QE Is Dead… Long Live QE!

Guest Post by Bill Bonner, Chairman, Bonner & Partners


1107-blog

Source: Pixabay 

[N]othing is more essential than that permanent, inveterate antipathies against particular nations and passionate attachments for others should be excluded, and that in place of them just and amicable feelings toward all should be cultivated. The nation which indulges toward another an habitual hatred or an habitual fondness is in some degree a slave.

– George Washington’s farewell address

Dear Diary,

QE is dead. Long live QE!

This time it was the European Central Bank that bought the drinks. US investors bellied up to the bar and helped themselves; the Dow rose 69 points. Gold kept slipping.

Since the Fed ended its QE program, the Bank of Japan and the ECB have come forward promising more money for stock markets.

Draghi has faced increased pressure to do more to support a slowing euro-zone economy after the Bank of Japan last week unexpectedly announced it would add the equivalent of another $730 billion to its balance sheet.

And at the end of its two-day policy meeting yesterday, the ECB announced a plan to buy another €1 trillion in asset-backed securities. This will bring the ECB’s balance sheet back to 2012 levels.

Broken Promises

According to the standard narrative, the US is on the road to recovery, as Japan and Europe struggle.

Globalization? Forget it. The US has apparently “decoupled” from the rest of the world. And now Japan and the euro zone need more QE.

The story is appealing. But untrue. The US has not and cannot decouple from the rest of the world. The US is struggling too.

That was the real message from the midterm elections. The Democrats had promised a lot. They hadn’t delivered. The voters – whose real incomes have been going down since the turn of the century – knew the truth.

Now it’s the Republicans’ turn to make promises they can’t keep. They can’t keep them because it will take major changes to turn the economy around. Voters don’t really want any major changes. And the Republicans don’t plan to make them anyway.

Giveaways and special privileges have zombified the electorate. It doesn’t want anything different. It just wants more.

What would be different?

Easy: a flat income tax rate, a neutral foreign policy, and a balanced budget.

Any chance of those things? Did you hear Mitch McConnell promise them? Would a single member of Congress vote for them?

Russia has a flat income tax rate of 13%. Simple. Easy. Cheap to administer.

A flat tax would save billions of dollars and help businesses, investors and households. But Congress will never vote for a flat tax because it would mean giving up its power to hand out special favors.

That is what makes a national election at least as uplifting as professional wrestling – and not just because the contestants can be gaudy and breathtakingly stupid. Sometimes there’s something really at stake: the private interests of the elite against the public interest of everyone else.

A “Savage” Threat

As for a neutral foreign policy, we could just butt out and watch the Sunnis and Shia kill each other without our help or our heavy artillery. That might be good for them and good for us, but it would be bad for the security industry.

But wait… There is “a savage global terrorist threat that seeks to wage war on every American,” said Mitch McConnell and John Boehner in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal.

The terrorists don’t seem to be gunning for the Swiss.

Why not?

“Avoid foreign entanglements,” said Washington, thinking ahead. But today, the city named after him – and especially its northern Virginia suburbs – never met a foreign affair it didn’t want to get entangled in.

A balanced budget?

Oops… have we said something wrong?

The professional economists in the room are covering their mouths and suppressing giggles.

What a terrible mistake that would be, they will tell you. We have to encourage unbalanced budgets. We need to lure people to spend money – citizens, corporations and the government – not save it.

Ordinary Americans are wisely dragging their feet on this; US household net debt has gone down since 2007. But corporations and the government are doing stout service in the name of increasing debt slavery.

Why is it supposed to be a good idea to spend money you don’t have?

Well, there is something called the “paradox of thrift.” The paradox is that saving may be good for an individual, but it is bad for an economy as a whole.

When a single person saves, he improves his personal finances. But when many people save, consumer spending goes down. Then sales go down… profits go down… and the entire economy disappears down some uncharted rat hole.

Failed Policies

That’s why Martin Wolf said Japan has “too much” savings in Wednesday’s Financial Times.

Like so much of modern economics, the “paradox of thrift” is nonsense.

Savings gives families a cushion against disaster. It also gives them the capital they need to improve their standard of living.

