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This
article was originally given as a
talk at the Burton
S. Blumert conference on Gold, Freedom, and Peace, a
benefit for LewRockwell.com.
In
2002, then-Fed Governor Benjamin Bernanke burst into our
monetary consciousness with his printing
press speech. His fine
work earned him the honorary title “helicopter commander”.
While largely a background figure since then, his recent
appointment to succeed Alan Greenspan as Fed chair makes this an
ideal time to review Dr. Bernanke’s views on monetary policy,
and to speculate about what his chairmanship will bring.
Since
the Fed emerged from its near-death experience in the 70s, it
has largely been identified with the label “inflation
fighting”. Notably, Dr.
Bernanke’s research and speaking have dealt almost entirely
with the subject of deflation. While
his infamous address before the National Economists Club, titled
Deflation:
Making Sure “It” Doesn’t Happen Here (2002) has been
endlessly reported and debated, more revealing and less well
known are Dr. Bernanke’s many speeches on deflation between
1999 and 2004, and a series of research papers on the same
subject produced by the then-Fed governor and his colleagues.
I
have identified fourteen
papers and speeches dealing with deflation, seven by Dr.
Bernanke and seven by other Fed governors and staff economists. These
materials are all available for public download on the Fed’s
web site. To steal a line from columnist Dave Barry, I’m not
making this up. This
article will cover the most important points from these
articles. Since I had to
read all of these, I consider myself quite fortunate that there
none of the speeches was by Alan Greenspan.
These
writings deal with three themes: the menace of deflation, the
Fed’s strategy for preventing it, and their contingency plans
to fight it (should their prevention efforts fail).
While
Governor Bernanke is not the only member of the anti-deflation
wing at the Fed, the Chair apparent has emerged as the most
prominent advocate of this new agenda.
His leadership merits the name “Bernankeism” for this
policy program.
Upon
reading the source materials, three main tenets of Bernankeism
emerged. I will
describe them and illustrate with examples in the Fed’s own
words. The three are:
prevention is better than cure, learn the lessons of history,
and the possibility of “unconventional measures”.
The
first principle of Bernankeism is that it is better to prevent
deflation than to attempt a cure after the disease has set in.
The
basis of the Bernanke school’s thinking on deflation is the
standard (mainstream) macro-economic view that consumer spending
(not saving) drives economic activity, and that insufficient
consumer spending is the cause of recessions.
According to this view, when recession strikes, inflation
is called for.
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Inflation works in three ways. One,
by lowering real prices when nominal prices are for some reason
“stuck” at above-market-clearing levels; and two, and by
threatening a continued erosion in the purchasing power of cash,
inflation motivates anti-social cash hoarders to spend, thus
providing the missing stimulant to economic activity. A third is
through so-called “wealth effects”: when asset prices
inflate, people misperceive the inflation as true wealth and
then increase their spending.
Deflation
is so dangerous, according to Dr. Bernanke because it is a
self-reinforcing process that is very difficult to reverse once
it has begun. They start
from the true observation that when people spend less, prices
fall. They then reason
that when prices fall, people become increasingly reluctant to
spend because they anticipate that prices will continue to fall.
People start to hoard cash, planning to buy tomorrow when
things are cheaper. The
less people spend, the more prices fall, and the more that
people hoard. In the grip
of cash hoarding, according to Bernankeism, the entire economy
would spiral down as all spending ground to a halt.
This is why they think that deflation is like a chronic
illness.
For
an example of this view, I will cite the research paper titled Monetary
Policy and Price Stability (1999) (by Fed research
staffers):
If
economic activity is weak or contracting and interest rates hit
the zero bound, a dangerous dynamic can be set in motion.
Falling inflation, or even escalating deflation, would increase
real rates of interest. As this depresses aggregate demand
further, downward pressures on prices would raise real interest
rates further: The economy would potentially face a downward
deflationary spiral.
Governor
Bernanke and his accomplices are obsessed with something know as
“the zero bound problem”. Eight of the fourteen papers and
speeches that I examined deal with this problem either as their
main point or in passing.
The
zero bound comes about as follows.
The Fed commissars concern themselves largely with
controlling a single rate of interest, the Fed Funds rate.
This rate can be lowered only to near zero, but not to
zero or below, because no one would buy a bond that had a zero
or negative yield; they would hold cash instead.
