The Economy Comes Unglued
Ever since the beginning of the financial
crisis and Quantitative Easing, the question has been before us: How
can the Federal Reserve maintain zero interest rates for banks and
negative real interest rates for savers and bond holders when the US
government is adding $1.5 trillion to the national debt every year via
its budget deficits? Not long ago the Fed announced that it was going
to continue this policy for another 2 or 3 years. Indeed, the Fed is
locked into the policy. Without the artificially low interest rates, the
debt service on the national debt would be so large that it would raise
questions about the US Treasury’s credit rating and the viability of
the dollar, and the trillions of dollars in Interest Rate Swaps and
other derivatives would come unglued.
In other words, financial deregulation leading to Wall Street’s
gambles, the US government’s decision to bail out the banks and to keep
them afloat, and the Federal Reserve’s zero interest rate policy have
put the economic future of the US and its currency in an untenable and
dangerous position. It will not be possible to continue to flood the
bond markets with $1.5 trillion in new issues each year when the
interest rate on the bonds is less than the rate of inflation. Everyone
who purchases a Treasury bond is purchasing a depreciating asset.
Moreover, the capital risk of investing in Treasuries is very high. The
low interest rate means that the price paid for the bond is very high. A
rise in interest rates, which must come sooner or later, will collapse
the price of the bonds and inflict capital losses on bond holders, both
domestic and foreign.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
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