The mainstream
media is hailing QE3 as a great victory for the U.S. economy. On nearly every news broadcast, the
"talking heads" are declaring that Ben Bernanke's decision to pump 40 billion
dollars a month into our financial system is definitely going to help solve our
economic problems.
The money for
QE3 is being created out of thin air and this round of quantitative easing is
going to be "open-ended" which means that the Federal Reserve is going to keep
doing it for as long as they feel like it.
But is this really good for the average American on the street? No way.
Despite two
previous rounds of quantitative easing, median household income has still fallen
for four years in a row, the employment rate has not bounced back since the end
of the last recession, and new home sales have remained near record lows. So what have the previous rounds of
quantitative easing accomplished?
Well, they have driven up the prices of financial assets.
Those that own
stocks have done very well the past couple of years. So who owns stocks? The
wealthy do. In fact, 82 percent of all individually held stocks are owned by the
wealthiest 5 percent of all Americans. Those that have invested in commodities
have also done very nicely in recent years.
We have seen
gold, silver, oil and agricultural commodities all do very well. But that also
means that average Americans are paying more for basic necessities such as food
and gasoline. So the first two rounds of quantitative easing made the wealthy
even wealthier while causing living standards to fall for all the rest of us. Is
there any reason to believe that QE3 will be any
different?
Of course
not.
This time the
Federal Reserve is focused on buying mortgage-backed securities. Yes, the same financial garbage that
helped cause the last crisis. The
Fed plans to gobble up tens of billions of dollars of that trash every month
from now on.
But will the Fed
pay true market value for those mortgage-backed securities? If you believe that, I have a bridge to
sell you.
So this is going
to be a huge windfall for some people, and that does not include
us.
Not a single
penny of this 40 billion dollars a month will go directly into our hands. The theory is that it will "filter down"
to us eventually.
But that hasn't
happened with previous rounds of quantitative easing.
So where does
the money go?
A recent CNBC
article discussed a very interesting report from the Bank of England about the
effects of quantitative easing....
It said that the
Bank of England’s policies of quantitative easing - similar to the Fed’s - had
benefited mainly the wealthy.
Specifically, it
said that its QE program had boosted the value of stocks and bonds by 26
percent, or about $970 billion. It said that about 40 percent of those gains
went to the richest 5 percent of British households.
Many said the
BOE's easing added to social anger and unrest. Dhaval Joshi, of BCA Research
wrote that “QE cash ends up overwhelmingly in profits, thereby exacerbating
already extreme income inequality and the consequent social tensions that arise
from it."
Wow.
Who benefits
from quantitative easing?
According to the
Bank of England, it is "mainly the wealthy" who benefit.
As I noted the
other day, Donald Trump said essentially the same thing when he told CNBC the
following....
"People like me
will benefit from this."
As I already
discussed above, a lot of quantitative easing money gets into the financial
markets where it pumps up the prices of financial assets.
But not all of
it goes there.
We were told
that the whole idea behind quantitative easing was that it was supposed to get
banks lending again, but this has not happened. Instead, banks are sitting on
unprecedented amounts of money.
Just look at how the first two rounds of quantitative easing have caused
excess reserves being held by banks to explode from close to zero to over 1.5
trillion dollars....
Yes, you read
that correctly.
The Federal
Reserve is paying banks to park money with them. So instead of risking their money by
lending it out to us, the banks can just park it at the Fed and make risk-free
profits for as long as they want.
Must be
nice.
If the Federal
Reserve really wanted banks to start lending again, all the Fed has to do is to
stop paying banks not to lend money.
But of course if
more than 1.5 trillion dollars suddenly started flooding into our economy
(especially after you consider the multiplier effect) we would be dealing with
nightmarish inflation unlike anything we have ever seen
before.
So if you want
to know why inflation was not even worse after QE1 and QE2 it is because more
than a trillion and a half dollars is being parked with the
Fed.
