Central
Banks Are On the Defensive
by
Gary North
by Gary North
Recently by Gary North: Squeaky
Wheels Always Get 'Greeced'
All over the
Western world, central banks are under pressure from their governments
to inflate. Governments are not satisfied with short-term interest
rates at historic lows, such as a federal funds rate of 0% to 0.25%
in the United States. Politicians want rapid economic growth, and
they are convinced that this is possible after a major recession
only with more fiat money. In short, they have accurately understood
the message of their college-level textbooks. This is what textbooks
have been saying for over 50 years. This is the new, improved Keynesianism.
Keynes focused on the need for large government deficits and increased
government spending, not monetary inflation. The new Keynesianism
wants large government deficits and lots of fiat money.
These twin
pillars of neo-Keynesian policy are not working anywhere in the
West. They are working for now in China, which has become the world's
bubble economy, but not in the popped-bubble economies of the West.
THE
BANK OF JAPAN
On February
18, Bloomberg ran a story on a statement by the governor of the
Bank of Japan, who warned against government interference. The government
is running a large budget deficit. It is pressuring the Bank of
Japan to inflate. The Bank has refused.
Interest rates
are low today because commercial bankers still refuse to lend. This
has been Japan's problem for two decades. Investors still buy the
Treasury securities of their governments. The central banks initially
pushed rates down through monetary inflation (more reserve money
to supply the commercial banks), but today, rates are low because
lenders are frightened of the private sector, and the private sector
is afraid of more debt. The central banks are not inflating, yet
short-term government debt rates are extremely low. The economic
boom is nowhere to be seen. The recovery is slow.
Traditional
Keynesian textbooks say that to keep short-term rates this low,
there must be rapid monetary inflation. But these rates are low
today without monetary inflation. This fact conflicts with textbook
Keynesianism. The policy-makers are in disarray, both in the government
and the central banks.
We can see
this in a
Bloomberg report on Japan.
Feb.
18 (Bloomberg) Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa countered
government pressure by suggesting it should develop a plan to contain
the world's largest public debt.
"It's important
to gain trust of financial markets by showing a path for fiscal
consolidation," Shirakawa said in Tokyo today after his policy
board kept interest rates at 0.1 percent and refrained from expanding
monetary easing steps.
As Hans Sennholz
used to say, "Wait a minute!" If the Bank of Japan "kept interest
rates at 0.1%," how did it do this?
The governor
is protesting government pressure to inflate. The official textbook
explanation for the boom-producing effects of monetary inflation
is that this policy will lower interest rates. But the bank rate
has been one-tenth of one percent. Japan's central bank did not
"keep" the rate this low this week, or last week, or last year,
or last decade. It has done approximately nothing for 15 years,
yet the rate stayed this low.
The Bank of
Japan has barely inflated the money supply since 1994. M2 has rarely
increased above 3% per annum. As a result, there has been little
price deflation in Japan since 1994. Consumer prices fell slightly
in a few years: about 1%. In other years, consumer prices rose a
little. You can see
the chart for yourself.
So, the story
of Japan's long-term price deflation is a complete myth. I
have discussed this before.
The Bank of
Japan is not keeping the rate low. The free market is. Lenders want
safety. They will pay for this: low interest rates on government
debt. The rate on 10-year Japanese bonds is 1.3%. With consumer
prices falling at a rate of 2% per annum the first time they
have fallen this much 1.3% is a real rate of return of a
little over 3%. Not much.
Private borrowers
want safety, too by not taking on more debt. So, rates stay
low.
The Bank of
Japan can of course expand its purchases of government debt. But
why should it do this? The government can sell its debt at low rates.
What will more fiat money do for the government's ability to sell
its debt? Nothing.
The Bloomberg
story goes on to say that the governor insisted that the central
bank needs independence from the government. This is the cry of
central bankers at all times, in all places.
Have you ever
read of the senior tenured bureaucrat in any government-protected,
semi-private monopoly agency recommending that the nation's Congress
or Parliament take over the operations of his agency, because government
protection has made the agency unresponsive to the public good?
The next time will be the first.
