Debt ceiling absurdity: US Fed will now repay itself by printing money

 
Federal-Reserve-Seal-logoVivek Kaul 
It was widely expected that the Democrats and the Republicans will finally strike a deal and extend the debt ceiling of the government of the United States(US). And that’s precisely what happened.
A few hours before the US government would have reached its debt ceiling, both the houses of the American Congress, passed a short term bill, allowing the government to suspend the debt ceiling until February 7, 2014. The Senate passed the bill, 81:18. The House of Representatives passed the bill 285:144. The bill will also end the government shut-down in the United States and allow it to operate till January 15, 2014.
Governments around the world spend more than they earn. They make up for the difference by borrowing money. The US government is no different on this front. The only trouble is that it is not allowed to borrow beyond a certain limit. This limit is referred to as the debt ceiling and till yesterday was set at $16.69 trillion.
If the bill suspending the debt ceiling had not been passed, the US government would not have been able to borrow more. And given that it would have become difficult for it to meet its expenditure from its income. Today, i.e. October 17, 2013, the US government will have around $28 billion of cash on hand. The treasury secretary Jack Lew had suggested in early October that expenditure of the US government on certain days could touch even $60 billion.
Given this, it would be able to meet only a part of its expenditure and hence, someone was not going to get paid.
The tricky question for the government would have been to decide who that someone would be. Would the government decide not to pay out the pension cheques? Or would it be unable to pay salaries of its employees? Would it default on the interest payments that are due on its bonds? Or would it be unable to repay maturing bonds? The American government like other governments around the world makes up for the difference between what it earns and what it spends, by selling bonds.
Interest payments of around $6 billion are due before the end of October. Also, bonds worth around $90-93 billion need to be repaid between October 24 and October 31. A default on this front would be catastrophic. The US government bonds (or treasuries as they are more commonly referred to as) are deemed to be the safest financial securities in the world. And if the security deemed to be the safest financial security in the world is not safe, what is?
But these are points that I have made before (
you can read them here). The US government’s current debt stands at around $16.69 trillion. It has borrowed this money by selling bonds. Of this nearly $4.8 trillion is held by various agencies of the US government. Most of the US government agencies holding US government bonds are pension funds and retirement funds, which need to make payments in the years to come. To be able to make these payments, they need to invest now. Hence, they invest money in US government bonds deemed to be the safest financial security in the world.
The remaining US government debt of around $11.89 trillion ($16.69 trillion – $4.8trillion) is referred to as the debt held by the public. Of this, foreign nations hold around $5.7 trillion. China holds around $1.28 trillion and Japan $1.14 trillion.
What is interesting is that the Federal Reserve of United States, the American central bank, holds US government bonds worth $2.086 trillion. On the whole, this is only 12.5% of the total US government debt of $16.69 trillion. But what is interesting is that over the last five years the holding of the Federal Reserve has risen by 434%.
On September 17, 2008, two days after the investment bank Lehman Brothers went bankrupt, the Federal Reserve held US government bonds worth around $479.84 billion. As stated earlier currently it holds bonds worth $2.086 trillion. In comparison the debt held by foreign nations has gone up only marginally.
In the last one year, this holding has gone up by nearly $433 billion. What is happening here? The US government is spending substantially more than what it is earning. Since 2009, it has been running fiscal deficits of greater than a trillion dollars. Between 2009 and 2012 the US government ran a total fiscal deficit of $5.09 trillion. In 2013, it is expected to run a fiscal deficit of around a trillion dollars. Fiscal deficit is the difference between what a government earns and what it spends.
In a situation like this, if the US government would borrow all the money from the public, interest rates would shoot up, given that there is only so much amount of money that can be borrowed. And if the government borrows more, then there would be lesser amount of money for others(primarily the private sector) to borrow. This crowding out would lead to a situation where other institutions like banks would have had to offer a higher interest to borrow.
If a bank borrows money at a high rate of interest, it would have to lend it out at a still higher rate of interest, in order to make a profit. Higher interest rates would mean, higher EMIs. This would discourage the average American from borrowing and spending money, something which the US government believes is very important for reviving economic growth.