This poses a problem for the central banker bent on
inflation: if the Fed Funds rate hit zero (or near-zero as it
did with Japan), inflation cannot be accelerated by cutting the
Fed Funds rate. In these
circumstances, the Fed’s inflation program would be
frustrated.
For
this reason, Bernankeism advises the central bank to avoid the
zero bound problem by creating a constant state of pleasant and
benign inflation of around 2-3%. This
will keep the
economy a safe distance away from the dangerous precipice beyond
which lies deflation, and gives the Fed room to cut rates.
For
an example of their thinking, I cite a speech titled An
Unwelcome Fall in Inflation (2003).
Dr. Bernanke states;
I
hope we can agree that a substantial fall in inflation at this
stage has the potential to interfere with the ongoing U.S.
recovery, and that in conceivable--though remote--circumstances,
a serious deflation could do significant economic harm. Thus,
avoiding a further substantial fall in inflation should be a
priority of monetary policy. To my mind, the central import of
the May 6 statement is that the Fed stands ready and able to
resist further declines in inflation; and--if inflation does
fall further--to ensure that the decline does not impede the
recovery in output and employment.
The
second principle of Bernankeism is that central bankers must
heed the lessons of history. According to the papers and
speeches, the Fed’s fear of deflation is based the two great
20th-century failures of central banks to inflate:
America’s
Great Depression and the
Case of Japan in the 90s.
Dr.
Bernanke accepts Milton Friedman’s theory of the Great
Depression. In the
Freidman view, a contraction of the money supply brought about
by loan defaults and then bank failures turned what would have
been an ordinary recession into the Great Depression.
This catastrophe could have been avoided had Fed inflated
sufficiently. The
Friedmanites depict a Federal Reserve System ideologically
paralyzed by the so-called liquidationists.
Our
next Fed chair, in a
speech given in the honor of Milton Friedman (2002),
expressed contrition on behalf of central bankers everywhere in
saying, “I would like to say to Milton and Rose: Regarding the
Great Depression. You're right, we [the Fed] did it [caused the
Depression]. We're very
sorry. But thanks to you
[Friedman], we won't do it again.”
The Fed has learned its lesson.
The
failure of Japan’s central bank to inflate its economy out of
the mess following the bursting of the 1980s stock and real
estate bubbles comes in a close second to the Depression in the
Bernanke manual for deflation fighters.
Four of the 14 Fed speeches deal mostly or entirely with
Japan’s attempt to inflate its way out of a series of
recessions that followed their bust.
Despite successive Keynesian-stimulus public-works
programs (that have nearly paved the entire island of Japan into
a parking lot), and several years of a near-zero
short-term interest rate, and a massive program of
foreign exchange intervention that has left the BOJ holding
hundreds of billions of dollars worth of US Treasuries, the BOJ
has been unable to generate much inflation at all.
To
cite one of many examples, in a speech titled Preventing
Deflation: Lessons from Japan's Experience in the 1990s
(2002) (a paper by four Fed staff economists) we read:
We
conclude that Japan’s sustained deflationary slump was very
much unanticipated by Japanese policymakers and observers alike,
and that this was a key factor in the authorities’ failure to
provide sufficient stimulus to maintain growth and positive
inflation. Once inflation turned negative and short-term
interest rates approached the zero-lower-bound, it became much
more difficult for monetary policy to reactivate the economy.
The
term “conventional measures” figures prominently in much of
the Fed’s discussion. “Conventional measures” is a term
from the central banker’s dictionary.
These measures consist of essentially two things:
controlling the short-term Fed Funds rate and purchase and sale
by the Fed of government securities by its so-called Open Market
Committee.
The
lesson of Japan, according to Bernankeism is that when the
powers of a central bank are limited to “conventional
measures”, the central bank may not be able to prevent
deflation, nor to fight it once it has taken hold.
In the Fed’s view, Japan tried
conventional inflation measures to their utmost.
However, because the deflation caught them by surprise or
perhaps due to the inherent limitations of conventional
measures, the BOJ’s efforts were too little, too late.
The
third principle of Bernankeism is the necessity of
“unconventional measures”.
Inflation
is always the answer (according to these thinkers), but, they
are afraid that it may nearly impossible to bring it about when
they most need it. Suppose
that the Fed found itself fighting a stubborn deflation.
If conventional measures had been tried and failed, and
with the US on the brink of following Japan down the road to a
long and painful deflationary morass, what would be the
alternative?
