The Citadel
Is Breached: Congress Taps the Fed for
Infrastructure Funding
By Ellen Brown
January 17,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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In a landmark
infrastructure bill passed in December, Congress
finally penetrated the Fed’s “independence” by
tapping its reserves and bank dividends for
infrastructure funding.
The bill was a
start. But some experts, including Congressional
candidate Tim Canova, say Congress should go further
and authorize funds to be issued for infrastructure
directly.
For at
least a decade, think tanks, commissions and other
stakeholders have fought to get Congress to address
the staggering backlog of maintenance, upkeep and
improvements required to bring the nation’s
infrastructure into the 21st century.
Countries with less in the way of assets have
overtaken the US in innovation and efficiency, while
our dysfunctional Congress has battled endlessly
over the fiscal cliff, tax reform, entitlement
reform, and deficit reduction.
Both houses
and both political parties agree that something must
be done, but they have been unable to agree on where
to find the funds. Republicans aren’t willing to
raise taxes on the rich, and Democrats aren’t
willing to cut social services for the poor.
In December
2015, however, a compromise was finally reached. On
December 4, the last day the Department of
Transportation was authorized to cut checks for
highway and transit projects, President Obama signed
a 1,300-page $305-billion transportation
infrastructure bill that renewed existing highway
and transit programs.
According to America’s civil engineers, the sum
was not nearly enough for all the work that needs to
be done. But the bill was nevertheless considered a
landmark achievement, because Congress has not been
able to agree on how to fund a long-term highway and
transit bill since 2005.
That was
one of its landmark achievements. Less publicized
was where Congress would get the money: largely from
the Federal Reserve and Wall Street megabanks. The
deal was summarized in a December 1st
Bloomberg article titled “Highway
Bill Compromise Would Take Money from US Banks”:
The
highway measure would be financed in part by a
one-time use of Federal Reserve surplus funds
and by a reduction in the 6 percent dividend
that national banks receive from the Fed. . . .
Banks with $10 billion or less in assets would
be exempt from the cut.
The
Fed’s surplus capital comes from the 12 reserve
banks. The highway bill would allow for a
one-time draw of $19 billion from the surplus,
which totaled $29.3 billion as of Nov. 25. . . .
Banks
vigorously fought the dividend cut, which was
estimated to generate about $17 billion over 10
years for the highway trust fund.
According
to Zachary Warmbrodt,
writing in Politico in November, the Fed
registered “strong concerns about using the
resources of the Federal Reserve to finance fiscal
spending.” But former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke, who is now at the Brookings Institute,
acknowledged in a blog post that the Fed could
operate with little or no capital. His objection was
that it is “not good optics or good precedent” to
raid an independent central bank. It doesn’t look
good.
Rep. Peter
DeFazio (D-Oregon), ranking member on the House
Transportation Committee, retorted, “For the Federal
Reserve to be saying this impinges upon their
integrity, etc., etc. — you know, it’s absurd. This
is a body that creates money out of nothing.”
DeFazio also said,
“[I]f the Fed can bail out the banks and give them
preferred interest rates, they can do something for
the greater economy and for average Americans. So it
was their time to help out a little bit.”
An Idea Whose
Time Has Come
It may be
their time indeed. For over a century, populists and
money reformers have petitioned Congress to solve
its funding problems by exercising the sovereign
power of government to issue money directly, through
either the Federal Reserve or the Treasury.
In the
1860s, Abraham Lincoln issued debt-free US Notes or
“greenbacks” to finance much of the Civil War, as
well as the transcontinental railroad and the
land-grant college system. In the 1890s, populists
attempted unsuccessfully to revive this form of
infrastructure funding. In the Great Depression,
Congress authorized the issuance of several billion
dollars of US Notes in the Thomas Amendment to the
1933 Agricultural Adjustment Act. In 1999, Illinois
Rep. Ray LaHood introduced the State and Local
Government Economic Empowerment Act (H. R. 1452),
which would have authorized the US Treasury to issue
interest-free loans of US Notes to state and local
governments for infrastructure investment.
Law
professor Timothy Canova
plans to reintroduce this funding model if
elected to represent Florida’s 23rd
Congressional district, where he is now running
against the controversial Debbie Wasserman Schultz,
current chair of the Democratic National Convention.