In
his strongest warning yet on the country's growing debt burden,
Shirakawa said governments need to "respect" that monetary policy
isn't aimed at funding fiscal spending. His remarks came after Finance
Minister Naoto Kan earlier this week stepped up heat on the central
bank to fight deflation by saying Japan needs an inflation target
of at least 1 percent. . . .
"Monetary
policy isn't aimed at fiscal funding," Shirakawa said at the news
briefing. "It's aimed at achieving sustainable growth under stable
prices. It's important that governments respect this stance and
markets have faith in it."
He is not
alone in his protest against government interference.
"ACCOUNTABILITY
IS AUTONOMY"
On February
17, the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia gave
a speech to the Philadelphia chapter of the World Affairs Council.
Whenever an official gives a speech to a WAC chapter, we can be
sure that the official regards this as an important speech.
The media
do not talk about the World Affairs Council. There may be an occasional
report about a speech at a WAC chapter, but there will be nothing
said about the WAC: what it is, who belongs, and what influence
it possesses.
The WAC has
an important social function. It is the single most important membership
organization for the nation's senior elite Establishment to communicate
the latest perspective to the nation's elite.
According
to the brief entry on Wikipedia, the WAC has 535,000 members in
89 separate councils in 39 states. There are 175 million adults
in the United States. This means the WAC's membership is a little
over three-tenths of one percent of the adult population. I call
this an elite.
The WAC was
founded in 1918, three years before the Council on Foreign Relations
was founded. Like the CFR, the WAC officially is concerned with
international affairs. Also like the CFR, the WAC deals with domestic
issues as well.
The President
of the Philadelphia FED, Charles Plosser, titled his speech, "The
Federal Reserve System: Balancing Independence and Accountability."
This sounds boring. For those who understand the function of the
Federal Reserve and its influence, the speech is not boring to read.
The target
of the first half of the speech was Ron Paul. It was a warning against
Ron Paul's bill in the House of Representatives that would authorize
the Government Accountability Office to audit the FED. The House's
leadership has kept the bill from coming to the floor for a vote,
despite the fact that a majority of the membership has officially
supported it, and despite the fact that a majority of the House
Financial Services Committee voted for it, 43 to 26, in November
2009.
The FED has
consistently opposed this bill. The official explanation is that
this would in some way constitute interference with the FED's policy-making.
This argument has never been clear. The fact that the General Accountability
Office will verify the numbers in no way constitutes interference
with FED policy, unless FED policy has been carried on under false
numbers.
Nobody at
the FED will say what is really at stake: an independent audit of
the government's gold holdings, which are officially held for the
government by the FED for safekeeping. If the gold is gone, or if
there are legal claims against it by foreign central banks as a
result of FED swaps, this would constitute fraud on a massive scale.
The real power
in the FED has always been the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
In all textbook accounts of the years leading up to the Great Depression,
the focus is on Benjamin Strong, the President of the New York FED.
He set policy, not the Board of Governors.
The bulk of
the world's gold holdings are stored in the vault of the New York
FED. This includes most of the deliverable gold (99.9% fine) owned
by the FED as trustee of the U.S. government's gold. The gold at
Ft. Knox (probably coin melt, 90% fine) constitutes a second holding
area, said to be 20% of the nation's gold. No one knows. It has
not been audited since the early 1950's, not even by the private
accounting firms that audit the FED on an annual rotation basis.
The FED demands
secrecy. It proclaims that it pursues transparency, but it does
not on any issue of substance.
Bloomberg
News in November 2008 sued the Board of Governors under the Freedom
of Information Act to find out which institutions received how much
money in the October 2008 bailouts. The Board of Governors refused
to comply on this legal basis: this would expose trade secrets of
the recipient banks.
Even though
a district Federal judge in August 2009 ruled that the New York
FED must turn over these records, the FED refused to comply. She
gave the FED five days to comply. It did nothing for six months.
Anyone who
thinks that the Federal courts have operational authority over the
Federal Reserve System is ignorant of the last century of American
history.
