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Book
5th June 2012, 07:57 AM
http://i.fokzine.net/upload/090718_60385_larrysummers_barackobama.jpg

It is time for governments to borrow more money

By Lawrence H. Summers,

With the past week’s dismal jobs data (http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/wonkbook-dont-read-too-much-into-the-may-jobs-numbers/2012/06/04/gJQA4J75CV_blog.html) in the United States, signs of increasing financial strain in Europe (http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/europes-grim-choices/2012/06/03/gJQA17q7BV_story.html) and discouraging news from China, the proposition that the global economy is returning to a path of healthy growth looks highly implausible.

It is more likely that negative feedback loops are again taking over as falling incomes lead to falling confidence, which leads to reduced spending and yet further declines in income. Financial strains hurt the real economy, especially in Europe, and reinforce existing strains. And export-dependent emerging markets suffer as the economies of the industrialized world weaken.

The question is not whether the current policy path is acceptable. The question is, what should be done? To come up with a viable solution, consider the remarkable level of interest rates in much of the industrialized world. The U.S. government can borrow (http://www.bloomberg.com/markets/rates-bonds/government-bonds/us/) in nominal terms at about 0.5 percent for five years, 1.5 percent for 10 years (http://www.tradingeconomics.com/bonds-list-by-country) and 2.5 percent for 30 years. Rates are considerably lower in Germany and still lower in Japan.

Even more remarkable are the interest rates on inflation-protected bonds. In real terms, the world is prepared to pay the United States more than 100 basis points to store its money for five years and more than 50 basis points for 10 years. Maturities would have to reach more than 20 years before the interest rates on indexed bonds becomes positive. Again, real rates are even lower in Germany and Japan. Remarkably, the United Kingdom borrowed money last week for 50 years at a real rate of 4 basis points (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/feedarticle/10142388).

These low rates on even long maturities mean that markets are offering the opportunity to lock in low long-term borrowing costs. In the United States, for example, the government could commit to borrowing five-year money in five years at a nominal cost of about 2.5 percent and at a real cost very close to zero. What does all this say about macroeconomic policy? Many in the United States and Europe are arguing for further quantitative easing to bring down longer-term interest rates. This may be appropriate, given that there is a much greater danger from policy inaction to current economic weakness than to overreacting.

However, one has to wonder how much investment businesses are unwilling to undertake at extraordinarily low interest rates that they would be willing to undertake with rates reduced by yet another 25 or 50 basis points. It is also worth querying the quality of projects that businesses judge unprofitable at a -60 basis point real interest rate but choose to undertake at a still more negative rate. There is also the question of whether extremely low, safe, real interest rates promote bubbles of various kinds. The renewed emphasis on quantitative easing (http://www.cnbc.com/id/47669062/) is also an oddity. The essential aim of such policies is to shorten the debt held by the public or issued by the consolidated public sector, comprising both the government and central bank. Any rational chief financial officer in the private sector would see this as a moment to extend debt maturities and lock in low rates — the opposite of what central banks are doing. In the U.S. Treasury, for example, discussions of debt-management policy have had this emphasis. But the Treasury does not alone control the maturity of debt when the central bank is active in all debt markets.

So, what is to be done? Rather than focusing on lowering already epically low rates, governments that enjoy such low borrowing costs can improve their creditworthiness by borrowing more, not less, and investing in improving their future fiscal position, even assuming no positive demand stimulus effects of a kind likely to materialize with negative real rates. They should accelerate any necessary maintenance projects — issuing debt leaves the state richer not poorer, assuming that maintenance costs rise at or above the general inflation rate.

As my colleague Martin Feldstein (http://www.nber.org/feldstein/) has pointed out, this is a principle that applies to accelerating replacement cycles for military supplies. Similarly, government decisions to issue debt, and then buy space that is currently being leased, will improve the government’s financial position as long as the interest rate on debt is less than the ratio of rents to building values — a condition almost certain to be met in a world with government borrowing rates below 2 percent. These examples are the place to begin because they involve what is in effect an arbitrage, whereby the government uses its credit to deliver essentially the same bundle of services at a lower cost. It would be amazing if there were not many public investment projects with certain equivalent real returns well above zero. Consider a $1 project that yielded even a permanent 4 cents a year in real terms increment to GDP by expanding the economy’s capacity or its ability to innovate.

