April 22, 2020
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
Deflation is here, and it is a real threat to any economic recovery from the virus
The price of a barrel of oil
briefly fell below zero dollars this week, demonstrating clearly what happens
when there is no longer demand for a product or commodity, as tens of millions
of Americans are leaving cars in their driveways and airlines are largely grounded.
All around the world, it’s much the same situation as the global economy has
collapsed in the wake of the Chinese coronavirus pandemic. In that environment,
prices fall, and sometimes they can fall all the way to zero with a sufficient collapse of demand. In the case
of oil, there’s simply nowhere left to store the oil being pumped out the
ground and as it is, it will take months or longer to clear existing
inventories. Overall, last month consumer prices fell by 0.4 percent led by the
drop in energy prices.The collapse of demand appears destined to affect many
sectors of the economy. Making matters worse, the dollar was already quite
strong relative to other currencies when the pandemic-induced recession began.
And, in March, the Trade Weighted U.S. Dollar Index rose to an all-time high as
the world poured into U.S. treasuries in a flight to safety. This might be the
biggest warning light of all. The Great Depression dragged on for as long as it
did because of the failure to understand the unintended consequences of keeping
the dollar exchange rate to gold too high as other economies engaged in massive
competitive devaluation and retired the interwar gold standard. Today, if the
Fed refuses to intervene to keep the dollar’s value stable — again, it just hit
an all-time high — President Donald Trump needs to pay attention. The President
could direct Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to work with the Federal Reserve
Board of Governors to engineer a devaluation, using the boosted the Exchange
Stabilization Fund to buy foreign exchanges and then selling them directly to
the Fed. Or get the Fed to unlock its own exchange stabilization powers and
conduct those operations directly. As long as the dollar keeps rising, based on
past experience, unemployment could keep increasing — even after states reopen
their economies.
Video: Texas car lot owner is happy Governor Abbott wants economy open again
Texas Governor Greg Abbott is
getting ready to reopen Texas, and for small businesses it could not come a
moment sooner.
Video: Saving lives is way more important than saving the media's anti-Trump narrative on the virus
The media cares more about
saving their anti-Trump narrative than all the lives President Donald Trump has
helped save in the federal government’s coronavirus response.
Failure to reopen economy causes death and destruction also
Americans for Limited
Government President Rick Manning: “In nine days, many governors across the
nation are making plans on how to reopen all or part of their economies.
Predictably, some worry that moving away from strict social distancing policies
will have negative health consequences. What these people miss is that these
distancing policies bring forth known problems associated with extreme poverty,
including increased suicides, depression and substance abuse. On the substance
abuse front alone, we know that 70,000 a year were losing their lives to opioid
overdoses alone, and that that number has been significantly cut over the past
couple of years. We also know that there were 40,000 more suicides than
expected during the Great Recession, and that the UN just released a report
stating that hundreds of thousands of children will die due to the increased
poverty created in the economic shutdown. Let's be clear, this is not an easy
situation, but when 5.5 million Americans are filing for unemployment claims on
average the past four weeks, with no end in sight, the personal and national
devastation wrought by the social distancing cure is not sustainable and the
President and our nation's governors must act to balance. The President took a
great step forward in providing guidance on reopening America state by state,
and it is expected he will continue to provide the best ideas available on ways
private businesses can meet the needs of their employees and customers in these
unique times. One relatively undiscussed result of the private sector shutdown
is that local, state and federal governments will all see dramatic revenue
losses from staying shut down too long at a time when their expenditures are
increased. Recognizing this early, if states and local governments are
unwilling to lay off non-essential government employees before the situation
becomes critical, then aggressively reopening is the only alternative."
Deflation is here, and it is a real threat to any economic recovery from the virus
By Robert Romano
The price of a barrel of oil briefly fell below zero dollars this week, demonstrating clearly what happens when there is no longer demand for a product or commodity, as tens of millions of Americans are leaving cars in their driveways and airlines are largely grounded. All around the world, it’s much the same situation as the global economy has collapsed in the wake of the Chinese coronavirus pandemic.
In that environment, prices fall, and sometimes they can fall all the way to zero with a sufficient collapse of demand. In the case of oil, there’s simply nowhere left to store the oil being pumped out the ground and as it is, it will take months or longer to clear existing inventories.
Overall, last month consumer prices fell by 0.4 percent led by the drop in energy prices.