I
quote Dr. Bernanke himself from a paper titled Monetary
Policy Alternatives at the Zero Bound: An Empirical Assessment
(2004). When the
economy is at the zero bound, “a central bank can no longer
stimulate aggregate demand by further interest-rate reductions
and must rely on ‘non-standard’ policy alternatives.” What
does he mean by “non-standard”?
This is what passes for “thinking outside of the box”
among central bankers.
The
reader of the Fed’s papers and speeches will find a series of
increasingly exotic plans for the dollar.
From beginning to end, these methods range from the
merely unsound to the bizarre and terrifying.
The
paper titled Monetary
Policy and Price Stability (1999) introduces some of the
more mild of the so-called alternatives.
The first of these tools is to expand the menu of assets
that the Fed could purchase through its open market operations.
The Fed’s current structure limits its activities to the
purchase of short-term US Treasury bonds.
When the Fed can no longer lower short-term interest
rates, long term rates are the next obvious target. Among
their options for lowering long bond yields are: the purchase of
long-term US Treasury Bonds, writing interest rate option
contracts, purchasing
foreign exchange reserves (in an attempt to lower the exchange
rate of the dollar), and purchasing private sector securities
like stocks and bonds. The measures described in this paper
would involve massive Fed intervention in US financial markets.
If
the above methods were not sufficient to “simulate aggregate
demand”, the Fed could loan money into existence, accepting as
collateral almost any private sector asset whatever.
In the paper titled Monetary
Policy and Price Stability, we find:
A
central bank can also attempt to spur private aggregate demand
by extending loans to depositories, other financial
intermediaries, or firms and households. By making the loan, the
central bank turns an asset that may be illiquid for the lender
into a liquid asset. This may be particularly helpful in
spurring aggregate demand should the financial sector be under
stress and in need of liquefying its assets.
In
the United States, the Federal Reserve currently lends only to
depository institutions. But in contrast to the limited type of
securities the Federal Reserve can purchase, it can accept as
the security for a loan virtually any security that the Federal
Reserve Banks themselves deem acceptable. And in fact, the
Federal Reserve accepts mortgages covering one- to four-family
residences; state and local government securities; and
business, consumer, and other notes. These notes can be open
market securities such as corporate bonds and commercial paper
or can be commercial and industrial loans extended by banks, for
example.
The
measures described so far rely on loaning money into existence
in order to generate inflation. This channel depends on the
willingness of borrowers to borrow the cheap money that the Fed
prints. But what if
borrowers won’t borrow? Don’t worry, say the Bernankeists,
we will print the money and distribute it.
From
the paper titled Monetary
Policy When the Nominal Short-Term Interest Rate is Zero
(2005), in a section with the ludicrous title Wealth
Creation, we find:
In
ordinary circumstances, monetary policy exerts its stimulative
impact in part through increasing the financial wealth of the
public -- such as producing capital gains in bond and equity
markets. If, at the zero bound, the Federal Reserve had already
taken what actions it could to raise bond and equity prices, it
might look to other tools it has to increase the public's
wealth. One tool commonly attributed to the Federal Reserve, at
least in theory if not by the Federal Reserve Act, is that of
conducting "money rains."
Money
rains are a clean way to study theoretically the effects of
increases in the supply of money. In practice, it seems a bit
difficult to envision how the Federal Reserve could literally
implement a money rain - that is give money away either through
directly disbursing currency to the public or by disbursing it
through the banking system. The political difficulties that are
likely to arise from the Federal Reserve determining the
distribution of this new wealth would be daunting.
The
above plan aims to decrease the value of each dollar by
increasing the quantity in circulation.
But what if the Fed prints but people are unwilling to
spend? The next weapon in
their arsenal is to make money pay a negative rate of interest.
While that sounds difficult, in the paper titled Monetary
Policy in a Zero-Interest-Rate Economy (2003), two Fed
economists explain how:
No
one would be willing to hold any asset that pays a negative
nominal rate, as long as zero-interest money is available as a
store of value. The strategy for eliminating the zero bound,
therefore, is to make money pay a negative nominal interest
rate, by imposing some type of "carry tax" on currency
and deposits.