Depending on where it was undertaken, this project would yield at least an extra 1 cent a year in government revenue for each dollar spent. At any real interest rate below 1 percent, the project pays for itself even before taking into account any Keynesian effects.
This logic suggests that countries regarded as havens that can borrow long term at a very low cost should be rushing to take advantage of the opportunity. This is a view that should be shared by those most alarmed about looming debt crises, because the greater your concern about the ability to borrow in the future, the stronger the case for borrowing for the long term today.

There is, of course, still the question of whether more borrowing will increase anxiety about a government’s creditworthiness. It should not, as long as the proceeds of borrowing are used either to reduce future spending or raise future incomes. Any rational business leader would use a moment like this to term out the firm’s debt. Governments in the industrialized world should do so too.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/it-is-time-for-governments-to-borrow-more-money/2012/06/04/gJQAaky4DV_print.html


:o WTF? Privately-Owned Jew Central Banks are in the "Public Sector" ? ? ?

mamboni
5th June 2012, 10:17 AM
I think the headline was inadvertently truncated:

It is time for governments to borrow more money from the Jew-owned banks


What Summers fails to tell the reader is that once backed into the corner of zero and negative interest rates there is no way out without destroying the bonds themselves and the currencies. So imagine ZIRP and negative real interest rates for as long as the eye can see:

1. The US government can borrow forever with no impact on fiscal deficits by debt service
2. Deficits are reduced as economy activity from new money increases receipts - in theory

The problem is the money stock is constantly expanded and money moves to the assets of it's choosing. In essence, all new money will flow into only two channels: government coffers and gold. In the mean time, the working people are slowly destroyed by price inflation in necessities as wages always lag the prices of retail goods. Businesses are forced to curtail capital investment and liquidate holdings because of the pernicious effects of cost push inflation. Jobs are gradually downsized and destroyed.

The result is capital destruction on a mass scale.

If you don't hold physical gold and silver outside of the banking system, you will be financially destroyed.

osoab
5th June 2012, 03:18 PM
Liesman thinks we should start a 2-3 trillion bailout fund for Europe. vid @ link.


http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/pictures/picture-5.jpg
Steve Liesman's Modest Proposal: America Must Bail Out Europe (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/steve-liesmans-modest-proposal-america-must-bail-out-europe)



Yesterday, the progressive "think-tankers" from the CEPR first voiced (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/progressive-think-tank-begs-bernanke-bail-out-spain)the idea that it is time for America to finally come to the aid of Europe, because you see, the liberals, ever so generous with other peoples' money, have had enough of a sinking financial system brought to its knees by the intersection of a financial system perpetually bailed out at the taxpayers' expense, and a insolvent global welfare state, and just wish it was all back to where it was a decade ago, where everyone lived in perpetual bliss and stupidity. We truly hope Messrs Baker and Weisbrot lead by example and dispose of all their net worth, by dispatching it in Europe's direction, post haste: after all, anything less would be just seem so very hypocritical. Today, to nobody's shock at all, the "think tank" is joined by everyone's favorite TV hobby economist: Steve Liesman, who in an op-ed on CNBC writes: " It’s time to change the narrative and for the United States to step up and abandon its policies of praising Europe’s incremental progress, gently prompting it to action and insisting that it be a Euro only solution... The US should lead the world in creating a large pot of money available to the Europeans to recapitalize their banks. A $2 or $3 trillion fund should get the market’s attention." It should Steve. And just like in the case of CEPR, we hope you can lead the US by creating a large pot of all your money that you would send to Spain and Greece first. Then everyone promises to follow in your so very generous footsteps.


From CNBC (http://www.cnbc.com/id/47691602):


Europe's Mess: Time for the US to Clean It Up

When it comes to Europe, incremental and mealy mouthed haven’t worked. It’s time for big and bold.

Waiting for Europe to get its act together to solve its financial problems has become an even more insufferable drama than "Waiting for Godot." They keep talking but a financial solution never comes. Former deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman, writing in today’ Washington Post, warned of a Euro-led global economic slump and said: “The reason markets are battering the euro zone is that its hesitant leaders have not developed the tools for countering such pressures.”

