Posted on 10/15/2010 6:57:02 PM PDT by blam
Krugman: We Need Up To $10 Trillion In QE
by: Cullen Roche
October 15, 2010
Paul Krugman thinks we need more QE. Not just a little bit more. About 8-10X more than current projections! Richard Koos head must be spinning. No, no, we havent failed, its just that we havent tried hard enough! Krugmans idea is the equivalent of a shopkeeper who thinks he can scream about the loads of new apples he is putting on the shelves while creating a stir in the marketplace that will ultimately result in higher sales. It wont work in the long-run.
Of course, this is all very ironic given Mr. Krugmans most recent commentary regarding Mr. Bernankes lecturing of Japanese officials:
American officials used to lecture other countries about their economic failings and tell them that they needed to emulate the U.S. model. The Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s, in particular, led to a lot of self-satisfied moralizing.
Mr. Krugman used to lecture the Japanese quite a bit. In a 1999 piece Mr. Krugman discussed the ways in which QE could help the Japanese economy. He wrote:
Quantitative easing: There has been extensive discussion of quantitative easing , which usually means urging the central bank simply to impose high rates of increase in the monetary base. Some variants argue that the central bank should also set targets for broader aggregates such as M2. The Bank of Japan has repeatedly argued against such easing, arguing that it will be ineffective that the excess liquidity will simply be held by banks or possibly individuals, with no effect on spending and has often seemed to convey the impression that this is an argument against any kind of monetary solution.
The Bank of Japan not only thought QE would be ineffective - they actually admitted as much (see here). Mr. Krugman goes on to argue that QE is essentially a non-event:
It is, or should be, immediately obvious from our analysis that in a direct sense the BOJ argument is quite correct. No matter how much the monetary base increases, as long as expectations are not affected it will simply be a swap of one zero-interest asset for another, with no real effects. A side implication of this analysis (see Krugman 1998) is that the central bank may literally be unable to affect broader monetary aggregates: since the volume of credit is a real variable, and like everything else will be unaffected by a swap that does not change expectations, aggregates that consist mainly of inside money that is the counterpart of credit may be as immune to monetary expansion as everything else.
Theres an obvious caveat thrown about in here expectations. Mr. Krugman seems to believe that we can talk inflation into the economy:
But this argument against the effectiveness of quantitative easing is simply irrelevant to arguments that focus on the expectational effects of monetary policy. And quantitative easing could play an important role in changing expectations; a central bank that tries to promise future inflation will be more credible if it puts its (freshly printed) money where its mouth is.
The bigger problem here is not quantity, however. Mr. Krugman appears to believe that the apple (and no, this apple salesman is not selling iPads unfortunately) salesman can rush into the marketplace and scream and wave his hands regarding the new stock of apples he has that is 10X larger than his old stock. Step right up ladies and gents! Fresh new apples right off the truck! Weve got 10X more than we had yesterday!. The problem with this thesis is that, while it might cause a stir in the marketplace (it might even cause a near-term boost in sales or commodity and equity prices if you will), ultimately, sales will be determined by the willingness of the consumers to purchase. Therein lies the weakness in QE. Because it does not alter net financial assets in the private sector there is no reason to believe that it will alter the real economy in the long-term.
Talking a big game about future inflation expectations is great and all, but talk is cheap. Ultimately, we need real positive change in the real economy more jobs, higher wages, higher net worth. QE doesnt provide that. You can alter public perception briefly by screaming in the streets, but ultimately, without some real world impact people just begin to ignore you. And this might just be the greatest problem with QE. Not only will it do little to nothing to solve the economic malaise, but it threatens the credibility of the Federal Reserve who has now gone all in on a policy tool that I believe Mr. Bernanke himself does not even fully understand. If it doesnt work the Fed will be viewed as the emperor with no clothes and that will be one more notch on devils tool of discouragement. And ultimately, that will have the exact OPPOSITE effect that Mr. Krugman and Mr. Bernanke are hoping for.
Krugman is a crazy person.
I mean like delusional, hallucinatory crazy.
I knew guys with D averages in econ that could outthink this idiot.
Krugman believes if we print enough money to give every a million dollars, we all be rich
Krugman needs 9 grams.
Krugman is nothing but an Obama/extreme leftist hack. Both of them would like it very much if $10T in federal debt were monetized just to say Obama got rid of the debt in time for the 2012 election. Who cares of the rest of “Rome” is buring to the ground, just like they did with the Porkulus.
I don’t even know why this man still has a job after being so completely wrong.
Neither Krugman nor Obama has a clue about what constitutes wealth.
“Krugman is a crazy person.
I mean like delusional, hallucinatory crazy.”
Good grief... I am one in favor of additional QE (fight off deflation which, according to the analyst at the Atlanta Fed is at the highest probability of occurring than any tome in the post war economy) but $10 Trillion? That’s just nucking futs...
Good grief... I am one in favor of additional QE (fight off deflation which, according to the analyst at the Atlanta Fed is at the highest probability of occurring than any tome in the post war economy) but $10 Trillion? That’s just nucking futs...
Who do you suppose is going to get the 10 trillion?
One definition of insanity: When faced with two options, one being lower taxes (especially on businesses) and less regulation and the other option being monetizing the debt with 10T dollars....you go with #2.
Krugman is an idiot. It’s always a safe bet to bet against him nomatter what he says.
What he’s REALLY saying is that we should renounce our debts, since most of it is in dollars - so by doubling or tripling the amount in circulation, you effectively reduce the real cost of the debt. It’s a form of default. Unfortunately, you also will cause imported goods (including oil) to double or triple in price, and domestic goods to increase by varying levels (related to their amount of imported content, starting from raw materials, and including labor). Savings accounts will be worth proportionally less, as will just about everything in dollars. People’s pay will not increase much, if at all, so basically we become a third-world country. On a personal level, ask yourself how you would do if everything you spent money on, say, doubled in price.
Having said that, this country will soon have to choose a path with regard to the debt and future obligations. We will either have to default (in some way), or actually try to pay down our debt. To do so will mean budget surpluses - and that means big changes - such as raising the retirement age to 72 years old, and quickly, for example. Or huge tax increases on the poor and middle class (like a VAT), as taxing the rich just slows the economy down and negates any benefits. They could (and may) go after private retirement accounts - with the worthless promise of an annuity. Or maybe some stuff that’s even worse, but I’ll leave that to your imagination.
$10 trillion??? Guy doesn’t have a clue of the money needed, try a quadrillion dollars to cover the debt involved. $10 trillion only covers interest.
Why do Mommy and Daddy spend $50,000 a year to have Biffy or Buffy go to Princeton to listen to total idiots like Krugman, or Blinder??
I’ll never know!
QE = stealth tax (and an especially regressive one).
Why does Krugman hate the poor?
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