Deficit Terrorists Strike in UK: Is US Next?
By Ellen Brown
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 21, 2010
Last week, England’s new government said it
would abandon the previous government’s stimulus
program and introduce the austerity measures required to
pay down its estimated $1 trillion in debts. That
means cutting public spending, laying off workers,
reducing consumption, and increasing unemployment and
bankruptcies. It also means shrinking the money
supply, since virtually all “money” today originates as
loans or debt. Reducing the outstanding debt will
reduce the amount of money available to pay workers and
buy goods, precipitating depression and further economic
pain.
The financial sector
has sometimes been accused of shrinking the money supply
intentionally, in order to increase the demand for its
own products. Bankers are in the debt business,
and if governments are allowed to create enough money to
keep themselves and their constituents out of debt,
lenders will be out of business. The central banks
charged with maintaining the banking business therefore
insist on a “stable currency” at all costs, even if it
means slashing services, laying off workers, and soaring
debt and interest burdens. For the financial
business to continue to boom, governments must not be
allowed to create money themselves, either by printing
it outright or by borrowing it into existence from their
own government-owned banks.
Today this
financial goal has largely been achieved. In most
countries,
95% or more of the money supply is created by banks
as loans (or “credit”). The small portion issued
by the government is usually created just to replace
lost or worn out bills or coins, not to fund new
government programs. Early in the twentieth
century, about 30% of the British currency was issued by
the government as pounds sterling or coins, versus only
about 3% today. In the U.S., only coins are now
issued by the government. Dollar bills (Federal
Reserve Notes) are issued by the Federal Reserve, which
is
privately owned by a consortium of banks.
Banks advance the principal but not the interest
necessary to pay off their loans; and since bank loans
are now virtually the only source of new money in the
economy, the interest can only come from additional
debt. For the banks, that means business continues
to boom; while for the rest of the economy, it means
cutbacks, belt-tightening and austerity. Since
more must always be paid back than was advanced as
credit, however, the system is inherently unstable.
When the debt bubble becomes too large to be sustained,
a recession or depression is precipitated, wiping out a
major portion of the debt and allowing the whole process
to begin again. This is called the “business
cycle,” and it causes markets to vacillate wildly,
allowing the monied interests that triggered the cycle
to pick up real estate and other assets very cheaply on
the down-swing.
The financial sector,
which controls the money supply and can easily capture
the media, cajoles the populace into compliance by
selling its agenda as a “balanced budget,” “fiscal
responsibility,” and saving future generations from a
massive debt burden by suffering austerity measures now.
Bill Mitchell, Professor of Economics at the University
of New Castle in Australia, calls this “deficit
terrorism.” Bank-created debt becomes more
important than schools, medical care or infrastructure.
Rather than “providing for the general welfare,” the
purpose of government becomes to maintain the value of
the investments of the government’s creditors.
England Dons the Hair Shirt
England’s new
coalition government has just bought into this agenda,
imposing on itself the sort of fiscal austerity that the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) has long imposed on
Third World countries, and has more recently imposed on
European countries, including Latvia, Iceland, Ireland
and Greece. Where those countries were
forced into compliance by their creditors, however,
England has tightened the screws voluntarily, having
succumbed to the argument that it must pay down its
debts to maintain the market for its bonds.
Deficit hawks point ominously to Greece, which has been
virtually squeezed out of the private bond market
because nobody wants its bonds. Greece has been
forced to borrow from the IMF and the European Monetary
Union (EMU), which have imposed draconian austerity
measures as conditions for the loans. Like a Third
World country owing money in a foreign currency, Greece
cannot print Euros or borrow them from its own central
bank, since those alternatives are forbidden under EMU
rules. In a desperate attempt to save the Euro,
the European Central Bank recently bent the rules by
buying Greek bonds on the secondary market rather than
lending to the Greek government directly, but the ECB
has said it would “sterilize” these purchases by
withdrawing an equivalent amount of liquidity from the
market, making the deal a wash. (More on that
below.)