This is where the Federal Reserve stepped in. It has been buying the bonds being sold by the US government to finance its fiscal deficit. Where does the Federal Reserve get this money from? It simply prints it and hands it over to the government.
As we saw earlier, between 2009 and 2012, the US government has run a fiscal deficit of $5.09 trillion. During the same period the Federal Reserve’s holdings of US government bonds went up from $475.92 billion (as on December 31, 2008) to $1.67 trillion (as on January 2, 2013). This increase, amounts to roughly $1.2 trillion. This amounts to around 23.6% of the total fiscal deficit of $5.09 trillion.
Hence, the US government financed nearly 23.6% of its fiscal deficit by selling bonds to the Federal Reserve. Federal Reserve handed over this money to the US government by simply printing it. This has helped keep interest rates low in the United States.
And that is the real story. A lot of the US government borrowing over the last few years has been directly from the Federal Reserve. And now that the debt ceiling has been raised, this will continue.
The money that is borrowed by the US government from the Federal Reserve and other sources, is used to fund its expenditure. A substantial part of the expenditure is repayment of past debts as bonds mature, as well as payment of interest on these bonds.
In the year 2012, the US government paid a total interest of around $359.80 billion on its bonds. The fiscal deficit of the US government was around $1.08 trillion. Hence, nearly one third of the fiscal deficit was because of interest rate payments.
The US government does not earn enough to repay maturing bonds. Hence, it has to borrow money to repay bonds. This is a perfect Ponzi scheme where the government is paying off old debt by issuing new debt. A Ponzi scheme is essentially a financial fraud where the money that is due to older investors is repaid by raising fresh money from newer investors. The scheme keeps running till the money brought in by the new investors is greater than the money that needs to repaid to older investors. The moment this reverses, the scheme collapses.
In fact, as bonds being bought by the Federal Reserve from the US government, come up for maturity they will be repaid by getting the Federal Reserve to print money and buy new bonds. Hence, the Federal Reserve will be printing money to repay itself. If that isn’t absurd, I don’t know what is. The US Federal Reserve is currently helping the US government run its Ponzi scheme by printing money and buying bonds.
Having said that, increasing the debt ceiling was important given that even a whiff of a default would have caused a global financial crisis. First and foremost investors would have started selling out off US government bonds. This would have driven bond prices down and bond yields up, in the process pushing up interest rates first in the US and then globally. This would have put the entire plan of the US government to revive economic growth by maintaining low interest rates in a jeopardy. It would have also led to investors all over the world selling out of various financial markets. The logic would have been that if the security deemed to be the safest financial security in the world is not safe, what is?
Of course, the trouble is that the US government will breach its debt ceiling again in a few months time. What happens then? The debt ceiling has been in place in the US since 1939. Since 1960, the American Congress has increased the ceiling 79 times. So what stops it from doing it the 80th time as well? Nothing really. But till when can this Ponzi scheme go on? Ultimately all Ponzi schemes collapse. The only question is when. And for that I really do not have an answer.
The article originally appeared on www.firstpost.com on October 17, 2013 

(Vivek Kaul is a writer. He tweets @kaul_vivek) 
 

US govt reduced to live on borrowed time

3D chrome Dollar symbolVivek Kaul
Governments spend more money than they earn and finance the difference through borrowing. The government of United States(US) is no different on this front. The trouble is that it cannot borrow beyond a certain limit. This limit, known as the debt ceiling, was set at $16.69 trillion.
This ceiling should have been breached in May 2013, a little earlier this year. Since then, Jack Lew, the American treasury secretary, has taken a number of extraordinary measures like delaying public employee pension fund payments, in order to ensure that the government expenditure remains under control. Lesser expenditure meant lesser borrowing and hence, the government managed to keep its total borrowing below $16.69 trillion.
Today i.e. October 17, 2013, the government would have run out of the extraordinary measures that it has been taking. Given this, the treasury department would have exhausted its borrowing authority.