On our farm, for example, we have a woodpile about 50 yards from the kitchen door. In the winter, we spend a fair amount of time just bringing in firewood.

So, we put aside some savings… and use the money to build a woodshed closer to the house. Time saved. We can live more comfortably (a higher standard of living) and we have time available to do other things (more household output).

The same thing happens in an economy. Money spent is money gone forever. But money saved and invested is money that increases our standard of living, raises wages and adds to our wealth.

The US, Japan and Europe are still stimulating consumption and discouraging saving.

In Japan, this has been going on for more than 20 years – with little to show for it aside from the world’s highest government debt-to-GDP ratio. These policies have failed everywhere. That is one of the reasons the American voter turned against the Democrats; he held them responsible.

But they are extremely popular with Wall Street – the single biggest source of funding for Mitch McConnell’s reelection campaign. Over the last five years, the Fed has added $3.6 trillion to the financial system, much of it passing through or coming to rest on Wall Street. Whatever campaign contributions it took to support the unlocking of the Fed’s vault must have been the most successful investment ever.

QE dead?

With that kind of adrenaline pumping in Wall Street’s veins, it will be amazing if we don’t have more of it.

Regards,

Signature

Bill

Further Reading: Bill delves deeper into the world of money, power and wealth in his new project, The Bill Bonner Letter. We’ll automatically add you to Bill’s mailing list when you pick up a copy of his latest book, Hormegeddon. To read a full review… and find out how to get access to Bill’s new project… follow this link.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
8 Comments
overthecliff
overthecliff
November 8, 2014 12:31 pm

Heroin(QE) is addictive and cannot be kicked by people who have no morals no character or princioles of any kind except getting more heroine(TPTB). We are locked in to QE until the whole system resets. Be prepared above all else be armed. Nadeem Walayat of Market oracle has had this QE pegged for years there won’t be an end to QE.

Don Levit
Don Levit
November 8, 2014 7:14 pm

I do not understand the logic, at least in a sustainable way, of encouraging consumption to boost GDP.
Savings intended to provide better, more efficient products and services in the future will add to GDP, probably multiple times what consumption spending will add.
Maybe not this year, but in a way that will really create positive market results.
Are people who think merely of consumption adding to present-day GDP economically crazy?
Don Levit

Steve Hogan
Steve Hogan
November 8, 2014 9:18 pm

Don, there is no logic behind the spend-now mentality. All of the insane policies being pursued around the world are intended to pull consumption forward from the future. It’s short-sighted and ultimately destructive, as it dwindles a nation’s capital stock.

Without capital, an economy treads water at best, and in the case of Japan in particular, it’s like a snake eating its tail. Eventually there’s nothing left to consume.

We’re well past the point of no return. Take whatever time is left before the mother of all resets and prepare yourself and your family for some very difficult times ahead.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
November 8, 2014 9:48 pm

The new world order, decided behind closed doors by financial wizards of oz, was doomed to fail. That so many ‘smart’ people engage in such a stupendous agenda is mind boggling.

Control freaks suck ass.

Don Levit
Don Levit
November 8, 2014 9:58 pm

Steve
I agree with you
However there are people who believe the US is so unique that we can never run out of capital stock
These are the people who believe money can be created from
nothing
On a recent blog with no comments allowed Cullen Roche at pragcap.com recently wrote that capitalism today is doing what is supposed to do: making capitalists rich at everyone else’s expense
This is a very intelligent man making an insane insight
With the wealth gap larger than that of the Great Depression Cullen and other influential People seem to be unconcerned
Don Levit

Mark
Mark
November 9, 2014 8:05 am

The terrorists don’t seem to be gunning for the Swiss.

Why not?

Because the elites have a good enough thing going in Switzerland.

They’d rather pay someone 30 dollars an hour to pick up there clothes.

overthecliff
overthecliff
November 9, 2014 9:38 am

I want to get a SNAP card and get some of my money back. How do I get free shit?

overthecliff
overthecliff
November 9, 2014 9:47 am

Crap I’ll never be able to fill out the SNAP application. I can’t even post on the right thread.