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Page added on September 16, 2012

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QE3: Quantitatively Easing America Further Into Inflation

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Everybody knew it was coming. With the economy continuing to founder, it was only a matter of time before Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve decided to turn once again — like the proverbial pig to its wallow — to printing money in a vain attempt to jolt the moribund American economy back to life. As with the first two such feckless efforts, they’re dressing this one in fancy verbiage — “quantitative easing” — that fools no one.

This third round of quantitative easing — QE3 for short — announced on September 13, is just the digital equivalent of printing still more money, money that banks and other financials will either hoard in vaults or pour into equities, driving up stock prices but doing little to enliven the economy as a whole.

In point of fact, this latest Fed “stimulus” will end up doing more harm than good, prolonging and exacerbating an epochal downturn that refuses to go away — because America’s financial policymakers refuse to let the Great Correction run its course. The latest Fed initiative will involve the monthly purchase of up to $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities by the Federal Reserve, which it will pay for by expanding the money supply. The Keynesian logic (if such it can be styled) of this move is that the Fed purchases will keep mortgage rates low and encourage skittish American homebuyers to jump back into the market. More home purchases will get money circulating again, encouraging people to go out and shop and start running up their credit cards like they did in the go-go days prior to 2008.

The reality, as only a central banker, buffered from real-world business by a comforting cocoon of academic abstractions, could fail to grasp, is that most Americans are too busy struggling to find or keep employment, pay down debts, and avoid foreclosure to give any thought to taking out a mortgage on a new McMansion. Meanwhile, banks and big business, the primary beneficiaries of the Fed’s latest credit-buying binge, are too worried about dark clouds on the near-term economic horizon — continuing fiscal chaos in Europe and the impending “fiscal cliff” chief among them — to loan out or otherwise invest the new money productively.

What is likely to result from QE3 is rising prices coupled with stubbornly stagnant unemployment figures. With gasoline again at record highs and grocery costs soaring, inflation is starting take a serious bite at the checkout counter. As Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak, told CNN Money recently, “I would love for Ben Bernanke to walk into a Wal-Mart and tell a person living paycheck to paycheck that high inflation will be good for them.”

And Boockvar is far from alone among investment professionals and economists in voicing concern over the latest round of quantitative easing. An August survey by CNN Money showed that a whopping 93 percent of investment strategists were opposed to QE3, and 77 percent of economists agreed with them. And as Martin Feldstein, Harvard economist and former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors under Ronald Reagan, has pointed out, what will happen when the Fed has to begin raising interest rates once again, as it must? How will the economy fare when borrowing once again begins to cost serious money? This will be a particular concern for the granddaddy of all debtors, the U.S. government.

In fine, the Fed is caught in a snare of its own devising, unable to resist micromanaging the money supply, and unable to exert any influence save for the worse. If interest rates are kept at essentially zero, stagflation will continue apace; if they are raised, already hard-pressed debtors, including, perhaps, the government itself, may be forced to abandon any lingering semblance of fiscal responsibility.

The New American



5 Comments on "QE3: Quantitatively Easing America Further Into Inflation"

  1. BillT on Sun, 16th Sep 2012 11:39 pm 

    Whatever happens, it will not be pretty. The destruction of America’s middle class is progressing nicely. How many retirees can now live off of their savings interest? How many can continue to survive with frozen Social Security and real inflation on necessities at double digits? How many of those still employed get double digit raises to keep up? Look around. What you see is the ghost of America past, slowly fading to vapors.

  2. DMyers on Mon, 17th Sep 2012 12:34 am 

    Ben, get in that helicopter and dump those dollars. I’m down here with open arms. Give a duffel bag full to me, not those bankers! I’ll go spend it. I promise!

  3. Norm on Mon, 17th Sep 2012 1:46 am 

    Yeah, bernanke just giving the money to his buddies at the banks. he not giving any money to people who would spend it.

    he also trying to make everybody live in a big house, as though thats what is needed.

  4. Arthur on Mon, 17th Sep 2012 8:54 am 

    But Norm, you can get money, via the banks, at very low interest rates. Bernanke is a proxy for the private (!) owners of the FED, who have the monopoly on printing dollars at near zero nominal cost ever since 1913. JFK wanted to end this scam, look what happened to him. Ron Paul wanted to abolish the FED too, but he was no president, so the media could ignore him. The FED has created trillions over the past few years and lend it, against interest, to anybody on the planet who was interested, leading to hansom profits for the owners of the FED, most of them jews. The money can be used and is used to buy the entire politics in Anglosphere. Or as Buchanan once put it: Congress is Israeli occupied territory. The dollar basically is a jew tax, imposed on the planet. No elaborate tax collecting system necessary, but instead milk the planet nice and clean via the interest mechanism, with interest payments done automatically. You pay it to your local bank, the local bank pays it to a bigger bank and this bank pays it to the FED. For them it is wealth created out of thin air, as Ron Paul and his libertarian coterie like to call it. This scam is going on now for more than a century. Henry Ford warned against it during the twenties, to no avail. The FED has inflated the dollar by a factor of 50 since, giving opportunity to unload trillions and trillions of inherently worthless paper dollars, on which interest payments are due TO THE END OF TIMES. Are we smart or what?

  5. DC on Mon, 17th Sep 2012 10:13 pm 

    He may be called helicopter Ben, but his copter only flies over 2 locations, Wall St. and what is that place called..the Hamptons? Its pre-programmed only to drop money at those 2 spots, and no where else. Course, the problem we all have isn’t money.There is lots of money around, can print it now easier than ever before. Its wealth in-equality amoung other things. Buying billions in worthless CDO’s will fix nothing. The financial ‘services’ sector needs to fall back to 5-10% of the total economy at MOST again. Not the amazing 40% it is now.

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