The Board
of Governors appealed the ruling on January 11, 2010. A ruling will
not come down for months. A recent summary of this bizarre
story appeared in the New York Times. In a rare form
of candor, the writer added this observation, deep down in the bowels
of his article:
The
Federal Reserve has wrapped itself in secrecy since the turn of
the 20th century, when a select group of financiers met at the private
Jekyll Island Club off the eastern coast of Georgia and, forgoing
last names to preserve their anonymity among the staff, drafted
legislation to create a central bank. Its secrecy, of course, persists
today, with Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, refusing
to tell even Congress which banks received government money under
the bailout.
"SECRECY
IS TRANSPARENCY"
Mr. Plosser
gave the usual reasons for opposing the audit.
So,
our uniquely American form of a central bank strikes a balance between
centralization and decentralization; between the public and private
sectors; and among Washington, Wall Street, and Main Street. The
result is a central bank that achieves a delicate balance: it permits
policymakers a good deal of independence when conducting monetary
policy but in return requires transparency and accountability to
the American people.
Why does setting
monetary policy require this degree of secrecy? Officially, the
FED is rather vague on the answer. It is all about accountability,
the FED says. You see, transparency and accountability to the American
people require secrecy, so that Congress is kept in the dark. You
understand this, don't you?
The elite
at the World Affairs Council did not bat an eye. "Of course, of
course." There was no response comparable to a town hall meeting
in a Congressman's district over the bailouts. There were no catcalls.
There was polite acceptance.
From the point
of view of economic analysis the pursuit of self-interest
secrecy by the FED is required because the FED is the administrator
of a cartel of government-protected commercial banks. The government
has created barriers to entry, thus creating the cartel. Bankers
do not want the government to police the cartel. They want their
own agency to do this. They nominate the Presidents of the 12 Federal
Reserve Banks. The big banks want to milk the cartel for all they
can. They got the bailout money, and in their view, that ended any
legitimate interest Congress may have in pursuing the matter. So,
Mr.
Plosser said this:
Another
frequently mentioned proposal under consideration would politicize
the governance of the 12 Reserve Banks by making the chairs of the
boards of directors, or the Reserve Bank presidents, political appointees.
Other legislators have suggested eliminating the votes of Reserve
Bank presidents on the Federal Open Market Committee.
As I hope
I've explained, such changes would weaken the regional and decentralized
structure of the Federal Reserve System and lead to a more centralized
and political institution and less effective policy. Were regional
Reserve Bank presidents or chairs to become political appointees,
they might be more attuned to the political process in Washington
that selected them, rather than having a public interest in the
broad economic health of the nation and the Reserve Districts
in which they reside. Politicizing these important positions might
also discourage some talented, public-spirited individuals to
serve as part of our nation's central bank.
The hearts
of World Affairs Council members must have swelled with pride. "Yes,
yes, we understand. Far be it from us to discourage some talented,
public-spirited individuals to serve as part of our nation's central
bank."
The message
was clear: we must keep politics out of the most powerful cartel
in the country. No audit! No control over who gets to be President
of a regional FED bank!
Central
bank independence means that the central bank can make monetary
policy decisions without fear of direct political interference.
It does not mean that the central bank is not accountable for its
policies.
Allow me to
summarize:
- Autonomy
is accountability.
- Secrecy
is transparency.
George Orwell
saw it coming. Newspeak is alive and well inside the FED.
CONCLUSION
For
the first time since 1914, the Federal Reserve System is under serious
attack. The attackers are not members of the World Affairs Council.
The attackers are from the hinterlands. The bailouts angered them
in October 2008. The bailouts confirmed Ron Paul's warnings in his
Presidential campaign. The Web has made it possible for the troops
to get mobilized.
The FED has
never had to deal with anything like this. It does not know how
to respond. Mr. Plosser's speech is an indication of just how little
the FED understands public relations. A minority of critics have
seen through the Wizard of Oz's smoke and mirrors. The Web has given
these people access to information that could be concealed before.
The genie
will not go back into the bottle. Opposition to the FED will spread,
no matter how many speeches that high-level FED officials deliver
to local chapters of the World Affairs Council.
February
20, 2010
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2010 Gary North
The
Best of Gary North
|