Hours before this would have happened, the leaders of the Democratic Party and the Republican Party in the American Senate stuck a deal, suspending the debt ceiling. This will allow the US government to borrow beyond $16.69 trillion, till February 7, next year. The will also end the current government shut-down in the US and keep the government running along till January 15, 2014.
This is not the first time that the US government came close to its borrowing limit, given that the debt ceiling has been in place since 1939. Since 1960, the debt ceiling has been raised 78 times by the American Congress. But this time around the Democrats and the Republicans left it too late, each waiting for the other to blink first.
If the ceiling had not been extended the short-term repercussions would have been terrible. The treasury secretary Lew had said in early October that the US government “will be left…with only approximately $30bn” come October 17. This would not be enough to meet the expenditure of the government, which can be as high as $60 billion on some days, Lew had pointed out.
Interest payments of around $6 billion are due on US government bonds before the end of this month. Along with that, bonds worth between $90 to $93 billion need to be repaid between October 24 and October 31 (Source: www.thefinancialist.com) Governments issue bonds to borrow money.
The US government has reached a stage wherein it does not earn enough to repay the money it has already borrowed by issuing bonds. Hence, it has borrow more money by issuing fresh bonds to pay off the older bonds. If the debt ceiling had not been extended, it would have become very difficult for the US government to repay the money it had already borrowed.
More importantly, the US government bonds are deemed to be the safest financial security in the world. If the US government defaulted on paying interest on its bonds or repaying the principal, there would have been mayhem in financial markets, all over the world, including India. It has even been suggested that the crisis that could have unfolded would have been bigger than the crisis that followed the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. Investors would have sold out of US government bonds driving up global interest rates.
The US government would also have had to prioritise its expenditure. Does it make pension payments? Does it pay its employees and contractors? Does it pay interest on its bonds? Does it repay maturing bonds? These are the questions it would have had to address. Also, there are no legal provisions guiding the government on who to pay first. Hence, any prioritisation of payments could have led to a slew of lawsuits against the US government.
Given the negative repercussions of the debt ceiling not being extended, the markets were positive that a deal reached would be reached. Stock and bond markets around the world have been stable. And gold, looked at as a safe haven, is quoting at levels of around $1280 per ounce (one troy ounce equals 31.1grams).
The trouble is that the US government will cross its debt ceiling level again in February, 2014. What happens then? How long can the American Congress keep increasing the debt ceiling? The basic problem is that the US government has borrowed too much money, and continues to do so, and if it doesn’t default today, it will default in the years to come.
The article originally appeared in the Daily News and Analysis dated October 17, 2013
(Vivek Kaul is the author of Easy Money. He can be reached at [email protected]

10 things you should know about the American debt ceiling

ObamaVivek Kaul 
The American government is staring at a big problem ahead. Come October 17, and it will hit the debt ceiling set by the American Congress. If this happens it will have global implications. Given that, it is important to understand what the debt ceiling really means and how it can impact the whole world.
So what is the debt ceiling?
The American government, like almost every government in the world, spends more than what it earns. The difference between what it spends and what it earns is met through borrowing money. There is an overall limit to the amount the American government can borrow. This limit is currently set at $16.69 trillion.
So what will actually happen on October 17?
The American Treasury Secretary Jack Lew (equivalent of the finance minister in India) has said that on October 17, the Treasury department will run out of the extraordinary measures it had put in place to ensure that the government doesn’t cross the debt ceiling of $16.69 trillion. 
Since May 2013, Lew has taken a number of extraordinary measures, like delaying pension fund payments, to ensure that the government expenditure remains under control and hence, the government does not cross the debt ceiling.
So the American government will run out of money on October 17?
The answer to this question is not very clear. Lew has said that as on October 17, the government “
“will be left to meet our country’s commitments at that time with only approximately $30bn.” And this amount will not be enough to meet expenditures of the government, which on certain days can be as high as $60 billion. He has not clarified the exact expected expenditure of the American government as on October 17. Hence, we don’t know if the American government will run out of money on October 17.