It’s
easy to envision such a system with regard to deposits at the
Federal Reserve or transactions deposits at banks; for the most
part, the technology to implement such a system is already in
place. A tax or fee on Reserve deposits of 1 percent per month,
for example, would mean that those deposits, in effect, pay a
nominal interest rate of roughly minus 12 percent.
The
technological difficulty lies mainly in imposing such a tax on
currency. In the 1930s, Irving Fisher of Yale University,
one of the greatest [sic] American
economists, proposed such a system, in which currency had
to be periodically ‘stamped’, for a fee, in order to retain
its status as legal tender. The stamp fee could be calibrated to
generate any negative nominal interest rate that the central
bank desired.
If
“aggregate demand” has not been sufficiently stimulated by
the above measures, the Bernanke Fed stands ready to play its
final card: the direct monetization of goods and services.
From the same
paper, under the heading The
Goods and Services Solution, we read:
Why
not have the Fed just conduct an open market purchase of real
goods and services? Even more so than exchange rate
intervention, this strategy would represent a direct stimulus to
aggregate demand.
As
posed, though, the strategy has a major drawback: it violates
the Federal Reserve Act. The Fed isn't authorized to purchase
goods and services, apart from those needed for the operation of
the Federal Reserve System.
The
strategy can be implemented, however, by coordination with
fiscal policy-makers. The Federal government, for example, could
purchase goods and services and finance the purchase with new
debt, which the Fed in turn would buy–in technical
terminology, the Fed would 'monetize' the resulting debt.
By
coordinating with fiscal policy, the Fed could even implement
what is essentially the classic textbook policy of dropping
freshly printed money from a helicopter.
My
final example is from a story that ran in The
Financial Times (March 25, 2002).
The paper reported:
The
US Federal Reserve in January considered a variety of
"unconventional" emergency measures to be taken if
cutting short-term interest rates failed to arrest a US
recession and prevent Japanese-style deflation. One of those
steps may have been a plan to buy US stocks.
According
to the reporter, an unnamed source was quoted as follows:
the
Fed "could theoretically buy anything to pump money into
the system" including "state and local debt, real
estate and gold mines - any asset".
These
“unconventional measures” all have two things in common:
one, that they are more inflationary than the conventional
central bank policies; two, that they are among the most absurd,
bizarre, and preposterous monetary crank schemes ever proposed
by anyone calling themselves an economist.
Not to mention that some of these plans are illegal
(according to existing Fed regulations), though who doubts that
in a crisis, this would be ignored?
Setting
that aside, the question remains: Do they really mean it?
Or is this just a lot of musings by academic economists
with time on their hands? Too
many boys with toys? Is
Bernankeism a serious plan? Or
is it an orchestrated propaganda campaign?
In
attempting to answer that question, we must not forget that
everything the Fed says must be looked at as propaganda.
In the realm of media relations there is surely no body
on the planet whose utterances are more scrutinized than the
Fed. The mere possibility
of the removal of the word “measured” from the statements
accompanying recent rate increases has spawned an entire body of
analysis and commentary. A Google search on “removal of the
word measured” yields over 500 hits.
The
Fed is well aware of this and it can only be assumed that
calculation plays a large part in their artifice.
Every statement by a Fed governor is without doubt
carefully crafted and vetted as a part of its overall message.
The Fed’s management of the media, dubbed by some the
“Open-Mouth Committee”, is a key part of the manipulation of
public opinion that preserves the Fed mystique.
Even
the Fed itself is not secretive about their use of opinion
management. One of
Bernanke’s papers, Monetary
Policy Alternatives at the Zero Bound: An Empirical Assessment
enumerates “using communications policies to shape public
expectations about the future course of interest rates” as one
of the three main types of non-standard policies.
And in Central
Bank Talk and Monetary Policy, we read:
Although
effective communication by the central bank is always important,
it becomes especially important when the rates are near zero.
Indeed, when the proximity of the zero bound prevents further
rate cuts to stimulate the economy, talking about future policy
actions may be one of the few tools at the central bank's
disposal by which to influence conditions in financial markets.
However,
because something is propaganda does not mean that it is a
deliberate untruth. As
Rothbard wrote:
To
achieve a regime of big government and government control, power
elites cannot achieve their goal of privilege through statism
without the vital legitimizing support of the supposedly
disinterested experts and the professoriat. To achieve the
Leviathan State, interests seeking special privilege, and
intellectuals offering scholarship and ideology, must work hand
in hand.
