No
Exit for Ben
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Prescription
for Disaster
In
a Wall Street Journal op-ed on Monday, and in congressional
testimony later in the week, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke reassured
all that thanks to his accurate foresight and deft use of the Feds
policy toolkit, he could maintain near zero percent interest rates
for an extended period without creating inflation. With supernatural
powers such as these, one wonders if Ben would be better employed
by the Justice League rather than the Federal Reserve.
Bens
game plan is apparently simple: once he determines that the economy
is on solid ground, he will use the monetary equivalent of Supermans
laser vision to strategically evaporate all the excess liquidity
that he has recently created without endangering the recovery. Dont
try this at home, kids.
In other words,
as he did just a few years ago when the subprime fiasco began to
emerge, Bernanke is assuring us that inflation is contained. He
is just as wrong now as he was then.
The idea that
the inflation genie can be painlessly rebottled has no historic
precedent. Even mainstream economists, whove never met a fiscal
stimulus they didnt like, agree that central banks must act
preemptively with regard to inflation. Bernanke is making the case
that the new set of liquidity tools, hastily developed in the panic
of late 2008, will act just as well in reverse. But liquidity is
a lot like liquid, its a lot easier to spill than to un-spill.
The Chairman believes that his new gadgetry will allow him to perform
a feat of monetary magic no other central banker has managed to
pull off. But given his history of getting it wrong, why should
we assume that this time he will get it right?
The bottom
line is that Bernanke has no exit strategy. He can talk about it
all he likes, but when it comes time to actually pull the trigger,
his nerves will buckle. The current communications campaign is simply
an attempt to calm the markets. I doubt few citizens or members
of Congress had any hope of understanding the exit strategy mechanisms
that Bernanke described. Many likely place their faith in his seeming
mastery of financial minutiae. Sadly, as with the mythical strong
dollar policy, confident talk may be the sum total of the
Chairmans strategy.
He senses that
the villagers, in the form of currency traders and bond market vigilantes,
are becoming a bit restless. To sooth their concerns, he must pretend
that he has the situation under control. Like Jack Nicholson in
A
Few Good Men, he knows full well that markets simply cant
handle the truth.
But make no
mistake, in order to mop up all the excess liquidity, the Fed will
need to raise interest rates substantially to attract buyers for
all the bonds that the Treasury must sell. Fed officials know that
our economy is completely dependent on cheap money and limitless
government credit, and cant tolerate the loss of either. Of
course, the longer the monetary spigot remains open, the more addicted
to low rates we get, and the harder it will be to kick the habit.
If the Fed could not remove the punch bowl during the years before
the bust, how will they do so while the economy is far weaker? Even
if they do start the process, the minute the recovery
seems in jeopardy, look for the Fed to turn the showers back on.
Also, paring
down the Feds bloated balance sheet will require selling hundreds
of billions of dollars of toxic assets, such as bonds backed by
subprime mortgages, credit card debt, and auto and student loans,
back into the market. Finding buyers for such sludge without crushing
the market is a trick that Houdini himself would be reluctant to
attempt. The Feds assumption that the assets will no longer
be toxic by the time it sells them is farcical. The economy at large
has not yet suffered the full weight of the recession because these
assets have been largely quarantined at the Fed. Reintroduce these
toxins back into the economy and the reaction could be lethal.
Bernanke also
mistakenly expressed optimism that a strengthening global economy
would aid our recovery. Unfortunately, a global resurgence will
force Bernankes anti-inflation hand, and will thereby cause
more pain to the U.S. economy.
Few appreciate
how the global panic of 2008 actually benefited the U.S. by causing
a flight into U.S. dollars and Treasury bonds. The resultant flows
put a lid on consumer prices and kept interest rates low. As growth
overseas resumes, and these flows reverse, both consumer prices
and interest rates will rise.
Further, as
current policy prevents the structural imbalances underlying our
economy from being corrected, U.S. unemployment will continue to
rise. Combined with higher interest rates and rising consumer prices,
the Misery Index (inflation + interest rates + unemployment) will
be a big issue in the 2010 mid-term elections, and an even bigger
one in 2012.
July
25, 2009
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.
Copyright
© 2009 Euro Pacific Capital
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