Greece is stuck in the debt trap, but
the UK is not a member of the EMU. Although it
belongs to the European Union, it still trades in its
own national currency, which it has the power to issue
directly or to borrow from its own central bank.
Like all central banks, the Bank of England is a “lender
of last resort,” which means it can create money on its
books without borrowing first. The government owns
the Bank of England, so loans from the bank to the
government would effectively be interest-free; and as
long as the Bank of England is available to buy the
bonds that don’t get sold on the private market, there
need be no fear of a collapse of the value of the UK’s
bonds.
The “deficit terrorists,” however, will
have none of this obvious solution, ostensibly because
of the fear of “hyperinflation.” A June 9 guest
post by “Cameroni” on Rick Ackerman’s financial website
takes this position. Titled “Britain
Becomes the First to Choose Deflation,” it begins:
“David Cameron’s new Government in England
announced Tuesday that it will introduce austerity
measures to begin paying down the estimated one trillion
(U.S. value) in debts held by the British Government. .
. . [T]hat being said, we have just received the signal
to an end to global stimulus measures -- one that puts a
nail in the coffin of the debate on whether or not
Britain would ‘print’ her way out of the debt crisis. .
. . This is actually a celebratory moment although it
will not feel like it for most. . . . Debts will have to
be paid. . . . [S]tandards of living will decline . . .
[but] it is a better future than what a hyperinflation
would bring us all.”
Hyperinflation or
Deflation?
The dreaded threat of hyperinflation
is invariably trotted out to defeat proposals to solve
the budget crises of governments by simply issuing the
necessary funds, whether as debt (bonds) or as currency.
What the deficit terrorists generally fail to mention is
that before an economy can be threatened with
hyperinflation, it has to pass through simple inflation;
and governments everywhere have failed to get to that
stage today, although trying mightily. Cameroni
observes:
“[G]overnments all over the globe
have already tried stimulating their way out of the
recent credit crisis and recession to little avail. They
have attempted fruitlessly to generate even mild
inflation despite huge stimulus efforts and pointless
spending.”
In fact, the money supply has been
shrinking at an alarming rate. In a May 26 article
in The Financial Times titled “US Money Supply Plunges
at 1930s Pace as Obama Eyes Fresh Stimulus,”
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard writes:
“The stock
of money fell from $14.2 trillion to $13.9 trillion in
the three months to April, amounting to an annual rate
of contraction of 9.6pc. The assets of institutional
money market funds fell at a 37pc rate, the sharpest
drop ever.
“’It’s frightening,’ said Professor
Tim Congdon from International Monetary Research. ‘The
plunge in M3 has no precedent since the Great
Depression. The dominant reason for this is that
regulators across the world are pressing banks to raise
capital asset ratios and to shrink their risk assets.
This is why the US is not recovering properly,’ he
said.”
Too much money can hardly have been
pumped into an economy in which the money supply is
shrinking. But Cameroni concludes that since the
stimulus efforts have failed to put needed money back
into the money supply, the stimulus program should be
abandoned in favor of its diametrical opposite --
belt-tightening austerity. He admits that the
result will be devastating:
“[I]t will mean a
long, slow and deliberate winding down until solvency is
within reach. It will mean cities, states and counties
will go bankrupt and not be rescued. And it will
be painful. Public spending will be cut. Consumption
could decline precipitously. Unemployment numbers may
skyrocket and bankruptcies will stun readers of daily
blogs like this one. It will put the brakes on growth
around the world. . . . The Dow will crash and there
will be ripple effects across the European union and
eventually the globe. . . . Aid programs to the Third
world will be gutted, and I cannot yet imagine the
consequences that will bring to the poorest people on
earth.”
But it will be “worth it,” says Cameroni,
because it beats the inevitable hyperinflationary
alternative, which “is just too distressing to
consider.”
Hyperinflation, however, is a
bogus threat, and before we reject the stimulus idea, we
might ask why these programs have failed. Perhaps
because they have been stimulating the wrong sector of
the economy, the non-producing financial middlemen who
precipitated the crisis in the first place.