Prof. Canova wrote in a December 2012 article:
. . .
Wall Street bankers and mainstream economists
will argue that greenbacks and other such
proposals would be inflationary, depreciate the
dollar, tank the bond market, and bring an end
to Western civilization. Yet, we’ve seen four
years of the Federal Reserve—now on its third
quantitative-easing program—experimenting with
its own type of greenback program, creating new
money out of thin air in the form of credits in
Federal Reserve Notes to purchase trillions of
dollars of bonds from big banks and hedge funds.
While the value of the dollar has not collapsed
and the bond market remains strong, neither have
those newly created trillions trickled down to
Main Street and the struggling middle classes.
The most significant effect of the Fed’s
programs has been to prop up banks, bond prices,
and the stock market, with hardly any benefit to
Main Street.
In a
January 2015 op-ed in the UK Guardian titled “European
Central Bank’s QE Is a Missed Opportunity,” Tony
Pugh concurred, stating of the US and European QE
programs:
Quantitative easing, as practised by the Bank of
England and the US Federal Reserve, merely
flooded the financial sector with money to the
benefit of bondholders. This did not create a
so-called wealth affect, with a trickle-down to
the real producing economy.
. . .
If the EU were bold enough, it could fund
infrastructure or renewables projects directly
through the electronic creation of money,
without having to borrow. Our government has
that authority, but lacks the political will.
The [Confederation of British Industry] has
calculated that every £1 of such expenditure
would increase GDP by £2.80 through the money
multiplier. The Bank of England’s QE programme
of £375bn was a wasted opportunity.
According to IMF director Christine
Lagarde, writing in The
Economist in November 2015:
IMF research shows that, in advanced economies,
an increase in investment spending worth one
percentage point of GDP raises the overall level
of output by about 0.4% in the same year and by
1.5% four years after the spending increase.
In a
December 2015 paper titled “Recovery
in the Eurozone: Using Money Creation to Stimulate
the Real Economy”, Frank van Lerven expanded on
this research, writing:
For the
Eurozone, statistical analysis of income and
consumption patterns suggests that €100 billion
of newly created money distributed to citizens
would lead to an increase in GDP of around €232
billion. Using IMF fiscal multipliers, our
empirical analysis further suggests that using
the money to fund a €100 billion
increase in public investment would reduce
unemployment by approximately one million,
and could be between 2.5 to 12 times more
effective at stimulating GDP than current QE.
The
Hyperinflation Myth
The
invariable objection to exercising the government’s
sovereign money-creating power is that it would lead
to hyperinflation, but these figures belie that
assumption. If adding €100 billion for
infrastructure increases GDP by €232 billion, prices
should actually go down rather than up, since the
supply of goods and services (GDP) would have
increased more than twice as fast as demand (money).
Conventional theory says that prices go up when too
much money is chasing too few goods, and in this
case the reverse would be true.
In a November 2015 editorial,
the Washington Post admonished Congress for blurring
the line between fiscal and monetary policy,
warning, “Many a banana republic . . . has come to
grief using its central bank to facilitate
government deficit spending.” But according to Prof.
Michael Hudson, who has studied hyperinflations
extensively, that is not why banana republics have
gotten into trouble for “printing money.”
He observes:
The reality
is that nearly all hyperinflations stem from a
collapse of foreign exchange as a result of having
to pay debt service. That was what caused Germany’s
hyperinflation in the 1920s, not domestic German
spending. It is what caused the Argentinean and
other Latin American hyperinflations in the 1980s,
and Chile’s hyperinflation earlier.
Promising
Possibilities
Any
encroachment on the Fed’s turf is viewed by Wall
Street and the mainstream media with alarm. But to
people struggling with mounting bills and crumbling
infrastructure, the development has promising
potential. The portal to the central bank’s stream
of riches has been forced open, if just a crack. The
trickle could one day become a flow, a mighty river
of liquidity powering the engines of productivity of
a vibrant economy.
For that to
happen, however, we need an enlightened citizenry
and congressional leaders willing to take up the
charge; and that is what makes
Prof. Tim Canova’s
run for Congress an exciting development.
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.
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