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<https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2020/03/23/helicopter-money-this-is-the-game-changer-geo-politically/>
  


‘Helicopter Money’: This Is the Game-Changer Geo-Politically


Alastair Crooke

12-15 minutes

  _____  

As the US and the UK, to stem Covid-19 infections, adopt a close-to-wartime 
approach, with intrusive levels of intervention into social life, these 
governments – as the corollary to lockdown – are proposing massive bail-outs. 
At first brush, this may seem both sensible and appropriate. But wait. Bailing 
out what? Well, financial markets of course, but then … just about everything: 
Boeing, the US Shale-oil industry, airlines, the tourist industry, and (in the 
US) every citizen – through posting them a $1,000, or a $2,000 cheque, this 
week – or, as is mooted in DC – perhaps one every month. Great! Just like 
Christmas.

The markets crashed: $½ Trillion in ‘liquidity’ here; $1.5 Tn there – and there 
– and there. An alphabet soup of lending facilities — pretty soon you are 
talking ‘real money’. The alphabet soup cloaks the collective size of liquidity 
available to banks. And likewise for individuals? 210 million US adults X 
$1,000, X 12 or 18 (months), is a staggering sum of money — closer to $4 Tn, or 
18% of US GDP. Likewise, UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak pledged £330bn, or 15% of 
GDP, to support the economy, on top of a three-month mortgage payment holiday 
and a slew of tax deferments, and to do, as well, “whatever it takes”.

So, how come? How is this money suddenly available – when we have repeatedly 
been told in the wake of the 2008 crisis that austerity must be the only 
answer? Well, welcome to the ‘new orthodoxy’ (actually it is not new at all: 
France tried it in the eighteenth century when it ‘printed’ the Assignats). 
Call it ‘helicopter money’, or, the so-called ‘Modern Monetary Theory’: The 
principle is that it is okay to print money – if governments don’t otherwise 
have it. The point here is that ‘helicopter money’ (money conjured out of 
nothing: empty units reflecting no underlying real economic value) is a 
paradigm change. A major paradigm change.

It is the legacy from 2008. That was primarily a banking crisis: Printing money 
seemed to work out pretty well then, in the view of the élites. The main reason 
that those ‘experts’ have thought that printing money worked in the wake of 
2008 was because the Central Banks were able to reflate the financialised asset 
bubbles.

“But that wasn’t success, that was failure”, financial guru, Peter Schiff 
comments 
<https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/peter-schiff-weve-passed-point-no-return> . 
It was a failure because it resulted in even bigger bubbles, and even greater 
debt – which precisely has set us all up for today’s crisis: For we are going 
into this crisis naked of any real tools to deal with supply-shock.

In 2008, everybody believed the money ‘printing’ was temporary: Bank balance 
sheets were all gummed up; and the Fed was going to be able afterwards to 
normalize interest rates, and shrink its balance sheet. Well, nobody is going 
to believe that, this time. No, debts will soar – and will be ‘forever’ debts.

Yet for today’s policy-makers, it all seems so reasonable, so plausible: If the 
Fed floods the financial system with money, interest rates can stay at zero for 
ever. What’s not to like about this? Certainly, it fits with Trump’s real 
estate career, built on low interest, easy debt. Governments now may borrow for 
a hundred years at zero interest; and banks can lend like fury, as the Fed has 
dropped the requirement for banks to keep any reserves against their loans 
(i.e. to ‘print’ more easy credit for the favoured).

Better still, governments can just conjure the money out of thin air (by 
monetising its debts): It can use these funds to bail out all those businesses 
and citizens adversely affected by Covid-19, and become heroes. Welcome to the 
new ‘Orthodoxy’.

What’s the alternative? Well that’s the point. The financialised, monetarist 
worldview dogmatically pursued through the last decades has left the toolbox 
with only one tool (more money, more liquidity). They have driven the world 
into this monetarist cul-de-sac. They will go on doing the same thing 
(liquidity and bailouts), over and over again, and (per Albert Einstein), 
always hoping for a different and better result. But it won’t work. It won’t 
work because the problem is not lack of liquidity. It is that businesses have 
no business to do – under infection lockdown. We had better understand the 
consequences to this insanity. That’s all.