Governments have tried to “reflate” their flagging
economies by throwing budget-crippling sums at the
banks, but the banks have not deigned to pass those
funds on to businesses and consumers as loans.
Instead, they have used the cheap funds to speculate,
buy up smaller banks, or buy safe government bonds,
collecting a tidy interest from the very taxpayers who
provided them with this cheap bailout money.
Indeed, banks are required by their business models to
pursue those profits over risky loans. Like all
private corporations, they are there not to serve the
public interest but to make money for their
shareholders.
Seeking Solutions
The
alternative to throwing massive amounts of money at the
banks is not to further starve and punish businesses and
individuals but to feed some stimulus to them directly,
with public projects that provide needed services while
creating jobs. There are many successful
precedents for this approach, including the public
works programs of England, Canada, Australia and New
Zealand in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, which were funded
with government-issued money either borrowed from their
central banks or printed directly. The Bank of
England was nationalized in 1946 by a strong Labor
government that funded the National Health Service, a
national railway service, and many other cost-effective
public programs that served the economy well for decades
afterwards.
ADVANCE \u 5
In Australia during the
current crisis, a stimulus package in which a cash
handout was given directly to the people has worked
temporarily, with no negative growth (recession) for two
quarters, and unemployment held at around 5%. The
government, however, borrowed the extra money privately
rather than issuing it publicly, out of a misguided fear
of hyperinflation. Better would have been to give
interest-free credit through its own government-owned
central bank to individuals and businesses agreeing to
invest the money productively.
The
Chinese have done better, expanding their economy at
over 9% throughout the crisis by creating extra money
that was mainly invested in public infrastructure.
The EMU countries are trapped in a deadly
pyramid scheme, because they have abandoned their
sovereign currencies for a Euro controlled by the ECB.
Their deficits can only be funded with more debt, which
is interest-bearing, so more must always be paid back
than was borrowed. The ECB could provide some
relief by engaging in “quantitative easing” (creating
new Euros), but it has insisted it would do so only with
“sterilization” – taking as much money out of the system
as it puts back in. The EMU model is
mathematically unsustainable and doomed to fail unless
it is modified in some way, either by returning economic
sovereignty to its member countries, or by consolidating
them into one country with one government.
A third possibility, suggested by Professor Randall Wray
and Jan Kregel, would be to assign the ECB the role of “employer
of last resort,” using “quantitative easing” to hire
the unemployed at a basic wage.
A fourth
possibility would be for member countries to set up
publicly-owned “development banks” on the
Chinese model. These banks could issue credit
in Euros for public projects, creating jobs and
expanding the money supply in the same way that private
banks do every day when they make loans. Private
banks today are limited in their loan-generating
potential by the capital requirement, toxic assets
cluttering their books, a lack of creditworthy
borrowers, and a business model that puts shareholder
profit over the public interest. Publicly-owned
banks would have the assets of the state to draw on for
capital, a clean set of books, a mandate to serve the
public, and a creditworthy borrower in the form of the
nation itself, backed by the power to tax.
Unlike the EMU countries, the governments of England,
the United States, and other sovereign nations can still
borrow from their own central banks, funding much-needed
programs essentially interest-free. They can but
they probably won’t, because they have been deceived
into relinquishing that sovereign power to an
overreaching financial sector bent on controlling the
money systems of the world privately and autocratically.
Professor Carroll Quigley, an insider groomed by the
international bankers, revealed this plan in 1966,
writing in Tragedy and Hope:
“[T]he powers of
financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim,
nothing less than to create a world system of financial
control in private hands able to dominate the political
system of each country and the economy of the world as a
whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist
fashion by the central banks of the world acting in
concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent
private meetings and conferences.”
Just as the
EMU appeared to be on the verge of achieving that goal,
however, it has started to come apart at the seams.
Sovereignty may yet prevail.
Ellen Brown,