QE2 is risky and should be
limited<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9ba381d0-e6b5-11df-99b3-00144feab49a.html>

By Martin Feldstein

Published: November 2 2010 20:50 | Last updated: November 2 2010 23:34

The Federal Reserve’s *proposed policy of quantitative
easing*<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7cf440d8-e2bb-11df-8a58-00144feabdc0,s01=1.html>is
a dangerous gamble with only a small potential upside benefit and
substantial risks of creating asset bubbles that could destabilise the
global economy. Although the US economy is weak and the outlook uncertain,
QE is not the right remedy.

Under the label of QE, the Fed will buy long-term government bonds, perhaps
one trillion dollars or more, adding an equal amount of cash to the economy
and to banks’ excess reserves. Expectation of this has lowered long-term
interest rates, depressed the dollar’s international value, bid up the price
of commodities and farm land and raised share prices.

Like all bubbles, these exaggerated increases can rapidly reverse when
interest rates return to normal levels. The greatest danger will then be to
leveraged investors, including individuals who bought these assets with
borrowed money and banks that hold long-term securities. These risks should
be clear after the recent crisis driven by the bursting of asset price
bubbles. Although the specific asset prices that are now rising are
different from last time, the possibility of damaging declines when bubbles
burst is worryingly similar.

The problem now *extends to emerging
markets*<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/338e7944-e66d-11df-95f9-00144feab49a.html>,
a group not directly affected in the last crisis. The lower US interest
rates are causing a substantial capital flow to those economies, creating
currency volatility. The economies hurt by the increasing value of their
currencies are responding with measures to protect their exports and limit
their imports, measures that could lead to trade conflict.

Ahead, when the US economy does begin to grow, the increased cash on banks’
balance sheets will make the Fed’s exit strategy harder. It was previously
“cautiously optimistic” it would be able to contain the inflationary
pressures that could be unleashed by banks with a trillion dollars of excess
reserves. This will be harder if the amount of excess reserves is doubled.
This could lead to much higher interest rates to restrain demand or to an
unwanted rise in inflation.

Why is the Fed doing this? It is of course worried by the weakness of the US
recovery. Fiscal policy is sidelined by the deficits projected for the years
ahead. Traditional monetary policy has already done what it can: short-term
interest rates are close to zero, commercial banks hold a trillion dollars
of excess reserves, and the money supply is growing more rapidly than
nominal gross domestic product. But the Fed leadership does not want to be
seen to be idle when the economy is in trouble.

Although its real focus is on reducing
*unemployment*<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/fd24fd6a-e293-11df-9ea3-00144feabdc0.html>,
much of the rhetoric of Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, is about preventing
deflation because some members of the Fed’s open market committee think the
Fed should focus exclusively on price stability. But there is no deflation.
Core consumer prices are rising and inflation is expected to average 2 per
cent over the next 10 years.

Since short-term interest rates are already near zero, some economists
advocate QE to reduce the real interest rate by raising inflation
temporarily while holding the nominal interest rate unchanged. A 4 per cent
expected rate of inflation for the next few years would turn a 1 per cent
nominal interest rate into a real rate of minus 3 per cent, thereby
stimulating interest-sensitive spending. But doing that would jeopardise the
credibility of the Fed’s long-term inflation strategy.

Mr Bernanke’s argument for QE is based on the “portfolio balance” theory
which stresses that, when the Fed buys bonds, investors increase their
demand for other assets, particularly equities, raising their price and
increasing household wealth and spending. Equity prices have already risen
by 10 per cent since Mr Bernanke discussed this approach. But how much
further will equity prices rise and what will that do to GDP?

Neither theory nor past experience can answer the first question. Much of
the share price increase induced by QE may already have occurred based on
expectations. An optimistic guess would be another 10 per cent. Since
households have about $7,000bn in equities, that would imply a wealth gain
of $700bn, raising consumer spending by about one-quarter of one per cent of
GDP, a welcome but trivially small effect on incomes and employment.

The other ways in which QE would raise GDP are also small. A 20-basis-point
reduction in mortgage rates would have little effect on homebuying at a time
when house prices are again falling. The increase in banks’ liquidity would
do nothing since banks already have massive excess reserves. Big
corporations are sitting on vast amounts of cash. Small businesses that are
not spending because they cannot get credit will not be helped, because the
banks on which they depend have a shortage of capital.

The truth is there is little more that the Fed can do to raise economic
activity. What is required is action by the president and Congress: to help
homeowners with negative equity and businesses that cannot get credit, to
remove the threat of higher tax rates, and reduce the out-year fiscal
deficits. Any QE should be limited and temporary.

*The writer is professor of economics at Harvard University*


-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
""GLOBAL SPECULATORS"" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/globalspeculators?hl=en.

Reply via email to