Quote from Ed Breen:
Daal, you and I are worlds apart in understanding. I don't think I have time to explain it all again in your M's dependent system. I'm sorry. I will just say that you should look at the Fed Balance sheet, you can find it at the St. Louis Fed, its updated every thursday...you probably know that, I state it for others and just incase you don't. If you go back to TARP when the money supply was material expanded, you will see that the Fed balance sheet went from somethink like 40 Billion to about 1 Trillion. Then you will notice as the Fed purchased illiquid assets from the banks, and engaged in quantitative easing and the purchase of illiquid securities from the service agencies (FNMA, FDMC, FHLB, etc), the balance grew to about 2 Trillion. That was the original infusion of 1 Trillion from the treasury funded by the sale of treasuries, used to buy all the illiquid stuff and operate quantitative easing, which had the effect of putting the 1 Trillion back into the banking system (exchanged for securities that could not be sold), which the banks in turn did not lend to the private sector, becuase the private sector was writing off and paying back more debt than it was creating, and becuase they could not lend it out they placed it back on reserve at the Fed as excess reserves. So, the Fed has the same money on its balance sheet that it go from Treasury under TARP times 2. All becuase of private sectore aggregate credit contraction. You are right, since then the Fed has not expanded its balance sheet....whith EU trouble and the need for dollars to create liquidity in the EU banking system, the start of a new swap program, that may change and you will see the swap account grow.
You can also look at the private banking institutions aggregate assets and liabilities at the St. Louis Fed sight. Note how much is in required reserves and how much is in excess reserves and how it changes month to month. The total reserves have remained constant as excess reserves decline and required reserves increase...this happens becuase in the aggregate banks are taking on more short term deposits (required reserve for liabilities) as they loose aggregate assets (loans). Another picture of the credit contraction.
Morganist - it is good to be understood. I agree with you first paragraph with the clarification that credit contraction is due to lack of interes...and ability to meet the decreased leverage requirements.
With regard to paragraph two, I see we need to agree on a working definition of 'inflation.' I want to define it for the purpose of this paradigm the way Friedman defined it....always and only a monetary event....a change in the money supply (defined by me to include credit formation) that causes all goods and services in the real economy to increase in price apart from any consideration of supply and demand. Without justifying the inflation indexes that are in current use...the CPI's and the PCE's, I choose to use the YOY Core PCE as my inflation indicator becuase that is what the Fed pays most attention to. So, I am looking to find inflaton measured in the Core PCE that effects all goods and service without regard for supply and demand.
So, when you talk about the value or inflation of the assets that the Fed is buying, I would say that is quite beside the point. The Fed bought illiquid assets that were eroding bank capital adequacy and so destroying liquidity in the interbank system. THey had no value. There was no market. That is why the Fed bought them. The Fed has no capital adequacy. It just got them off the banks books. That act and the 1.2 T of FNMA paper they bought has propped up the U.S. housing values, kept them from declining sharply.
You can see from above that I don't include supply shock in my definition of inflation.