Sunday, September 29, 2013

PERILS OF UNITED STATES QUANTITATIVE EASING PROGRAMMES ON WORLD ECONOMIES

Since the fall of 2008, many of the sovereign economies across the world faced their worst economic crisis in 70 years due to the RECESSION triggered by collapse of massive financial institutions in US.

Federal Reserve (The US central bank) Chairman Ben Bernanke had to take some extraordinary steps to calm financial markets.  Easy fix, he adopted, was to print money and slash short-term interest rates to zero (termed Quantitative Easing or QE), as way out of trouble, which was then praised by the Economists as an aggressive response.

Ben Bernanke made his first step on the Quantitative Easing (QE) ladder in an effort to accelerate the economic activity (increase lending, create more jobs, lower the unemployment rate) and higher home prices. Hence, QE1 was initiated in November 2008 and ran until March 2010. During that time, the Federal Reserve snapped up $2.1 trillion worth of mortgage-backed securities and Treasury bills to push down interest rates, spur the economy, re-finance the cash strapped banks and calm financial markets.

However, contrary to expectations, mortgage rates tumbled and the economy never showed signs of expected recovery.
Hence, Bernanke enacted QE2 and the Federal Reserve printed an additional $600 billion between November 2010 and June 2011. Despite pumping in additional money, the US economy did not respond to these extraordinary steps.

Further, in September 2012, QE3 was announced, and this time, it’s open-ended, which was sarcastically named QE Eternity. Federal Reserve continues to hold interest rates near zero and print an additional $85.0 billion each month to prop up the U.S. economy, which includes $40.0 billion a month to purchase mortgage-backed securities and the rest for swapping short-term securities for longer-term securities.

The US dollar remained the dominant global currency despite its economic travails, thereby resulting in American exports getting costlier and thus further widening US fiscal deficit. The generosity of Federal Reserve’s easy monitory policy for American banks and financial institutions resulted in rally in stock, bond and commodity markets worldwide, stoking higher inflation at the expense of economic growth. At the same time, the easy money from US found its way in to other developed and emerging economies, as short term capital funds which can quickly turn around, thus creating higher interdependencies of the subject central banks with Federal Reserve’s monitory policies. Consequently, the probability of the end of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve has recently resulted in huge outflows of dollars from stock and bond markets of “Twin deficit” economies (viz, India, Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa etc), thus weakening their currencies and destabilizing the structural stability of subject economies. However, “Surplus” economies like China are greatly unaffected by easy monitory policy stance of Federal Reserve. However, China being the energy and commodity starving country which imports majority of commodities will stand to gain if the commodity prices are normalized due to tightening of easy monitory policy by Federal Reserve (by raising interest rates and tapering Quantitative Easing program).
Hence, during the era of globalization, it became clear that the easy monitory policy of Federal Reserve was ineffective as it could not percolate and remedy the REAL economic health, but in effect, it has only created more structural and cyclical economic bubbles in its economy as well as other inter dependent economies.

 
IS ECONOMIC BUBBLE BURST IMPENDING?
Surprisingly, the financial markets, the central banks and Governments of many emerging and developing economies rejoiced on the outcome of Federal Reserve meeting held on September 17th and 18th for not tapering their Quantitative Easing Program, as widely anticipated.

Manish Chokani, CEO of Axis Capital, rightly says “what we are all celebrating is that someone is printing money at a trillion dollars a year in order to achieve a gross domestic product (GDP) growth of USD 300 billion a year. Because that GDP isn’t lifting off they continue to print 3 times the amount of money just to get that one unit of turnover. While financial markets and commodity celebrate that the trillion does not go into the real world and it spills over into commodities or into financial assets. We can’t be celebrating that until the world actually recovers. Therefore, how this whole thing ends is going to be quite ugly.”
Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the India’s Central bank, Governor Raghuram Rajan, summing up the perils of QE programmes, says “There is a danger of bubbles forming around the globe, due to easy monetary policy implemented to steer the world back into a more robust growth path. We seem to be in a situation where we are doomed to inflate bubbles elsewhere. We should wonder whether lower and lower interest rates are in fact part of the problem, I say I don't know. We need to think of the dangers of over stimulation. We need to think of the sustainability of growth created by stimulus measures."


IS FISCAL POLICY, THE RIGHT MANTRA?
According to Raghuram Rajan, right fiscal policy might work better than interest rates to get growth back to a sustainable path.

However, the mute point in question is finding and implementing the right fiscal policies in place could be very difficult, if not impossible, especially in countries like India, where populist measures are pursued by Governments for electoral gains, at the expense of long term growth and structural stability of the economy.