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From: Staley, Jes
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: 1/6/2012 12:43:49 AM
Subject:
"Last month, in a surprise move, Euro zone banks were given immense backing from their
Central Bank (the ECB) via a lending program that supports them with three year money. The
ECB and the Federal Reserve, despite different mandates, appear aligned and committed to do
all they can to find a cure for what ails us. Between our Fed's QE2 and twist and the ECB's
program backed by various types of collateral (even shorter term), the stage is set for an
unprecedented expansive push to get the world going.
While these Central Banks may have selected the only approaches available to address
respective regional needs, recent actions are but the first steps on technically
challenging paths that require dexterity and substantial follow through by government
policy makers to avoid major pitfalls and ensure long term success. With awe inspiring
fiscal deficits on both sides of the Atlantic, the Fed and ECB pursue strategies that can
result in a potentially dangerous mix if governments lose discipline and fail to address
budgets and debt levels in due course.
A frequent visitor to Germany, I hear three things when it comes to the Euro zone crisis:
First and foremost, there is a respect for and sense of accountability to all of Europe.
Second is the belief that individual countries must control their budgets. And third,
there is the conviction that the European Central Bank cannot be allowed to print money to
lend to sovereign governments.
Many Germans are terrified of runaway inflation because of what it did to their country in
the first half of the last century. Runaway inflation is a crushing, relentless burden on
society's most fragile. And it is set in motion at times when governments print money to
avoid difficult fiscal choices. I am very sympathetic to these concerns because of my
personal experience in the 1980s, living in Brazil and witnessing inflation's corrosive
effect on that nation.
It's said that the values of America's greatest generation were forged by the deprivations
they observed and suffered during the Great Depression. Brazilians in their 30s and older
vividly recall what it was like to live through an inflationary economic catastrophe caused
by heavy handed planners and government led profligacy.
Extraordinary yet understandable are the generations presently building Brazil (even their
recent, leftist, Presidents), who for the most part support fiscal and monetary views that
our great grandparents and today's conservative Germans would likely endorse.
Governments often avoid difficult choices. And with all that's gone on in the past few
years, it is amazing we can still find comfort in the assumption that, at crunch time, the
right people will be imbued with the necessary special perception and deftness to hit all
the correct buttons so everything works out just so.
The Federal Reserve purchased over $2 trillion dollars of US debt during the past couple of
years. Where does this money come from? And now, the Europeans are doing something similar
to finance local banks and their demand for Euro zone sovereign debt.
A week ago, the ECB ran its first auction of three year bank funding. More than 500 local
banks borrowed US$635 billion in a single day. Although a portion of this financing
replaced existing short-term funding, my guess is that, unchecked, ECB leveraging will grow
significantly in the coming months. Both Central Banks have already multiplied the size of
their balance sheets to record levels to get money to the public markets. At some point,
there will have to be a change or there will be consequences.
Paul Krugman once said: "Unsustainable situations usually go on longer than most economists
think possible. But they always end, and when they do, it's often painful."
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With the ECB liquidity actions and the Fed's push for growth by boosting demand, somewhere
down the road Central Bank heads will be called on to demonstrate that they can be "Masters
of the Universe". To be successful, they will need to act with uncanny precision,
independence and self-control to manage this unprecedented monetary expansion and avoid
painful, unintended consequences.
Low bond rates and continued fiscal deficits are a fragile equilibrium, however. And, in
the face of challenges like supply shocks or major sovereign downgrades, there will be
trade-offs and potential for mistakes.
The Fed and ECB have stepped up big time. However, to achieve sustainable growth, they, and
the rest of us, rely on government policy makers to follow through, abandon learned
helplessness and take action on the trajectory of spending, government efficiency and
reasonable tax policy.
It's a huge bet with an uncertain outcome. We are rooting for success. But as officials
grasp more levers to operate the world's complex financial machinery, we can only hope that
these managers and technicians do not overlook that homespun yet universal economic truth:
there is no such thing as a free lunch.
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ℹ️ Document Details
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0600ad7957e1e458e6d3d20d24caff748c59ac971f384a89cc655c2eac1fd0dd
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EFTA01301196
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2
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