It took a little while, but the
selloff of U.S. treasuries abroad has ceased for now in August and September —
a record $127.4 billion was sold between March and July.
It had marked the largest drop in
foreign holdings of treasuries on record, detailed
monthly Treasury data going back to the year 2000 reveals.
Most of the increase came in
September with a $57.1 billion jump.
Not coincidentally, that was the
same month the Federal Reserve announced that it would be continuing its $85
billion a month of purchases of treasuries and mortgage bonds indefinitely.
On Sept. 18 the Fed said
it had “decided to await more evidence that progress will be
sustained before adjusting the pace of its purchases.” In addition, it said it
would keep the Federal Funds Rate near zero percent.
When the so-called “taper” was on
the table — and higher interest rates were on the horizon — foreigners
curtailed their purchases. And when it was clear the Fed would keep interest
rates artificially low for the foreseeable future by boosting demand for
treasuries, the market came back.
This creates a rather perverse
incentive for the Fed never to stop its purchases for fear of generating a
market rout.
For every point of increased
interest, taxpayers can up to owe another $172 billion of interest payments on
the $17.2 trillion national debt. If rates get too high, it could set off a
funding crisis and imperil the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency.
By 2022, the national debt will
likely total $25 trillion based on projections by the Office of Management and
Budget. If interest rates were to normalize to their historical average of
about 5 percent, interest owed will total $1.25 trillion a year.
The future growth of debt is already
baked into the cake. Unless the baseline, particularly on mandatory spending,
is moved downward, 30 years from now we are going to be in serious trouble.
There is no way economic growth will be able to keep up.
The debt, which was $16.432 trillion
at the beginning of the year, if it
continues growing at an average 7 percent rate annually like it did the last 60
years, by 2042, will be $125.08 trillion. Interest payments at a 5
percent rate would then total $6.25 trillion — every single year.
Right now foreign investors and
governments hold about one-third of the national debt. If that holds steady,
they will need to increase their holdings almost ten-fold to $41.6 trillion.
But will we even get that far
without a foreign flight out of treasuries, particularly at the rate we are
growing the debt?
If we can, then there’s actually no
reason to ever cut government spending. No reason to ever stop borrowing $1
trillion a year. Banks all over the world will keep lending us more money, no
matter how profligate we are, and no matter how much of it we monetize
ourselves.
Ben Bernanke will be finishing his
term as Fed chairman having been unable to stop the money printing. Now it will
fall on Janet Yellen to either continue his policy, or to somehow get the genie
back in the bottle.
There is a Chinese curse which says
“May he live in interesting times.” What’s interesting here is we’ll likely get
to find out in our lifetimes if the Fed can forever print money to buy the debt
without consequence.
Source: Robert Romano is the senior editor
of Americans for Limited Government.
Read more at NetRightDaily.com: http://netrightdaily.com/2013/12/way-feds-qe-trap/#ixzz2mRWIzwOU
Comments:Read more at NetRightDaily.com: http://netrightdaily.com/2013/12/way-feds-qe-trap/#ixzz2mRWIzwOU
The Fed’s QE trap will result in high,
decades-long, systemic inflation, like 10% per year for 40 years. It is de-coupled from the real economy, which
is based on “real consumer demand”. As
incomes fall, demand falls. We are
entering a period of stagflation as the new normal. We are not cutting
government spending to allow the economy to find its real bottom.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party
Leader
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