So did QE1 and
QE2 do any good for average Americans?
Let's go to the
charts.
This first chart
shows that the percentage of working age Americans with a job has stayed
extremely flat since the end of the last recession.
Does it look
like QE1 and QE2 made a difference to you?
I don't see any difference....
Okay, but what
about new home sales?
Did QE1 and QE2
help them?
Nope....
But the
mainstream media is still buying the baloney the Fed is
pushing.
The mainstream
media is promising us that home sales will soon rise and that lots of new jobs
are on the way.
Sadly, the truth
is that things have steadily gotten worse for average Americans over the past 4
years despite all of the money printing the Fed has been doing. If you doubt this, just read this
article.
But this is all that Ben Bernanke
seems to have left. When printing
money doesn't work, his answer is to print even more
money.
QE3 is likely to
cause agricultural commodities and the price of oil to rise even
further.
So unless you
can convince your employer to give you a corresponding raise, this is going to
mean that your paychecks are not going to go as far as they did
before.
And so that
means a lower standard of living.
In a recent
article, Bruce Krasting issued an ominous warning....
Higher inflation
expectations in the US will filter around the globe. Post the extraordinary
steps Ben took yesterday, people will be stocking up on “stuff”. Things like
rice, flour, cooking oil, soy, wheat and sugar. If you can eat it, buy it now.
It will be more expensive in a month. While your at it, fill up the gas tank,
the price is going up next week and every week for the next few
months.
In addition, the
policy of the Federal Reserve of keeping interest rates as low as possible is
absolutely crippling the finances of many retirees. Even the former president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Atlanta, William F. Ford, recognizes
this....
One of the
overlooked consequences of the Federal Reserve’s recent rounds of monetary
stimulus is the adverse impact those policies have had on the interest income of
savers. The prolonged and abnormally low interest-rate structure put in place by
the Fed has made life particularly difficult for retirees and others who depend
on conservative interest-sensitive investments. But the negative effects do not
stop there. They spillover into the overall performance of the
economy.
Just about
everything that the Federal Reserve does these days is bad for ordinary
Americans.
But the Fed is
not going to stop. The Fed is
addicted to money printing now, and as a recent article by Peter Schiff
explained, the Fed is just going to "up the dosage" until it gets what it
wants....
The Fed will try
to conjure a recovery on the backs of currency debasement. It will not stop or
alter from this course. If the economy fails to respond to the drugs, Bernanke
will simply up the dosage. In fact, he is so convinced we will remain dependent
on quantitative easing that he explicitly said he won't turn off the spigots
even if things noticeably improve.
This is complete
and total incompetence by Ben Bernanke and his cohorts over at the
Fed.
Economist Marc
Faber believes that Ben Bernanke should resign, and I agree with
him....
"If I had messed
up as badly as Bernanke I would for sure resign. The mandate of the Fed to boost
asset prices and thereby create wealth is ludicrous - it doesn’t work that way.
It’s a temporary boost followed by a crash."
And yes, a crash
is coming.
Bernanke can try
to put it off for a while, but every action he takes is just making the eventual
crash even worse.
And some in the
financial community clearly recognize this. For example, credit rating agency
Egan-Jones downgraded the credit rating of the United States to AA- on
Friday.
The primary
reason they gave for the downgrade was QE3.
Ben Bernanke and
the Federal Reserve are destroying the U.S. dollar and destroying our financial
system for a short-term economic sugar high.
It is utter
insanity.
That is why we
desperately need to get the American people educated about the Federal Reserve
system. It is at the very heart of our economic problems and yet neither major
political party is willing to blame the Fed for the problems that it is
causing.
A bunch of
unelected bankers that are not accountable to the American people are running
our economy into the ground and the American people do not even realize what is
happening.
Please share
this article with as many people as you can. Hopefully we can get the American people
to understand that more money printing is definitely not the solution to our
problems.
ISH/HJ