As
the panic over the destiny of the Federal Reserve's “quantitative
easing” program reaches hysterical proportions, uncommonly bizarre
economic anomalies are surfacing. In the last week of June, the news
that first quarter US Gross Domestic Product growth report was
reduced dramatically from 2.4% to 1.8% was met by an equally dramatic,
but paradoxical positive jump in equity markets. Normally, a rather
staggering drop in GDP estimates would trigger stock market losses--
investor confidence would be battered. But the opposite occurred.
What's going on?
Pundits
and investors hailed the bad news because they hope that it will keep
the Federal Reserve committed to the $85 billion per month bond
purchasing project dubbed “quantitative easing.” They believe
that the Fed would not dare to relax the program in the face of poor
economic performance. And they recognize that without the Fed’s
foot firmly pressing the accelerator, the capitalist economy will
stagnate or slow. The Federal Reserve program is truly a life-support
system for our economy, and capitalism's apologists recognize that
they are in deep trouble without it. Therefore, investors welcomed the fall in GDP growth!
Even
Paul Krugman, the popular voice of social democratic theory in the
US, has caught the contagion of fear. In a late-June appeal in The New York Times (Et
tu, Ben?) to Federal Reserve head, Ben Bernanke,
Krugman calls for the Fed to keep its foot aggressively on the gas
pedal. A firm advocate of an alternative policy option, fiscal
stimulus (spending on infrastructure, public works, etc), Krugman
holds his nose and urges the continuation of the Fed's monetary
stimulus program of printing money for bond purchases.
So
why can't we just all agree to get along and urge the Federal Reserve
to keep printing dollars?
In
the first place, the Fed's policy of dollar-printing promiscuity is
losing its healing powers. The effect of the purchase of government
debt-- Treasury notes-- in order to restrain bond yields and interest
rates has diminished since mid-2012. Moreover, the Fed remedy has
lost its magic entirely in May and June of this year, with the yield
on the 10-year Treasury note rising by two-thirds, mortgage rates
jumping about 27% from March to the end of June, and the US and
European (except Germany) bond market experiencing a sell-off. All of
these indicators demonstrate that quantitative easing, as a stimulus
policy, is simply losing its punch.
The
Federal Reserve sees its injection of $85 billion into the economy
every month as a hedge against the dreaded deflation, a sure
companion to stagnation or negative growth. They watch to see when
inflation crosses their target of 2% in order to slap on the brakes
to avoid an overheated economy. But there is no reason for the Fed to
fret: inflation is well below their target, a clear sign that without
monetary stimulus we would be in a deflationary period. Corporations
are hoarding cash rather than investing: they are holding 5.6% of
their total assets in cash, against a forty year average of 4.4%. It
was weak business investment, in part, that caused the first quarter
GDP growth revision downward by 25%.
The
Chicago Federal Reserve's three-month moving average National
Activity index remained in negative territory, underlining the
diminishing effects of quantitative easing.
Aside
from its ineffectiveness, quantitative easing poses more serious,
more fundamental problems: Fed monetary promiscuity distorts markets
and masks underlying economic processes. Given that a capitalist
economy is an enormously complex organism made up of mutually
interactive actors, commodities and processes, manipulating some of
the central elements such as interest rates, the money supply, debt
growth, etc. can have unforeseen and damaging repercussions in other
sectors of the economy. Mechanisms fail and balances are disrupted. A
therapy becomes an injury. This is a lesson that the leadership of
the Peoples' Republic of China is learning from the volatility
created by its shadow banking sector. Even with majority public
ownership of the biggest banks, the informal private sector distorts
the impact of policy decisions.
In
Marxist terms, the massive Federal Reserve intervention in financial
markets violates the law of value. That is, it replaces the exchange
of equivalent-for-equivalent in financial markets, with exchanges
determined independently of market forces by the officers of the Fed.
Those exchanges must, at some point, be reconciled; but in the
meantime, they distort exchange relationships in other sectors of the
economy. They create a disconnect between the financial sector and
the signals sent to the productive economy. They distort the rate of
profit in the financial sector, channeling capital into speculation
and over-reliance on cheap credit. It’s no wonder that corporations
hoard cash and seek higher returns on retained capital and easily
available capital.
In
reality, quantitative easing invites the very conditions that led to
the 2007-8 collapse.
And
we are now seeing omens in the economic data.
The
exuberant 2013 stock market is suffering a retreat, but even more
ominously, demonstrating growing volatility. Last year, the small
investor jumped back in the market, a sure sign that a bear market
was in sight. Much of the volatility comes from market manipulators
exploiting the amateur day-traders. Like the swaggering Vegas weekend
gambler, they are ripe for the picking. One can watch the picking by
following the end-of-day trading; they don't know when to get in or
when to get out.
US
exports are pulling back.
The
post-World War II record profits reported in 2012 are threatened. Of
108 companies scheduled to report profits in the second quarter of
2013, 87 offered negative guidance to their shareholders. Falling
profits, contrary to underconsumption theorists, are a better
predictor of a downturn than falling consumption. Consumption
generally falls as a result and as an amplifier of economic decline.
Today,
US consumption hangs precariously in the balance. While savings are
declining, wages are in free fall. The year ending in September 2012
experienced a wage decline of 1.1%. First quarter estimates augur a
shocking decline. The consumer is simply running out of money,
savings, and available credit.
And the just announced June unemployment figures actually show an increase in the more telling U6 calculation to 14.3%. That rate includes those who have dropped out of the job market and those working part-time but desiring a full-time job.
Not
a promising picture.
In
most of the world's capitalist countries, the labor movements and
left political parties have yet to decouple their fate from that of
the monopoly capital, profit-driven, market-governed system. They are
like ships on turbulent waters unwilling to bring their vessels and
crew to port. They are simply counting on the storm to subside. They
are neither prepared for nor expecting a hurricane or a shipwreck.
After five disastrous years, one would hope that left and labor
leaders would began to look for alternatives to capitalism, a safe
haven for their fellow passengers.
Zoltan
Zigedy
zoltanzigedy@gmail.com
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