So when will the American government actually run out of money?
There are various estimates going around on this. Most analysts agree that the government won’t run out of money on October 18, and will keep chugging along for a brief while. The Bipartisan Policy Center expects this date to be anywhere between October 22 and November 1. 
As it points out “Updated data on Treasury cash flows through the first week of October show that the range for the Bipartisan Policy Center’s (BPC) X Date – the date on which the United States will be unable to meet all of its financial obligations in full and on time – has narrowed to between October 22 and November 1.”
Economists at JP Morgan have come up with a more precise date of October 24th. 
As an article on Time.com points out “They (i.e. the economists at JP Morgan) write that it is “extremely unlikely” the Treasury will be able to make it’s payments more than a few days after the 24th, and that the Treasury would most certainly have to default on some payments by November 1st, when large outlays for Social Security, Medicare, retirement benefits for military and civil services workers, and interest payments are due.”
So what will be the impact of this?
The expenditure of the American government will be greater than its income. Until now it has been able to borrow money to finance the gap. It won’t be able to borrow anymore. Given that, it will have to cut down on its expenditure.
AsEric Posner writes on Slate.com “If the debt ceiling is not raised, and the executive branch stops borrowing, the government will need to cut spending by about 15 to 20 percent—or almost 40 percent of spending on everything (yes, Medicare and defense) other than the interest on the debt.”
The impact of the cut in expenditure will be immediate. As Henry J Aaron writes in The New York Times “A decision to cut spending enough to avoid borrowing would instantaneously slash outlays by approximately $600 billion a year. Cutting payments to veterans, Social Security benefits and interest on the national debt by half would just about do the job. But such cuts would not only illegally betray promises to veterans, the elderly and disabled and bondholders.”
Other than having economic consequences, this cut in expenditure will also have social consequences. As Mark Blyth writes in 
Austerity – The History of a Dangerous Idea in a slightly different context but still applicabl in this case, “Seventy-two percent of the working population(in America) live paycheck to paycheck, have few if any savings, and would have trouble raising $2000 at short notice. There are, as far as we can tell, about 70 million handguns in the United States. So what would happen if…no paychecks were being paid out?”
Hence, cutting expenditure can have dramatic social and economic consequences.
So why is the American government doing nothing about this?
As must be clear by now the consequences of the American government hitting the debt ceiling and not being able to meet its expenditure, will be disastrous. Given this, why hasn’t the government done something about it? Why haven’t they increased the debt ceiling?
The answer lies in the fact that the two houses of the American Congress are currently in a logjam. The House of Representatives is dominated by the Republican Party and the Senate is dominated by the Democratic Party. And both the parties are refusing to talk to each other. The Republicans believe that fiscal profligacy of the American government has gone on for too long and needs to be reined in.
In fact, many Republican Congressmen are not concerned about the debt ceiling at all. 
As Senator Richard Burr recently said I’m not as concerned as the president is on the debt ceiling, because the only people buying our bonds right now is the Federal Reserve. So it’s like scaring ourselves.”
So are Republicans right on only the Federal Reserve buying government bonds?
This statement has been true in the recent past. The Federal Reserve of United States, the American central bank has been printing money to buy American government bonds. This helps the government finance its fiscal deficit. Fiscal deficit is the difference between between what a government earns and what it spends.
But Burr’s statement does not take into account the fact that foreign countries hold nearly $5.6 trillion of American government bonds. In comparison, the treasury holds bonds worth $1.93 trillion. These bonds were issued by the American government to borrow money to finance its fiscal deficit.
Interest on these bonds needs to be paid. Also, maturing bonds needs to be repaid. The American government has reached a stage, where it pays the interest on bonds as well as repays maturing bonds, by raising money by selling new bonds and taking on more debt. Any decision to stop paying interest on bonds or default on maturing bonds, will lead to a global financial crisis. As Posner writes “ If he(i.e Obama) stops interest payments, the United States will default. This will not only raise interest payments—costing taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars—but could spark a financial panic like the meltdown of 2008.”
