- Aug 31, 2002
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So just some background
Government debt: ~$16T
Private debt: ~$60T
Fed Balance sheet ~$5T
Some basics: The money supply and how stimulated the economy is overall is due to debt creation. So long as we are leveraging the financial system to infinity, times are good. When there is deleveraging, times are bad.
In 2008 private debt started to deleverage and government debt took over and increased to compensate. (counter-cyclical compensation- this is a good thing, or else we get 1930s great depression part deuce)
Japan has a precedent for this, they are currently on QE8, and their economy is in a deflationary abyss.
So when the fed increases its balance sheet, what does this mean?
The fed buys MBS, and helps to prop up the housing market, or buys bonds and helps prop up the bond market. This forces people to take out larger loans for houses, school, whatever, on a personal finance level because they are in competition with the fed. It also lowers the interest rate enabling the borrowing of large amounts on the same wage.
Carrying high debt loads means people in their monthly payments are throwing a good bit of money away in interest, carrying high debt loads tends to cause deflation.
So thats why all this QE money supply expansion hasn't really led to inflation, and it won't. The money never makes it down to mainstreet in the form of wages, it just forces us to take larger loans.
This forces money velocity WAY down. And its going to stay there.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/M2V
Theoretically, people would expect money velocity to rebound in a normally functioning economy, but that will never happen without mass defaults to bring us back to normalcy, and mass defaults will never happen if the fed keeps propping up markets.
Government debt: ~$16T
Private debt: ~$60T
Fed Balance sheet ~$5T
Some basics: The money supply and how stimulated the economy is overall is due to debt creation. So long as we are leveraging the financial system to infinity, times are good. When there is deleveraging, times are bad.
In 2008 private debt started to deleverage and government debt took over and increased to compensate. (counter-cyclical compensation- this is a good thing, or else we get 1930s great depression part deuce)
Japan has a precedent for this, they are currently on QE8, and their economy is in a deflationary abyss.
So when the fed increases its balance sheet, what does this mean?
The fed buys MBS, and helps to prop up the housing market, or buys bonds and helps prop up the bond market. This forces people to take out larger loans for houses, school, whatever, on a personal finance level because they are in competition with the fed. It also lowers the interest rate enabling the borrowing of large amounts on the same wage.
Carrying high debt loads means people in their monthly payments are throwing a good bit of money away in interest, carrying high debt loads tends to cause deflation.
So thats why all this QE money supply expansion hasn't really led to inflation, and it won't. The money never makes it down to mainstreet in the form of wages, it just forces us to take larger loans.
This forces money velocity WAY down. And its going to stay there.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/M2V
Theoretically, people would expect money velocity to rebound in a normally functioning economy, but that will never happen without mass defaults to bring us back to normalcy, and mass defaults will never happen if the fed keeps propping up markets.
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