Quote from ASusilovic:
More QE2 dissent â this time from the back of the classroom.
An open letter to Ben Bernanke via the Wall Street Journal:
We believe the Federal Reserveâs large-scale asset purchase plan (so-called âquantitative easingâ) should be reconsidered and discontinued. We do not believe such a plan is necessary or advisable under current circumstances. The planned asset purchases risk currency debasement and inflation, and we do not think they will achieve the Fedâs objective of promoting employment.
We subscribe to your statement in the Washington Post on November 4 that âthe Federal Reserve cannot solve all the economyâs problems on its own.â In this case, we think improvements in tax, spending and regulatory policies must take precedence in a national growth program, not further monetary stimulus.
We disagree with the view that inflation needs to be pushed higher, and worry that another round of asset purchases, with interest rates still near zero over a year into the recovery, will distort financial markets and greatly complicate future Fed efforts to normalize monetary policy.
The Fedâs purchase program has also met broad opposition from other central banks and we share their concerns that quantitative easing by the Fed is neither warranted nor helpful in addressing either U.S. or global economic problems.
That letter marks the start of a campaign by a group of prominent Republican-leaning economists (including Michael J. Boskin, Ronald I. McKinnon Niall Ferguson and) to stop Ben Bernanke and his crazy money creation schemes. According to the WSJ the letter will be published as an advert in their newspaper and the New York Times this week.
Others who have joined the campaign against QE2 include Richard âI ♥ banksâ Bove, Jim Chanos of Kynikos Associates and James Grant of Grantâs Interest Rate Observer.
In addition to letter-writing, the economists have already started to lobby influential politicians in Washington over suppers of sea bass, says the WSJ:
The economists have been consulting Republican lawmakers, including incoming House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, and began discussions with potential GOP presidential candidates over the weekend, according to a person involved.
⦠Last Tuesday evening, about 20 economists and others met over sea bass at the University of Pennsylvania Club in Manhattan and hashed out a broad strategy. Mr. Ryan, who has gained notice for a plan to balance the federal budget through deep spending cuts, joined the group as they discussed ways to encourage the GOPâs new House majority to unite behind what they describe as a âsound money policy.â
âWe talked about the importance of the right being outspoken and unified on this,â said a participant.
Munchies and monetary policy. Yum.
http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/2010/11/15/404186/economists-against-fed/?updatedcontent=1
rather nice takedown of these so called economists:
The Wall St. Journal, and perhaps other outlets, published an open letter to Ben Bernanke pleading for the immediate discontinuation of QE2:
We believe the Federal Reserveâs large-scale asset purchase plan (so-called âquantitative easingâ) should be reconsidered and discontinued. We do not believe such a plan is necessary or advisable under current circumstances.
The letter has 20+ signatories. It is noteworthy how outrageously wrong most of this team of incompetents were â on the recession, the credit crisis, and the markets; James Grant and Seth Klarman being notable exceptions.
Many of the names you will recognize (there are some I donât) appear to have hard right conservative leanings. Paul Krugman takes down a couple of the signers, wondering what economic credentials William Kristol has (Or credentials of any sort for that matter).
Of course, one might level the same charge at another of the letterâs signers, former Bear Stearns economist David Malpass. BR has taken down Malpass here and here (to cite but two), but I donât think Barry ever got to this one, in January 2008 (what we now know was the second month of the worst recession since the Great Depression):
Malpassâs message minimized the impact of both the ongoing U.S. housing recession and the credit crunch.
To an audience of guests representing top French financial institutions like BNP Paribas, Calyon and Natixis â all of which have been singed by the subprime crisis â Malpass sided with what appears to be a majority of U.S. economists in predicting that the U.S. economy would skirt the current crisis without falling into a formal recession.
âWe will have a slowdown month by month for the next six months,â Malpass said. âBut we will look back and we will say there was not a material recession.â
And hereâs open letter co-author Kevin Hassett from the American Enterprise Institute (June 2008) in an article titled Seeing Recession When Thereâs None to Be Found, displaying near perfect partisan hackery, the lede of which was:
Are we in a recession? Despite what the media has led the public to believe, director of economic policy studies Kevin A. Hassett compares todayâs economy to past recessions and finds that the current situation does not seem all that dire.
If a Democratic-leaning press can convince everyone that the economy is in recession, then it can influence the election. [...] The politically motivated pessimism, like the computer virus, can have real consequences.
Iâd be remiss if I didnât also note that Mr. Hassett was co-author of the timely (November 2000) howler Dow 36,000.
A third co-author, Michael Boskin, also did not see the recession that was already staring us in the face (October 25, 2007, emphasis mine):
LAS VEGAS (MarketWatch) â Despite severe problems in the housing market, a credit crunch and record-high oil prices, the U.S. economy will skirt a recession in the coming few quarters and get back on a solid growth path after that, economist Michael Boskin told real estate industry executives Thursday at the Urban Land Institute fall conference.
Another co-author who is uniquely unqualified to discuss recession (or anything economic for that matter) is Amity Shlaes. Back in July 2008, while we were into the 8th month of the recession â just weeks before the entire financial edifice collapsed â Shlaes wrote a Washington Post OpEd, titled âPhil Gramm Is Right.â Shlaes was defending Gramm, who had said âthe country was not in a true recession but a âmental recession.â He also said, âWe have sort of become a nation of whiners. (Nice call, superlative timing).
Charles Calomiris is yet another co-author. Up until 2007, he was the codirector of AEIâs Financial Deregulation Project; he spent the years since trying to blame Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac for the collapse, insisting that radical deregulation had nothing to do with crisis.
Peter Wallison is Calomirisâ co-author on this WSJ OpEd: Blame Fannie Mae and Congress For the Credit Mess, as well as the QE letter. As prime proponents of the radical deregulatory scheme that contributed so mightily to the credit collapse, they have desperately sought some other McGinty to blame for the crisis â anything but their own fecklessness. Wallison is, for lack of another adjective, hallucinatory.
Also on the list: Cliff Asness of AQR Capital Management is another co-author. According to Bloomberg, his flagship Absolute Return fund went the wrong way three years ago, as the credit crisis was starting, falling more than 50%.
So howâd those calls work out? Many of the people who are criticizing the Fed Chief arenât capable of seeing the worst recession in generations halfway through it; Why on earth should anyone care what their views on Quantitative Easing might be? These people should be working at Mickey Dees, not think tanks and hedge funds.
Is this a crew to which Bernanke should be paying any attention whatsoever? This is not a time for our economic policies to be hijacked by partisan ideologues who, frankly, donât seem to be offering up any viable alternatives.
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2010/11/dubious-open-letter-to-bernanke/