The US government bonds are the ultimate risk free asset. If the government defaults on interest payments and/or principal repayment, then investors all over the world are going to exit all kinds of financial markets. No wonder China which holds more than a trillion dollars of American government bonds is worried. 
The Chinese Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao recently said “We naturally are paying attention to financial deadlock in the U.S. and reasonably demand that the U.S. guarantee the safety of Chinese investment there.”
So that brings us back to the question why aren’t Republicans and Democrats talking?
This basically boils down to the fact that Republican Congressmen seem to be confident that the government is in a position to work its way around the debt ceiling. As Senator Orrin Hatch recently said “I think the administration could work on who gets paid and who doesn’t in a way that would pull us through.”
It is easy to ask the government to prioritize payments, but anything done around those lines could have serious legal implications. It needs to be pointed out that there are no legal provisions to decide which expenditure should be cut first. “There is no clear legal basis for deciding what programs to cut. Defense contractors, or Medicare payments to doctors? Education grants, or the F.B.I.? Endless litigation would follow. No matter how the cuts might be distributed, they would, if sustained for more than a very brief period, kill the economic recovery and cause unemployment to return quickly to double digits,” Aaron points out in 
The New York Times.
The politicians on both the sides are also taking it easy because the markets haven’t reacted to this lack of communication between the two political parties on the debt ceiling. As Senator Hatch put it “I don’t think the markets have been spooked so far, and I personally believe that if they realized there was a legitimate attempt to make the government work, they would be less likely [to be spooked].”
So why haven’t the markets reacted?
The debt ceiling has been in place since 1939. And since then the American Congress has raised it numerous times to allow the government to borrow more. As an article in the Christian Science Monitor points out “An overall cap on federal debt has been in place since 1939, and Congress has raised it numerous times since then. The Treasury Department counts 78 times since 1960.”
What has happened 78 times is also likely to happen one more time.
This explains why the various financial markets in America and around the world continue to remain stable and are not taking into account the possibility of another crisis. As Bill Gross manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, told Bloomberg Television “The odds of a default are “a million-to-one” as the Treasury Department will be able to take other measures to ensure it is servicing the country’s debt.”
Hence, the market is currently expecting the Republicans and the Democrats to sit down and solve the problem before October 17.
So will the markets continue to remain stable?
That’s a tricky question to answer. The closer we get to October 17 without any solution in sight, the more the stability of the markets will be threatened. In fact, if the American stock market falls it might even get the Republicans and the Democrats to start talking. As John Cassidy of The New Yorker magazines writes on his blog “If the market fell by, say, three or four hundred points for three days in a row, and then lurched down another eight hundred points, or even a thousand points, the effect would be salutary. How can I say that? Tens of millions of Americans would grow alarmed about their 401k plans. On Wall Street, there would be margin calls, liquidity runs, and other disturbing developments that inevitably accompany market breaks. Rumors would start to spread about the health of various financial institutions. You don’t have to subscribe to a tail-wags-the-dog view of finance and politics to believe that this would lead to a rapid change of thinking, and of behaviour, in Washington.”
This will get the two sides talking on the debt ceiling for sure.

The article originally appeared on www.firstpost.com on October 9, 2013
(Vivek Kaul is a writer. He tweets @kaul_vivek) 
 

US shutdown no big deal, expect bigger crisis on 17 October

platinum_coinVivek Kaul
 Starting today nearly 800,000 of the 2.1 million people that work directly for the government of the United States of America, have been asked to go on an unpaid leave, leading to non essential services from national parks to museums to libraries being shut down temporarily. The call centres of the Internal Revenue Service(IRS or the equivalent of the income tax department in India) won’t work and nearly 90% of the workers of the Environmental Protection Agency, won’t be at work either. NASA or the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has also more or less been shut down, except its mission control centre at Houston, Texas. Services like rubbish collection and street cleaning stand suspended as well.
Nearly a million workers have been asked to work without pay. This will ensure the continuation of essential services like military, postal service and police. Airport security and air traffic control will also carry on their work as usual.