This is a flashing red light warning of further economic calamity. Oil is just one example, but a collapse of demand appears destined to affect many sectors of the economy. The one I’m the most worried about at the moment is housing given how catastrophic it was the last time prices began falling on home prices. How many homes are being sold right now? What should happen to prices if there is no demand for new homes because unemployment lasts a lot longer than we would like?
In the last financial crisis, suddenly, homeowners owed more on their houses than they those houses could be sold for at the same time they were losing their jobs. Many just stopped paying their mortgages. Financial institutional holders of mortgage securities then stopped receiving payments of principal and interest, and they couldn’t afford to service their own debts and credit markets began seizing up.
8.3 million jobs were lost in that recession, with 6 million foreclosures between 2007 and 2010. Already at least 22 million Americans have lost their jobs in just a month, and it looks like that number will only continue getting worse until states begin reopening over the next couple of months as the virus wanes.
Making matters worse, the dollar was already quite strong relative to other currencies when the pandemic-induced recession began. And, in March, the Trade Weighted U.S. Dollar Index rose to an all-time high as the world poured into U.S. treasuries in a flight to safety. This might be the biggest warning light of all.
The Great Depression dragged on for as long as it did because of the failure to understand the unintended consequences of keeping the dollar exchange rate to gold too high as other economies engaged in massive competitive devaluation and retired the interwar gold standard.
Then as now, deflation was the problem amid collapsed demand, and as long as prices kept falling, unemployment kept on rising. Deflation began after World War I, stopped in the 1920s before beginning anew in 1927 and then went nuts in 1930. Inflation was marked at -2.7 percent in 1930, -8.9 percent in 1931, -10.3 percent in 1932 and -5.2 percent in 1933. As that occurred, unemployment rose dramatically, hitting 11.2 percent by the end of 1930, up to 19.2 percent by the end of 1931, up to 25 percent in 1932 and peaked in March 1933 at 25.4 percent.
Something quite similar already appears to be happening here.
It was not until 1933 when Franklin Roosevelt ended the interwar gold standard that unemployment finally began collapsing down to 11 percent by 1937 before spiking again in the 1937-38 double dip recession as deflation started up again. Ultimately, the ongoing problems were not fully alleviated until the massive mobilization of World War II.
Today we are arguably in the same exact position or maybe even worse with the global economy effectively shut down. The dollar is way too strong, unemployment is rising faster than at any time in history and it is unclear how many businesses will be able to survive being shuttered for more than a month, with states not expected to begin to fully reopen for a few weeks longer. Amid all the uncertainty, financial institutions and central banks are stocking up on U.S. treasuries, which has the perverse effect of making the dollar even stronger.
To combat the deflation, the Treasury could use the CARE Act’s increased Exchange Stabilization Fund, which was boosted to $500 billion from $90 billion to support small and large business lending by also using to quarantine foreign currencies and weaken the dollar relative to other currencies. How?
According to an Aug. 21, 2019 report from the Congressional Research Service, “In addition to its initial capitalization ($2 billion), Congress allowed the ESF to remain outside of annual appropriations. Instead, the ESF retains all of the earnings from its operations. The main limitation on the ESF’s ability to intervene to reduce the value of the dollar is the amount of dollar-denominated assets in its portfolio... In order to secure more dollars for foreign exchange operations, Treasury could (1) seek an additional appropriation from Congress;(2) monetize its holdings of IMF special drawing rights (SDR, an international reserve asset), valued at $50 billion, by temporarily selling them to the Fed; or (3) engage in a currency swap arrangement called ‘warehousing,’ in which the ESF sells foreign currency to the Fed and agrees to repurchase it at a later date, during which the Fed credits dollar reserves to the ESF for the duration of the swap.”
In addition, the Fed could help a lot, as it has all the same powers as the Exchange Stabilization Fund, but without limits. Per the Congressional Research Service, “The Fed can also purchase foreign currencies to reduce the value of the dollar; but unlike the Treasury, it is not limited in how much it can purchase. Because the Fed controls the money supply, it has the option to create bank reserves as desired to purchase foreign currencies.”
Meaning, the Fed could act on its own since the Treasury is currently backstopping American businesses, and could help devalue the dollar from its current all-time highs.