Austrian
economist Joseph Salerno has
written that modern macro-economics is a “fiat
profession”, a manufactured discipline whose purpose is to
legitimize inflation, and whose development has been funded by
the same state that benefits from inflation.
Seventy
years after Keynes, macro-economic inflationism has become so
entrenched in the economics profession that all
university-trained economists were taught this.
When false ideologies have been sufficiently entrenched,
propaganda no longer depends on deliberate lies.
Sincerely held beliefs by properly trained experts are
sufficient. Dr. Bernanke
is most probably a true believer.
Unlike Alan Greenspan, who got his start as a forecaster
and consultant before becoming a government employee, Dr.
Bernanke is a leading figure in the fiat macro profession, and
his eminence in this academic field pre-dates his appointment to
the Fed.
I
have no doubt that the authors of these papers would like to
implement their plans, if the conditions played out the way that
their theories describe. But
how likely is this to happen? Not
very. When the Fed first
started talking about deflation, interest-rates were at
generational lows and the economy was in the midst of a
post-bubble recession.
While
the media and much of the financial markets fell for what can
now be seen clearly in retrospect as a deflation scare, there
was no deflation. A few
Austrians and assorted contrary thinkers have pointed out that
the Greenspan era been one of rampant inflation.
The inflation of our time has produced asset bubbles,
rather than rising consumer prices. Even
at the time of the 2002 deflation scare, the housing bubble was
well underway. A recent Wall
Street Journal series Awash
in Cash: Cheap Money, Growing Risks,
documents the inflation of nearly all asset classes
around the world. The second
article in the series explains how timberland, formerly an
obscure and uncorrelated asset class, has doubled or in some
cases quadrupled over the last few years.
The
economic problem that has resulted from serial asset bubbles is
that the relative prices
of financial assets, compared to final goods, are unsustainably
high. This is
Greenspan’s “conundrum” of low long-term interest rates.
One way or another, there must be a normalization of
relative prices between credit-sensitive assets and final goods.
I will call this normalization a “financial asset
deflation”.
There
are two ways that a financial asset deflation could occur: one,
a deflationary crash in financial assets that would take down
stocks, housing, and blow the whole fiat money fractional
reserve banking system to smithereens; the other: an
accelerating consumer price inflation (or even hyperinflation),
in which everything we buy gets more expensive, allowing the
prices of end goods catch up with the elevated prices of
financial assets.
Some
within the Fed know that they must continue to inflate or face a
collapse. And when
conventional measures no longer work, they must be ready to
print money and buy the assets. No
one knows the score better than Alan himself, who has staved off
the collapse several times during his tenure by flooding the
markets with liquidity when the system threatened to unravel.
Greenspan’s
admission of the possibility of a financial collapse was first
revealed by Lawrence Parks in his book What
Does Alan Greenspan Really Think? Greenspan’s knowledge is
also proved by the release, after the five-year sliding wall, of
late 90s Fed meeting minutes. FOMC
transcripts from the 1996 meetings show that, contrary to Greenspan’s
statements at the time to the effect that a bubble cannot be
identified until it has burst, the Greenspan Fed was
aware that the stock market was in a bubble.
Greenspan
for years publicly
denied that there could even be such a thing as a housing bubble,
relying on the reasoning that housing is illiquid and all
housing markets are local in nature.
A recent New York Times story titled Fed
Debates Pricking Housing Bubble, reports
that some Fed governors have publicly dropped oblique hints that
they know that the recent speculative blow-off in housing is
driven by Fed’s own low interest rates.
I
believe that the anti-deflation wing headed by Bernanke is
telling part of the truth, but with an element of misdirection.
Yes, they are worried about deflation, but relevant
comparison is to Argentina, not Japan.
Yes, they must stand ready to monetize anything and
everything, but they are far more worried about collapsing asset
bubbles than slowly falling goods and services prices.
There
has already been speculation that anomalously large bond
purchases from Caribbean sources that have shown up in this
year’s flow of funds data from the Fed are a cover for Fed
purchases of treasury debt.
Yet
they cannot openly state that they are playing this game without
risking a run on the dollar and a collapsing bond market.
The fear of deflation enables them to keep the game
going, at least for a while. And
who better to do this than Chairman Bernanke.

© 2005 Robert Blumen
Editorial Archive
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Robert
Blumen is an independent software developer based in San Francisco,
California
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