It’s time to change the narrative and for the United States to step up and abandon its policies of praising Europe’s incremental progress, gently prompting it to action and insisting that it be a Euro only solution. Here, for example, is what a US Treasury official said yesterday: “We’re hoping to see accelerated European action over the next several weeks…” Be still my beating heart.

It's time for the US to express its dismay at the lack of progress and to begin corralling world resources to incentivize Europe to solve its problems

Several facts have led me to this conclusion:


Since the turn of the last century, Europe has never shown an ability to solve its problems without the United States.
Germany is economically the size of California, Texas and North Carolina. It cannot bail out Europe just as surely as those three states could not (and would not) bail out the United States.
The lack of trust in Germany among European countries means even if it could bail out Europe, it could never get political agreement for the necessary concessions.
Much needs to be done in Europe, but the focus for now needs to be on stability and the world should take a page out of the US response: Massive funds made available that never need to be used.
The US, despite its deficit problems, remains the only global power with the ability to rally the world toward a solution.

Collective action in times of panic is what governments are supposed to do. Be it response to a natural disaster like an earthquake or a financial crisis, governments should step up when the market or the individual can’t act. Two years of sclerotic responses by Europe, culminating in the latest panic, should be enough evidence that Europe doesn’t have the political means to solve its problems, even while it does have the financial means. As the TARP program showed (only when it comes to the banks) if you make enough money available quickly enough, you can stem the tide and it won’t cost you a penny.

So here’s a plan:

The US should lead the world in creating a large pot of money available to the Europeans to recapitalize their banks. A $2 or $3 trillion fund should get the market’s attention. Whatever the number, about one-third of this should come from the IMF. Two-thirds should come from Europe. European money should be in the first loss position, that is, the IMF, as is always the case, should not suffer a dime of losses until all the European money is wiped out. This money could be used as a sovereign rescue fund, to bail out sovereign institutions and for deposit insurance—all the programs that stanched the US panic. Whatever the use, it would not be available without a 2/3rd Europe portion and would be conditional—the way all IMF programs are—on European progress towards financial consolidation and fiscal union.

You can argue—and you would be correct—that this is Europe’s problem and they should pay for it. The place we are in now, however, is that we are all paying for it and waiting for European progress has proven a losing strategy. Even when they take action, like the European Central Banks’ Long-Term Repo Operations—they bungle it by saying “there won’t be a third” convincing the shorts that there’s profit in betting against the central bank. The key to collective action is to dare the shorts to come at you and ensure that it’s at least two-way trade, if not a loser for the challenger. Fed Chief Ben Bernanke and then Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson fundamentally understood this.

While Altman said the world needs European leaders to step up, my point is that the world needs its leaders to step up. The US remains the global financial leader and the international community will not step up without US leadership. That would mean US diplomacy to rally China and other emerging market countries to contribute (so far, we have been sort of indifferent). And that could mean commitment of additional US resources. I don’t think that commitment needs to be massive. There needs to be some symbolic amounts (we are already the largest fund contributor). But I believe it could be cost effective. It would assert US global leadership, and it could start a real process of solving Europe’s problems.

As for the domestic politics and a certain isolationist outcry, at this point, what’s the difference for President Obama? Europe, together with the anemic US recovery, already seems to be guaranteeing a one-term presidency. Asserting US economic leadership and financial commitment toward a European solution couldn’t make the financial situation much worse, and it just might make it better.




What is most ironic is that all these paragons of humanistic generosity (with other people's money of course) forget that this is precisely what the Fed has done each and every time Europe entered the toxic vortex of unsustainable debt: or otherwise we may have misunderstood what those hundreds of billions in Fed FX swaps to the rescue world's central banks (most recently here (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/here-comes-global-liquidity-bail-out)), or those trillions in secret Fed loans (http://www.bloomberg.com/data-visualization/federal-reserve-emergency-lending/#/overview/?sort=nomPeakValue&group=none&view=peak&position=0&comparelist=&search=)to each and every global bank by the Fed, actually represent...

Finally, here are Santelli and Liesman discussing this very topic.

Mouse
6th June 2012, 12:40 AM
This is a fucking joke, right?

Million dollar bonus?