyn is proposing is actually Overt Money Financing (OMF) –
injecting money directly into the economy.
Mitchell acknowledges that OMF is a taboo concept
in mainstream economics. Allegedly, this is because it would lead to
hyperinflation. But the real reasons, he says, are that:
- It cuts out the private sector bond traders
from their dose of corporate welfare which unlike other forms of
welfare like sickness and unemployment benefits etc. has made
the recipients rich in the extreme. . . .
- It takes away the ‘debt monkey’ that is used
to clobber governments that seek to run larger fiscal deficits.
OMF as a
Solution to the EU Crisis
Mitchell observes that OMF has actually been put
on the table by the European Parliament. According to
a Draft Report by the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs
on the European Central Bank Annual report for 2012, the European
Parliament:
- Considers that the monetary policy tools that
the ECB has used since the beginning of the crisis, while
providing a welcome relief in distressed financial markets, have
revealed their limits as regards stimulating growth and
improving the situation on the labour market; considers,
therefore, that the ECB could investigate the possibilities of
implementing new unconventional measures aimed at participating
in a large, EU-wide pro-growth programme, including the use of
the Emergency Liquidity Assistance facility to undertake an
‘overt money financing’ of government debt in order to finance
tax cuts targeted on low-income households and/or new spending
programmes focused on the Europe 2020 objectives;
- Considers it necessary to review the Treaties
and the ECB’s statutes in order to establish price stability
together with full employment as the two objectives, on an equal
footing, of monetary policy in the eurozone;
These provisions were amended out of the report,
says Prof. Mitchell, largely due to German hyperinflation paranoia.
But he
maintains that Overt Money Financing is the most effective way
to solve the Eurozone crisis without tearing down the monetary
union:
- It amounts to the ECB telling member states
that they will provide the Euros to permit sufficient deficit
spending aimed at increasing employment and production.
- No public debt is issued.
- No taxes are raised.
- Interest rates would not rise.
- A Job Guarantee could be introduced
immediately.
- The Troika can retire – no more bailouts.
- As growth returns, structural changes –
better public services, better schools, better health care etc.
can be implemented. Growth allows structural changes to occur
more quickly because people are happy to move between jobs if
there are jobs to move between.
The Bogus
Inflation Objection
Tim Worstall,
writing in the UK Register, objects to Corbyn’s PQE (or OMF) on
the ground that it cannot be “sterilized” the way QE can. When
inflation hits, the process cannot be reversed. If the money is
spent on infrastructure, it will be out there circulating in the
economy and will not be retrievable. Worstall writes:
QE is designed to be temporary, . . . because
once people’s spending rates recover we need a way of taking all
that extra money out of the economy. So we do it by using
printed money to buy bonds, which injects the money into the
economy, and then sell those bonds back once we need to withdraw
the money from the economy, and simply destroy the money we’ve
raised. . . .
If we don’t have any bonds to sell, it’s not
clear how we can reduce [the money supply] if large-scale
inflation hits.
The problem today, however, is not inflation but
deflation of the money supply. Some consumer prices may be up, but
this can happen although the money supply is shrinking. Food prices,
for example, are up; but it’s
because of increased costs, including drought in California,
climate change, and mergers and acquisitions by big corporations
that eliminate competition.
Adding money to the economy will not drive up
prices until demand is saturated and production has hit full
capacity; and we’re a long way from full capacity now. Before that,
increasing “demand” will increase “supply.” Producers will create
more goods and services. Supply and demand will rise together and
prices will remain stable. In the US, the output gap – the
difference between actual output and potential output – is
estimated at about $1 trillion annually. That means the money
supply could be increased by at least $1 trillion annually without
driving up prices.
Don’t Sterilize
– Tax!
If PQE does go beyond full productive capacity,
the government does not need to rely on the central bank to pull the
money back. It can do this with taxes. Just as loans increase the
money supply and repaying them shrinks it again, so taxes and other
payments to the government will shrink a money supply augmented with
money issued by the government.
Using 2012 figures (drawing from an earlier
article by this author), the velocity of M1 (the coins, dollar bills
and demand deposits spent by ordinary consumers)
was then 7. That means M1 changed hands seven times during 2012
– from housewife to grocer to farmer, etc. Since each recipient owed
taxes on this money, increasing M1 by one dollar increased the tax
base by seven dollars.
Total tax revenue as a percentage of GDP
in 2012 was 24.3%. Extrapolating from those figures, $1.00 changing
hands seven times could increase tax revenue by $7.00 x 24.3% =
$1.70. That means the government could, in theory, get more back in
taxes than it paid out. Even with some leakage in those figures and
deductions for costs, all or most of the new money spent into the
economy might be taxed back to the government. New money could be
pumped out every year and the money supply would increase little if
at all.
Besides taxes, other ways to get money back into
the Treasury include closing tax loopholes, taxing the
$21 trillion or more hidden in offshore tax havens, and setting
up a system of public banks that would return the interest on loans
to the government.
Net interest
collected by U.S. banks in 2014 was $423 billion. At its high in
2007, it was $725 billion.
Thus there are many ways to recycle an issue of
new money back to the government. The same money could be spent and
collected back year after year, without creating price inflation or
hyperinflating the money supply.
This not only could be done; it needs to be done.
Conventional monetary policy has failed. Central banks have
exhausted their existing toolboxes and need to explore some
innovative alternatives.
Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public
Banking Institute, and author of twelve books including the
best-selling Web of Debt. Her
latest book, The Public
Bank Solution, explores successful public banking models
historically and globally. Her 300+ blog articles are at EllenBrown.com.
Listen to “It’s Our Money
with Ellen Brown” on PRN.FM.