The Fed has already cut interest rates to zero, which should also help in principle, per the Congressional Research Service: “In addition to foreign exchange intervention, economic theory predicts that short-term interest rates, the Fed’s main policy tool, also affect the value of the dollar. The value of the dollar is determined by the relative demand for U.S. goods and services and U.S. assets. In practice, capital flows dwarf trade flows, so the value of the dollar is particularly sensitive to interest rates in the United States relative to the rest of the world. Foreign capital can only flow into the country on net (i.e., when foreign purchases of U.S. securities or physical capital exceed U.S. purchases of foreign securities or capital) through the exchange of foreign currency for dollars. Theory predicts that if the Fed lowers interest rates relative to the rest of the world, it would reduce the demand for U.S. capital, thereby reducing the value of the dollar. This is one of the standard channels through which lower interest rates stimulate the economy. Although U.S. interest rates are currently low, they are even lower for many major trading partners.”
But if the Fed refuses to intervene to keep the dollar’s value stable — again, it just hit an all-time high — President Donald Trump needs to pay attention. Congress has already acted to increase the size of the Treasury Exchange Stabilization Fund but with the program currently invested in payroll protection, its ability to intervene in foreign exchange markets is limited at the moment.
The President could direct Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to work with the Federal Reserve Board of Governors to engineer a devaluation, using the boosted the Exchange Stabilization Fund to buy foreign exchanges and then selling them directly to the Fed. Or get the Fed to unlock its own exchange stabilization powers and conduct those operations directly. As long as the dollar keeps rising, based on past experience, unemployment could keep increasing — even after states reopen their economies.
In fact, the Fed has already authorized this practice, known as warehousing, to occur, in its Jan. 2017 meeting: “the Committee authorizes the Selected Bank, with the prior approval of the Subcommittee and at the request of the United States Treasury, to conduct swap transactions with the United States Exchange Stabilization Fund established by section 10 of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 under agreements in which the Selected Bank purchases foreign currencies from the Exchange Stabilization Fund and the Exchange Stabilization Fund repurchases the foreign currencies from the Selected Bank at a later date…”
Everything should be on the table. What is occurring right now could be the greatest economic emergency since 2008 and 1929, and so far the federal government is focused rightly on preserving American jobs on the fiscal side of the equation. But on the monetary side, far more aggressive action is needed by the Fed and the Treasury to stabilize the dollar amid falling prices. Oil markets are just the beginning. Deflation is not to be trifled with, and the longer action is postponed, sadly, the worse it will get, and everything that is done in the end will be everything we should have been doing from the get-go. The dollar was already way too strong before the pandemic, and it is most certainly too strong for this recession, Mr. President. Act now while you still can.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
To view online: http://dailytorch.com/2020/04/deflation-is-here-and-it-is-a-real-threat-to-any-economic-recovery-from-the-virus/
Video: Texas car lot owner is happy Governor Abbott wants economy open again
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3Lxhioj-6U
Video: Saving lives is way more important than saving the media's anti-Trump narrative on the virus
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YX8libmJRG4
Failure to reopen economy causes death and destruction also
April 21, 2020, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement urging states to reopen their economies as soon as possible:
"In nine days, many governors across the nation are making plans on how to reopen all or part of their economies. Predictably, some worry that moving away from strict social distancing policies will have negative health consequences. What these people miss is that these distancing policies bring forth known problems associated with extreme poverty, including increased suicides, depression and substance abuse. On the substance abuse front alone, we know that 70,000 a year were losing their lives to opioid overdoses alone, and that that number has been significantly cut over the past couple of years.
"We also know that there were 40,000 more suicides than expected during the Great Recession, and that the UN just released a report stating that hundreds of thousands of children will die due to the increased poverty created in the economic shutdown. Let's be clear, this is not an easy situation, but when 5.5 million Americans are filing for unemployment claims on average the past four weeks, with no end in sight, the personal and national devastation wrought by the social distancing cure is not sustainable and the President and our nation's governors must act to balance. The President took a great step forward in providing guidance on reopening America state by state, and it is expected he will continue to provide the best ideas available on ways private businesses can meet the needs of their employees and customers in these unique times.
"One relatively undiscussed result of the private sector shutdown is that local, state and federal governments will all see dramatic revenue losses from staying shut down too long at a time when their expenditures are increased. Recognizing this early, if states and local governments are unwilling to lay off non-essential government employees before the situation becomes critical, then aggressively reopening is the only alternative."
To view online: https://getliberty.org/2020/04/failure-to-reopen-economy-causes-death-and-destruction-also/