The Federal Reserve Meets the Land of Oz

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Tom Ferguson: Monetary Policy Can’t Levitate a Broken Economy
Posted on January 10, 2017 by Yves Smith


By Thomas Ferguson, Director of Research, Institute for New Economic Thinking. Originally published in the International Economy magazine’s symposium New Tools for Central Bankers? Cross posted from the Institute for New Economic Thinking website

Central bankers today irresistibly bring to mind the Wizard of Oz. not just because of all the barely disguised political and economic cognates Frank Baum stuffed into his classic—William Jennings Bryan as the cowardly lion, “Oz” as an abbreviation for an ounce of gold, and so on. No, it’s the characters’ missing virtues that grab me: a heart, a brain, and courage. Central bankers today lack all three.

First, the brain. Two generations ago, almost every economist knew what a catastrophe a deficiency of effective demand could create. And in a real crunch, they knew what to do about that. They realized you couldn’t push on a string, so somebody — the government — had to borrow and spend when private markets would not. From the 1980s on, though, the fundamental Keynesian point — the Principle of effective Demand —disappeared in a cloud of statistical double-talk that, when you deconstruct it, turns out to imply estimating potential output as a lagged function of whatever foolish policy is being pursued.

Central bankers didn’t take this giant step backwards to pre-Keynesian economics by themselves. In that sense, it’s unfair to say they have only themselves to blame. But they swallowed it whole, helped subsidize it, and cheered it on. Now that they have rediscovered that monetary policy can’t levitate a broken economy, except by beggaring the neighbors, it’s time they admitted their errors and stopped acting like they could control everything. They could also admit what Gerald Epstein and I pointed out in the December, 1984, Journal of Economic History, based on the evidence of the Great Depression: that if you cut rates to zero and the yield curve collapses, banks get squeezed and financial instability increases. It’s amazing how many economic historians writing about the Great Depression since then missed that simple point.

Next, courage. In the good old days, central bankers were given to heady talk about “taking away the punch bowl” before the party really got going. That may have been mostly rhetoric, but it at least paid lip service to some value bigger than banking. Contrast the Fed and the European Central Bank in recent decades. The European Central Bank barely moved a muscle as banks in the center moved wave after wave of money to the European periphery in the heady run-up to 2007–2008. The failure to take even a baby macro-prudential step to restrain the capital flow, along with the purely political decision to treat every country’s debt the same, were crucial in bringing on the disaster that is still unfolding in the eurozone. Ditto the Fed, waiving details, under Greenspan and Bernanke, especially in regard to real estate lending. They just kept cheering on deregulation, until the whole world collapsed. Is it any wonder so many people no longer trust “experts”?

Finally, a heart. The European Central Bank aided and abetted the move to throw the costs of the bank crisis onto the unsuspecting populace of Europe. That was quite a trick: to have the states assume the debts then start beating gongs about excess debt. The Fed took risks to save the banking system, but is already telling us we are close to full employment and professing to be alarmed about “inflation,” when anyone can see that banks, insurers, and pension funds are clamoring for rate rises, just as in the 1930s. Both institutions need to start thinking about someone besides the financial community. If they don’t, I do not doubt that we will not have seen the last of the anger that Donald Trump and Senator Bernie Sanders mobilized in such disparate ways in the United States, nor the upheavals now visibly threatening the European Union’s very existence.
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Suddenly, I'm not buying the idea that all these bankers and economists just sort of 'missed something' about the fundamentals of our economy.

Effective demand is the missing piece of America's and the Western World's economic puzzle; until there is some, instability and sputtering, lagging growth will be the best we can expect.

There's no way a pot smoking armchair economist like myself has discovered a new truth. Our future is being siphoned off to feed the greed and lust for power of an ever decreasing group of those who would dominate the rest of us and let the world burn.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Suddenly, I'm not buying the idea that all these bankers and economists just sort of 'missed something' about the fundamentals of our economy.

Effective demand is the missing piece of America's and the Western World's economic puzzle; until there is some, instability and sputtering, lagging growth will be the best we can expect.

There's no way a pot smoking armchair economist like myself has discovered a new truth. Our future is being siphoned off to feed the greed and lust for power of an ever decreasing group of those who would dominate the rest of us and let the world burn.
Working class purchases kept this country afloat until now.

You can't have effective demand when there is no money to be spent..there's only so many ways you can bleed the working class.

Like my comment on another thread about Small Business Saturday..I'm tired of getting raped by them..comes a point where you're (middle class Anerica) paying the taxes AND paying exorbitant prices with no increase in income..guess where I'm taking it from?

MR SMALL BUSINESS!!!

Mr Small Business..SCorps..please listen closely..no raise..more taxes..even health premiums at work..AT WORK!!! where they by law have to pay 50%..and I can't afford to float you anymore..enough is enough..this is what's in you're future..your business is going to die..we cannot keep up with your price increases any more..10-20%? Used to be fair..I didn't mind helping, but not 100-200%

I know you're shifting your burden on to me..and I'm not paying your taxes for YOU anymore..grow a pair and stand up to the oligarchy by voting left or you better figure on another career.

Signed,
Now You Know Where Your Business Just Went In 2017:finger:
 
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Fogdog

Well-Known Member
He spoke the truth, did you want him to lie about it? You buy real estate when it is lower in value so you can benefit from the appreciation.

Another common sense business practice that you seem outraged about.
Common sense for the private citizen. Not for the president. He will either have to sell of his businesses or leave office. One way or the other, he's due for conflicts of interest and impeachable acts if he stays on course.

Not that you care if he's already made more than a billion on these same conflicts of interest. You are on your way to becoming a hundred-aire. (snicker)
 

NLXSK1

Well-Known Member
Common sense for the private citizen. Not for the president. He will either have to sell of his businesses or leave office. One way or the other, he's due for conflicts of interest and impeachable acts if he stays on course.

Not that you care if he's already made more than a billion on these same conflicts of interest. You are on your way to becoming a hundred-aire. (snicker)
You do know that the president and vice president are specifically exempted by law from conflicts of interest, right??

That means he wont have to sell off shit. His entire press conference the other day was on how he was passing the businesses to his sons while his daughter and her husband will be advisors in the white house.

You can thank Hillary Clinton for getting the rules clairified when she tried to take over for Bill when he was president.
 

Justin-case

Well-Known Member
You do know that the president and vice president are specifically exempted by law from conflicts of interest, right??

That means he wont have to sell off shit. His entire press conference the other day was on how he was passing the businesses to his sons while his daughter and her husband will be advisors in the white house.

You can thank Hillary Clinton for getting the rules clairified when she tried to take over for Bill when he was president.

Practicing Constitutional law now, hmmm.
 
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