What’s Wrong with Fed Policy?
July 17, 2006 (National Review)
There are well-known dangers in relying on a reserve currency that lacks a built-in control or alarm signal. The problem is currently illustrated by China’s ability to collect “rents” on its resource of a large, low-cost labor pool, which China’s rulers suddenly allowed to be “discovered” by the rest of the world. China recycles a substantial portion of its export earnings by purchasing U.S. Treasury bonds. Money leaves the U.S. and comes right back — regardless of the level of U.S. interest rates. A long-lasting deficit can develop in the U.S. balance of payments because foreign settlements no longer automatically reduce the amount of credit available at home.
Suppose, however, that the Chinese government decides, under pressure, to let its currency float and the yuan appreciates against the dollar. China will then expand its economy at a slower rate, collect fewer rents on its labor pool, and consequently recycle fewer dollars via Treasury purchases. (This outcome will be averted only if the country democratizes its domestic capital markets, a reform not currently contemplated by its communist government.)
Both countries may experience bank failures, recession, and inflation due to the resulting reduction in both growth rates and global demand for dollar liquidity. The source of the problem is the Fed’s reliance on mis-measured aggregates to control the supply of dollar liquidity, rather than market prices — such as gold, commodity prices, and yield curves. Until it turns its attention to market-based indicators, global central banks and governments involved in managing a reserve currency, as well as other countries linking their currencies to those reserve currencies, may compound their mistakes by perpetuating policies premised on current fads and a casual disregard of facts.
AntiSpin: One warning after another, for years on end, the policies that will lead to crisis go unheaded by the economic McNamaras of the current administration. The Fog of Economic Folly continues, the warnings unheeded, and may soon be compounded by the Fog of War, the chaos that may result if Syria and Iran are drawn into all-out regional war in the Middle East. Conditions support John Serrapere's defensive positions.
July 17, 2006 (National Review)
There are well-known dangers in relying on a reserve currency that lacks a built-in control or alarm signal. The problem is currently illustrated by China’s ability to collect “rents” on its resource of a large, low-cost labor pool, which China’s rulers suddenly allowed to be “discovered” by the rest of the world. China recycles a substantial portion of its export earnings by purchasing U.S. Treasury bonds. Money leaves the U.S. and comes right back — regardless of the level of U.S. interest rates. A long-lasting deficit can develop in the U.S. balance of payments because foreign settlements no longer automatically reduce the amount of credit available at home.
Suppose, however, that the Chinese government decides, under pressure, to let its currency float and the yuan appreciates against the dollar. China will then expand its economy at a slower rate, collect fewer rents on its labor pool, and consequently recycle fewer dollars via Treasury purchases. (This outcome will be averted only if the country democratizes its domestic capital markets, a reform not currently contemplated by its communist government.)
Both countries may experience bank failures, recession, and inflation due to the resulting reduction in both growth rates and global demand for dollar liquidity. The source of the problem is the Fed’s reliance on mis-measured aggregates to control the supply of dollar liquidity, rather than market prices — such as gold, commodity prices, and yield curves. Until it turns its attention to market-based indicators, global central banks and governments involved in managing a reserve currency, as well as other countries linking their currencies to those reserve currencies, may compound their mistakes by perpetuating policies premised on current fads and a casual disregard of facts.
AntiSpin: One warning after another, for years on end, the policies that will lead to crisis go unheaded by the economic McNamaras of the current administration. The Fog of Economic Folly continues, the warnings unheeded, and may soon be compounded by the Fog of War, the chaos that may result if Syria and Iran are drawn into all-out regional war in the Middle East. Conditions support John Serrapere's defensive positions.
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