This time, the 2008 recipé will not work. The US is going to be hit hard. And 
Americans are only just waking up to this fact.

This New Orthodoxy is no more than a desperate throw of the dice to keep the 
western hyper-financialised system aloft. The ‘mobilised-for-war’ narrative is 
an attempt to justify authoritarian measures, and the false bail-out meme: 
There was no ‘free money’ during the Wars.

In the 2008/9 crisis, the public was bemused: The financial world seemed too 
arcane to grasp fully. Only later, was it appreciated that the banks were being 
saved by ‘socialising’ their mistakes and losses. These – the losses – were 
‘socialised’ i.e. transferred to the public balance sheet, and the public were 
told to expect austerity – and pared down health and welfare systems, to pay 
for all these 2008 bail outs.

This time, it is not the banks, but corporations and their ‘junk’ debt, that 
the Authorities are hoping to preserve in aspic (just as the banks were, 
earlier). In simple terms, it will allow over-leveraged companies to go into 
even deeper debt – with those loans now backed by the US Federal government.

But, will a better informed public so readily agree that Boeing deserves a $60 
Bn bailout, when all its cash was spent in the last years in buying back its 
own stock and paying large dividends. It may be argued that if the money simply 
is printed, austerity cuts may not be required. But printing money dilutes the 
underlying purchasing potential of the money that had existed before dilution. 
That is to say, it is the 60% who ultimately will pay the cost – again. The new 
austerity will be a covert wealth transfer through dilution of peoples’ 
purchasing potential.

As Schiff notes 
<https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/peter-schiff-weve-passed-point-no-return> , 
monetary inflation “is probably not just the worst-case scenario, it’s probably 
the most likely scenario … the laws of economics apply here just like they did 
in the Weimar Republic of Germany, or in Zimbabwe, or in Venezuela. If we 
pursue the same monetary and fiscal policy they did, we’re going to receive the 
same monetary outcome they did (hyperinflation)”.

This all may seem a somewhat rarefied argument to some, but the implications 
(both political and geo-political) are huge. This wartime economic approach – 
of itself – is not going to bring radical change to our neo-liberalised 
institutional world, nor reform it. That window was shut after 2008. The 
reality today is that to ‘touch’ the system now might induce a debt-deflation – 
a prospect which truly terrifies the Establishment – on top of impending 
supply-shock recession.

We are locked in through the errors of the Central Bankers: No wonder the 
Authorities are trying to kindle a war atmosphere in order to say that 
‘helicopter money’ is okay. “It’s wartime”. And they will probably order the 
military out on the streets soon. Saying what is written here, will soon be 
held to be ‘enemy propaganda’.

The effect of a war-like command economy will not be to sweep society or the 
economy onto a new course, but rather, will be to re-situate it into the old 
grooves. Will anyone believe that in this new ‘command economy’ era, the 
government directed bailouts and the credit lines, will not be channelled 
principally 
<https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2020/03/17/laissez-faire-liberals-lament-new-age-collectivism-dawning/>
  to the political élites and their allies?

Yet, just as after the sacrifices of two World Wars, there was ‘New Deal’ mood 
apparent amongst the people. So it was too, in the wake of 2008: There were 
calls for reform to a system that entrenched the richest one per cent; but 
instead we got austerity, and a return to business as usual. Policy was 
deliberately designed to prop up the old system, and make it function as 
before. Reform denied.

Today, people are fully focussed on managing their lives under virus lockdown, 
but the political pendulum has been swinging markedly (so-called populist 
politics) against what is widely perceived as a politically and economically 
‘rigged system’.

The question then is, firstly, will US monetary actions succeed? Will they 
succeed in saving the financial system, ‘as it used to be’? Well, take the call 
for helicopter money: the term refers to giving money directly to individuals 
as if dropping cash on everybody out of a helicopter. But Schiff points out 
<https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/schiff-real-crash-here> , that when Milton 
Friedman (the father of monetarist economics) coined the term, he intended it 
as a joke:

“He was using it as an example of what not to do – about why Keynesian monetary 
stimulus doesn’t work. He said it’s a crazy, stupid idea … Because dropping 
money from helicopters doesn’t do anything. It’s just inflation. It just makes 
prices go up”.

