A“We’ll Look at Everything”: More Thoughts
on Trump's $1 Trillion Infrastructure Plan
By Ellen Brown
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
December
12, 2016
To stimulate the economy, create new jobs and generate new GDP
requires an injection of new money. Borrowing from the bond markets or
off-balance-sheet in public/private partnerships won’t do it. If Congress
won’t issue money directly, it should borrow from banks, which create
money on their books when they make loans.
The Trump agenda, it
seems, is not set in stone. The president-elect has a range of advisors
with as many ideas. Steven Mnuchin, his nominee for Treasury Secretary,
said in November that “we’ll take a look at everything,”even the
possibility of extending the maturity of the federal debt with 50-year or
100-year bonds to take advantage of unusually low interest rates.
Steve Bannon, appointed chief White House strategist, seems to be
envisioning Roosevelt-style experimentation with whatever works. “We’re
just going to throw it up against the wall and see if it sticks,” he said
in an interview posted by Michael Wolff on November 18th:
Like [Andrew] Jackson's populism, we're going to build an entirely new
political movement. It's everything related to jobs. The conservatives are
going to go crazy. I'm the guy pushing a trillion-dollar infrastructure
plan. With negative interest rates throughout the world, it's the greatest
opportunity to rebuild everything. Shipyards, ironworks, get them all
jacked up. . . . It will be as exciting as the 1930s, greater than the
Reagan revolution — conservatives, plus populists, in an economic
nationalist movement.
That sounds promising. Obsolete systems will
go and will be replaced. But how to ensure that the replacements are an
improvement?
Another Look at the Trillion Dollar
Infrastructure Plan
Current proposals for funding Trump’s $1
trillion infrastructure project have been
heavily criticized. In October, his economic advisors
Wilbur Ross and Peter Navarro proposed funding the plan with tax
credits to private investors, who would then borrow from the bond markets.
An infrastructure bank tapping into private investment has also been
suggested. Both rely on public/private partnerships.
Michelle Chen, writing in The Nation on December 2, calls the plan “a
full on privatization assault.”
A February 2015 report by Public
Services International titled “Why
Public-Private Partnerships Don’t Work” maintains that public/private
partnerships are just another form of government borrowing, moved
off-balance-sheet to evade debt ceilings and deficit fears. The report
concludes:
[E]xperience over the last 15 years shows that PPPs
are an expensive and inefficient way of financing infrastructure and
diverting government spending away from other public services. They
conceal public borrowing, while providing long-term state guarantees for
profits to private companies.
PPPs also won’t work to fund the
sorts of unprofitable but necessary infrastructure projects that Trump’s
plan is supposed to include. As
observed on Bloomberg View on November 18th: The problem is that
pension funds, hedge funds and other private parties will only back
projects that produce a lucrative and steady stream of revenue to cover
operating costs, interest and principal on the debt, and dividends to
repay their investment. . . . Most of the physical structures that
undergird the economy -- for example, non-tolled roads, sewage-treatment
plants, train stations and schools -- produce little or no revenue. The
same is true for spending on routine maintenance. . . . Unglamorous
projects, like mass transit and removing lead contamination from drinking
water, would fail to attract investor interest and therefore wouldn't get
funding. . . . There's also the matter of capital shift, in which
companies behind already-planned construction seek infrastructure-bank
financing, resulting in no net new spending or hiring. Net New Spending
Requires Net New Money There would be no net new spending or new hiring
for another reason. Funding through the bond markets merely recirculates
existing money, transferring it from one pocket to another, without
creating the new money needed to fund new GDP. Government investment
“crowds out” private investment. So argues investment advisor Paul Krasiel
in a November 21st article titled “Do
Larger Budget Deficits Stimulate Spending? Depends on Where the Funding
Comes From.” He writes:
President-elect Trump’s economic
advisers have suggested that an increase in infrastructure spending could
be funded largely by private entities through some kind of public-private
plan. This . . . would not result in net increase in U.S. spending on
domestically-produced goods and services and net increase in employment
unless there were a net increase in thin-air credit. The private entities
providing the bulk of financing of the increased infrastructure spending
would have to get the funds either from some entities increasing their
saving, that is, by cutting back on their current spending, or by selling
other existing assets from their portfolios. . . . [U]nder these
circumstances, there would be no net increase in spending on
domestically-produced goods and services.
Krasiel concludes that
“tax-rate cuts and increased government spending do not have a significant
positive cyclical effect on economic growth and employment unless the
government receives the funding for such out of ‘thin air’.” So who
creates money out of thin air? One obvious possibility is the government
itself, following the revolutionary lead of the American colonists and
Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War. (See my earlier article
here.)
