- Inflation is as inflation does
- Beware the Fed doublespeak about new electronic funds
- It’s still monetary inflation
Whiskey & Gunpowder
by Pete Kerr
Girardeau, Missouri, U.S.A.
by Pete Kerr
Girardeau, Missouri, U.S.A.
Digitizing Money Inflation Changes Nothing
In preparing for class this past spring, I encountered a video on the
Fed’s website that obfuscates the fact that the Fed prints money. The
six-minute video (posted in January 2011) features economist Steve
Meyer, senior advisor to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
In discussing the Fed’s most recent expansion, QE2, Meyer states,
You may wonder how the Fed pays for the bonds and other securities it buys. The Fed does not pay with paper money. Instead, the Fed pays the seller’s bank using newly created electronic funds, and the bank adds those funds to the seller’s account. The seller can spend the funds or can simply leave them in the bank. If the funds stay in the bank, then the bank can increase its lending, purchase more assets, or build up the reserves it holds on deposit at the Fed. More broadly, the Fed’s securities purchases increase the total amount of reserves that the banking system keeps at the Fed. Whether the Fed’s purchases lead to an increase in the amount of money circulating in the economy depends on what banks do with the new reserves and on what sellers do with the funds they receive. As it happens, the money supply has not grown unusually rapidly since the Fed began its first round of asset purchases. If anything the money supply has been growing more slowly than nor mal.
Any student of money and banking recognizes the sophistry in saying
that “the Fed does not pay with paper money.” If the video viewers are
the simpletons that Meyer presumes, he could have explained that the Fed
purchases bonds in much the same manner as you or I purchase items
using our debit cards. No paper money is involved; the ownership of a
deposit (call it a demand deposit, checkbook deposit, or debit-card
deposit) is transferred electronically. The difference is that while you
and I transfer existing deposits, the Fed has created new deposits
(i.e., “newly created electronic funds”).
These deposits can be converted to cash at any time. There is nothing
to prevent Meyer’s bond sellers from using an ATM like anyone else. The
electronically created deposits are turned into Federal Reserve notes;
ipso facto the Fed has paid with paper money.
Suppose, as Meyer suggests, that the bond sellers do not spend their
new deposits: “If the funds stay in the bank then the bank can increase
its lending, purchase more assets, or build up the reserves it holds on
deposit at the Fed.” Only in the latter instance does money creation
stop, and the expansion of money is then limited to the purchases from
the original bond sellers. The increase in excess reserves largely
matches the balloon in total reserves, suggesting that this has been the
case. However, if the banks make additional loans (i.e., purchase
additional assets), then new demand deposits are created. While the
ratio may be disputed, some of these new deposits will be exchanged for
paper money. Whether the Fed creates the new deposits or the banks
create the new deposits, there will be some conversion into paper money.
Meyer states,
More broadly, the Fed’s securities purchases increase the total amount of reserves that the banking system keeps at the Fed. Whether the Fed’s purchases lead to an increase of the amount of money circulating in the economy depends on what banks do with the new reserves and on what sellers do with the funds they receive.
This is true only if banks are the bond sellers and if they
sit on the proceeds from the bond sale. To the extent that the bond
sellers are members of the nonbank public (i.e., anyone other than the
banks, the Fed, or the US Treasury), the money supply, by any
definition, has increased. Furthermore, to the extent that the bond
sellers withdraw cash from their new deposits, there is an increase in
paper money.
While proponents of Keynesian economics might view this parsing as
nitpicking, the raison d’être of the video is to dispel the frequent
charge that the Fed is “running the printing presses” and courting the
attendant danger of price inflation.
Meyer recognizes this, saying that “If the Fed were to continue
buying securities even as banks eventually expand their lending then the
money supply could increase too rapidly and inflation could become too
high; Fed policymakers are determined to avoid that outcome.” While
Meyer is equally concerned about deflation, the purchasing power of
money (i.e., the price of money) takes a back seat to the price of
credit in Keynesian prescriptions. This attitude is best reflected in
the WGBH video “The Commanding Heights” when, reflecting upon
Depression-era financing, John Kenneth Galbraith said, “you didn’t worry
about accumulating debt, or, more precisely, you worried about it, but
did it anyway.”
Whenever the Fed purchases securities on the open market, there is monetary inflation.
This increase in the supply of the money commodity will decrease the
price of money (i.e., a decrease the purchasing power of money), ceteris
paribus. An increase in the demand for money by the nonbank public may
offset this increase in supply such that price inflation is not
reflected in any measure of prices (e.g., the consumer price index). But
as Bastiat would point out, the price inflation resulting from the
monetary inflation would have been higher had there been no increase in
the demand for money.
It is not the goal of this article to delve into the efficacy of
Keynesian prescriptions. But mainstream economists fall silent when
pressed on the Fed’s ability to control of the price of credit (i.e.,
interest rates). When it comes to the supply of credit, the Fed is a
small fish in a big pond. No one disagrees that the Fed can control the
supply of US dollars. At the same time, all agree that there is no
optimal quantity of money. As a medium of exchange, a small amount of
high-priced money can do the same job as a large amount of low-priced
money. Perhaps the best we can say is that the existence of “add a
penny, take a penny” cups suggests that too much money has been created,
while the chopping up of Spanish dollars into “pieces of eight” hints
that too little money exists.
Regards,
Pete Kerr
Pete Kerr is a professor of economics at Southeast Missouri State
University in Cape Girardeau. His work has appeared in various
publications including the Journal of Economic Education, Applied Economic Letters, and the Southern Economic Journal.
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