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https://scmp.com/comment/insight-opinion/united-states/article/2157573/federal-reserves-quantitative-easing-report
Comment/ United States

The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing report card is mixed – except for the rich

Stephen Roach says as the 10th anniversary of the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing programme approaches, five lessons can be learned from its successes and shortcomings

Members of the Occupy Wall Street movement stage a protest march near Wall Street in New York on October 12, 2011. The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing programme, instituted after the 2008 financial crisis, increased income inequality. Photo: AFP

November 2018 will mark the 10th anniversary of quantitative easing (QE) – the boldest policy experiment in the modern history of central banking. The only thing comparable to QE was the US Federal Reserve’s anti-inflation campaign of 1979-1980. But that earlier effort entailed a major adjustment in interest rates via conventional monetary policy. By contrast, the Fed’s QE balance-sheet adjustments were unconventional and, therefore, untested from the start.

The American Enterprise Institute recently held a symposium to mark this important milestone, featuring QE’s architect, Ben Bernanke. What follows are some comments I offered in an accompanying panel session.

The most important lesson pertains to traction – the link between Fed policy and its congressionally mandated objectives of maximum employment and price stability. On this count, the verdict on QE is mixed: the first tranche (QE1) was very successful in arresting a wrenching financial crisis in 2009, but the subsequent rounds (QE2 and QE3) were far less effective. The Fed mistakenly believed that what worked during the crisis would work equally well afterwards.

An unprecedentedly weak economic recovery says otherwise; the QE payback was disappointing. From September 2008 to November 2014, successive QE programmes added US$3.6 trillion to the Fed’s balance sheet, nearly 25 per cent more than the US$2.9 trillion expansion of nominal GDP over the same period.

Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, speaks during a news conference following the Fed’s monetary policy decision in Washington on June 20, 2012. Bernanke was the architect of the Fed’s quantitative easing programme. Photo: Abaca Press / MCT
Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, speaks during a news conference following the Fed’s monetary policy decision in Washington on June 20, 2012. Bernanke was the architect of the Fed’s quantitative easing programme. Photo: Abaca Press / MCT

A second lesson speaks to addiction – namely, a real economy that became overly reliant on QE’s support of asset markets. The excess liquidity spawned by the Fed’s balance-sheet expansion not only spilled over into equity markets but also the bond market. Monetary policy, rather than market-based fundamentals, increasingly shaped asset prices.

It is hardly a stretch to conclude that QE exacerbated America’s already severe income disparities

In an era of weak income growth, QE-induced wealth effects from frothy asset markets provided offsetting support for crisis-battered US consumers. Unfortunately, with this life support came the pain of withdrawal – not only for asset-dependent consumers and businesses in the US, but also for foreign economies dependent on capital inflows driven by QE-distorted interest-rate spreads. The taper tantrum of 2013 and the current travails of Argentina, Brazil and other emerging economies underscore the contagion of cross-market spillovers arising from the ebb and flow of QE.

A third lesson concerns mounting income inequality. Wealth effects are for the wealthy, whether they are driven by market fundamentals or QE. According to the Congressional Budget Office, virtually all of the growth in pre-tax household income over the QE period (2009 to 2014) occurred in the upper decile of the US income distribution, where the Fed’s own Survey of Consumer Finances indicates that the bulk of equity holdings are concentrated. It is hardly a stretch to conclude that QE exacerbated America’s already severe income disparities.

A member of a leftist organisation demonstrates against the rise of public services fares and the government’s negotiations with the International Monetary Fund in Buenos Aires on May 16. Argentina’s currency has plunged in recent months, highlighting the crossover impact of the flow of capital driven by quantitative easing. Photo: AFP
A member of a leftist organisation demonstrates against the rise of public services fares and the government’s negotiations with the International Monetary Fund in Buenos Aires on May 16. Argentina’s currency has plunged in recent months, highlighting the crossover impact of the flow of capital driven by quantitative easing. Photo: AFP

Fourth, QE blurs the distinction between fiscal and monetary policy. Fed purchases of government securities have tempered the market-based discipline of federal spending. This is hardly a big deal when debt-service costs are repressed by persistently low interest rates. But with federal debt held by the public nearly doubling between 2008 and 2017 and likely to rise further in the years ahead, what is inconsequential today could take on considerably greater importance in an interest-rate environment that lacks the QE subsidy to Treasury financing.

Do we want a reactive central bank that focuses on cleaning up the mess after a crisis erupts, or a proactive central bank that leans against excesses before they spark crises?

A fifth lesson pertains to the distinction between tactics and strategy. As lender of last resort, the Fed deserves great credit for stepping into the breach during a wrenching crisis. The problem is that the Fed also played a key role in condoning the pre-crisis froth that took the system to the brink.

This raises a fundamental question: Do we want a reactive central bank that focuses on cleaning up the mess after a crisis erupts, or a proactive central bank that leans against excesses before they spark crises?

That question – whether to “lean or clean” – has fuelled a raging debate in policy and academic circles. It has an important political economy component: Are independent central banks willing to force society to sacrifice growth in order to preserve financial stability? It also bears on the bubble-spotting debate.

The Fed’s preference for glacial normalisation keeps monetary policy on emergency settings long after the emergency has passed. Doing so raises the distinct possibility that the Fed will lack the ammunition it will need to counter the inevitable next recession. And that could well make the lessons noted above all the more problematic for the US economy.

A screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shows the rate decision of the Federal Reserve on June 13. After decades of low interest rates, the US central bank is gradually normalising rates. Photo: AP
A screen on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shows the rate decision of the Federal Reserve on June 13. After decades of low interest rates, the US central bank is gradually normalising rates. Photo: AP

Unsurprisingly, Bernanke offered a very different take on many of these issues at the symposium. He argued that the Fed’s balance-sheet tools are merely extensions of its traditional approach. That is debatable. By conflating QE-induced wealth effects with the effects on borrowing costs that arise through conventional channels, Bernanke conveniently sweeps aside most of the risks described above – especially those pertaining to asset bubbles and excess leverage.

We can only hope that circumstances don’t require another unconventional policy experiment such as QE. But it would pay to be especially mindful of QE’s shortcomings. Unlike Bernanke, I fear there is good reason to worry that the next experiment may not work out nearly as well.

Stephen S. Roach, a faculty member at Yale University and former Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, is the author of Unbalanced: The Codependency of America and China. Copyright: Project Syndicate