And, secondly, will this approach – which anyway is not working, as markets 
continue to implode – provoke a more concerted opposition to financial excess 
and inequality, in all its various forms? Will the demand for reform of the 
neo-liberal system become unstoppable? Maybe the ‘community spirit’ of 
suffering the virus together, will not be so tolerant of leaders who have 
failed to take appropriate steps to staunch infection spread, in a timely 
fashion?

Here, it is the ‘war’ on Covid-19 – rather than the other ‘war’ to save the 
economy – that will play a key role in shaping the geo-political future. Enough 
people have already commentated on the communal, national sentiment being 
generated by Corona virus. Here in Italy, Italians do feel far more linked 
empathetically – as if fighting a common enemy (which in a way they are). We 
all feel for the inhabitants of Lombardy and Bergamo. And, Italians know too, 
that they are on their own.

This feeling of Euro sauve qui peut (every country to its own) is palpable, and 
not confined to those just outside the EU borders, such as when the Serbian 
President (reacting bitterly to news that the EU had imposed an export ban on 
equipment such as masks and gowns to protect medical workers), said: 
“International solidarity does not exist. European solidarity does not exist”, 
to which most Italians would have responded ‘hear, hear’. The only help for 
Italy arrived from China 
<https://s2.washingtonpost.com/camp-rw/?e=YWlzbGluZy5ieXJuZUBnbWFpbC5jb20%3D&s=5e719cd2fe1ff6038cdda4fc&linknum=4&linktot=63>
 .

It is the return of the nation-state. Covid-19 will change the course of 
Italian politics, as well as determine – in a significant way – the future of 
the EU. Let us be clear: The US and the UK can only make those offers of 
gushing liquidity and bail-outs – because they ‘print’ money. They control 
their own money-supply, their deficits – and to a much lesser extent, have some 
scope over interest rates. EU states do not. And arguments over EU financial 
mitigation for Covid-19 will ‘rack’ EU institutions and unity – perhaps to 
breaking-point.

And this more general attitude of sauve qui peut and lack of empathy is 
probably felt nowhere more deeply than in China. The more so, even than Italy. 
China has been denigrated, particularly in America, in a way that many Chinese 
feel borders on racism. Pepe Escobar has written 
<https://www.unz.com/pescobar/china-locked-in-hybrid-war-with-us/> :

“Among the myriad, earth-shattering geopolitical effects of coronavirus, one is 
already graphically evident. China has re-positioned itself. For the first time 
since the start of Deng Xiaoping’s reforms in 1978, Beijing openly regards the 
US as a threat, as stated a month ago by Foreign Minister Wang Yi at the Munich 
Security Conference during the peak of the fight against coronavirus.

“Beijing is carefully, incrementally shaping the narrative that, from the 
beginning of the coronovirus attack, the leadership knew it was under a hybrid 
war attack. Xi’s terminology is a major clue. He said, on the record, that this 
was war. And, as a counter-attack, a “people’s war” had to be launched.”

Europe and America will be facing a very different Chinese-Russian axis in the 
wake of the Coronavirus. The gloves are off. And Europe will be the first to 
feel the effect: No more Euro prevarication. That is to say, no more ‘one foot 
in; one foot out’ in relations with China (on Huawei 5G – as just one example).

Russia and China well understand: Helicopter money, and unparalleled ‘printed’ 
bail-outs, this is the game-changer. For now, the US dollar is soaring on 
demand from states who see their own currencies crashing, but who have borrowed 
in dollars – and see those dollar loans becoming shockingly more costly, 
day-by-day.

But, the G7 Central Banks finally will have to fight the inflation monster that 
will be unleashed by their ‘helicopter theories’. Confidence in the dollar will 
decline, as more and more dollar helicopter ‘drops’ are made. Interest rates 
will rise, and western junk debt will become toxic, and untenable at higher 
rates.

In a word, the world will come to see the US as much less powerful and less 
competent than appearances have projected it. Its lacunae will stare out.

Is the time approaching for that global monetary re-set, as the dollar loses 
its shine, President Putin must be mulling …?

 

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