But the current conservative Congress is likely to
balk at that solution. A more acceptable alternative in that case could be
to borrow from banks. Ideally, this would be the central bank, since the
loan would be interest-free and could be rolled over indefinitely. But
borrowing from private banks would also work, since they too simply create
the money they lend on their books. (See
the Bank of England's 2014 quarterly report.) Krasiel writes:
[L]et’s assume that the new government bonds issued to fund new government
infrastructure spending are purchased by the depository institution system
(commercial banks, S&Ls and credit unions) and the Federal Reserve. In
this case, the funds to purchase the new government bonds are created,
figuratively, out of “thin air”. This implies that no other entity need
cut back on its current spending on goods and services while the
government increases its spending in the infrastructure sector.
Most New Money Is Created by Banks Richard Werner, Professor of
Economics at the University of Southampton in the UK, agrees. Werner
invented the term “quantitative easing,” but the central banks that
adopted the term did not follow his policy advice. They tried to expand
credit creation by padding the reserve accounts of banks; but the banks
did not follow through with new lending into the market. Werner’s
suggestion was for the banks to lend directly to governments. In a
July 2012 research paper titled “How
to End the European Crisis – At No Further Cost and Without the Need for
Political Changes,” he noted that a full 97% of the UK money supply is
created by ordinary commercial banks. That makes banks far superior to the
bond market in their ability to create the credit necessary to stimulate
the economy. To the objection that banks don’t have sufficient money to
fund governments, he wrote: That may be true in one sense. But this is
true for any loan granted by a bank. Which is why banks do not lend
money, they create it: banks are allowed to invent a deposit in the
borrower’s account (although no new deposit was made by anyone from
outside the bank) and since they function as the settlement system of the
economy, nobody can tell the difference between these invented deposits
and “real” ones. . Werner lists other advantages of governments funding
themselves by tapping bank credit lines rather than issuing bonds. One is
that the borrowing rate is substantially lower. Basel banking regulations
give governments the lowest risk-weighting (zero), so they can borrow from
banks at the favored-client rate; and the banks will be happy to lend,
because with zero risk-weighting they will need no new capital to back the
loans.
Another advantage: “Instead of primary market bond
underwriters, such as Goldman Sachs, earning large fees in cosy
relationships with semi-privatised public debt management agencies, banks
will be the beneficiaries of this business.”
Most important,
however, is that with the government as borrower, banks can create the new
credit necessary to underwrite new productivity.
For historical
precedent, Werner cites the system of short-term bills of trade known as “Mefo
Wechsel” issued by semi-public entities in Germany from 1933 onwards.
These bills were bought by German banks, increasing bank credit creation:
[T]he sharp German economic recovery from over 20% unemployment
in early 1933 to virtually full employment by the end of 1936 was the
result of the ensuing expansion in bank credit creation – in other words,
it was the funding of fiscal policy through credit creation that caused
the recovery, not fiscal stimulus per se. Japan’s experience of the 1990s
has proven how even far larger fiscal expansions will not boost the
economy at all if they are not funded by credit creation. [Citing
sources.]
Unlike borrowing money created by the Federal Reserve,
borrowing money created by banks would involve an interest cost. But as
Steve Bannon observes, interest rates today are at record lows; and
borrowing from banks would have the consummate advantage over borrowing
from the bond market that it would expand the pool of bank deposits that
are now officially counted as “money” in M2. This is what the Fed tried
but failed to do with its quantitative easing policies: stimulate the
economy by expanding the bank lending that expands the money supply.
For a compelling video presentation of these ideas, see Prof. Werner’s
Power Point given in Dublin in April 2016, linked
here.
A revolutionary movement needs a revolutionary financial
system. If everything is on the table, as Steven Mnuchin says,
the Trump team could consider funding its trillion dollar
infrastructure plan with newly-issued credit, whether created by the
Treasury or the central bank or through government credit lines with
commercial banks. An Andrew Jackson-style president could avoid adding to
the national debt altogether, by simply issuing an executive order to the
Treasury to mint a trillion dollar coin. As shown in earlier articles
here
and
here, this could be done without the need for congressional approval
and without triggering hyperinflation.
________________
Ellen Brown is an attorney and author of twelve books, including the
best-selling Web of Debt. Her latest
book, The Public Bank Solution,
explores successful public banking models historically and globally. Her
300+ blog articles are at EllenBrown.com.
She can be heard biweekly on “It’s
Our Money with Ellen Brown” on PRN.FM.