So what is happening here? The US budget year ends on September 30 every year. A ‘shutdown’ comes into the picture when the American Congress (the equivalent of what we call the Parliament in India) does not pass appropriation bills to fund the ‘discretionary’ spending programmes. The discretionary spending programmes need to be funded every year.
As Matthew Yglesias writes on www.slate.com “Discretionary spending…is money that Congress appropriates on what’s traditionally been an annual cycle. A law is passed saying that such-and-such agency has X amount of money to spend over such-and-such amount of time on this or that.” What is not categorised as discretionary spending is ‘mandatory’ spending. This includes social security, medicare (a form of medical insurance) and some farm subsidies. This spending continues as usual.
The two houses of the American Congress are currently in a logjam. The House of Representatives is dominated by the Republican Party and the Senate is dominated by the Democratic Party. The Republicans want the Affordable Care Act (better known as Obamacare, and an Act which aims to improve the quality of health insurance, at the same time making it more affordable ) to be pushed forward by a period of one year. They have made this a condition for passing a temporary budget to fund the ‘discretionary’ spending of government.
The Democrats on the other hand are in no mood to relent given that the Affordable Care Act is something that President Barack Obama has been closely associated with. Hence, the two political parties have been at loggerheads. As Yglesias writes “When the parties in Congress can’t come together on appropriations bills, they often pass what’s known as a continuing resolution that essentially instructs the government to extend the last appropriations bill forward in time…House Republicans keep writing new continuing resolutions that fund the government while simultaneously delaying or repealing key elements of the Affordable Care Act. Senate Democrats keep taking those provisions out and sending the “clean” continuing resolution back to the House. Absent a continuing resolution, the discretionary portions of the federal government lack funding to continue their work and the government goes into “shutdown.””
With no money coming in the non-essential services are being shutdown. As The New York Times reports “The Office of Management and Budget issued orders that “agencies should now execute plans for an orderly shutdown due to the absence of appropriations” because Congress had failed to act to keep the federal government financed.”
The shutdown will impact the American economy depending on how long it continues. Estimates made Goldman Sachs suggest that a two day shutdown could slowdown the economic growth rate during the period October-December 2013 by 0.1%. A longer shutdown of a week could shave of 0.3% from the economic growth.
Nevertheless, the American government partially shutting down should not be seen as a big worry. The bigger worry is set to come on October 17, later this month. On that day the American government is expected to hit its debt ceiling. The American government spends more than what it earns. In order to make up for the difference it sells bonds and takes on debt. There is a maximum amount of debt that it is allowed to take on, and which currently stands at $16.69 trillion. This limit is likely to be exhausted by October 17, 2013.
If the debt ceiling is not raised the American government will have to stop borrowing and start cutting its expenditure. AsEric Posner writes on Slate.com “If the debt ceiling is not raised, and the executive branch stops borrowing, the government will need to cut spending by about 15 to 20 percent—or almost 40 percent of spending on everything (yes, Medicare and defense) other than the interest on the debt.”
The impact of the cut in expenditure will be immediate. As Henry J Aaron writes in The New York Times “A decision to cut spending enough to avoid borrowing would instantaneously slash outlays by approximately $600 billion a year. Cutting payments to veterans, Social Security benefits and interest on the national debt by half would just about do the job. But such cuts would not only illegally betray promises to veterans, the elderly and disabled and bondholders.”
Also, the American government has reached a stage where it pays the interest on past debt by selling new bonds and taking on more debt. Any decision to stop paying interest on bonds will lead to a global financial crisis. As Posner writes “ If he(i.e Obama) stops interest payments, the United States will default. This will not only raise interest payments—costing taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars—but could spark a financial panic like the meltdown of 2008.”
If this situation arises, there is not much that President Obama will be able to do. He will basically have three options. “One is President Obama could decide that the government’s legal obligation to spend (and certain elements of the 14thAmendment) trump the statutory debt ceiling, and just order the Treasury to sell more bonds. The second option is Obama could instruct the Treasury to pay some of the government’s bills and just not pay the rest. The third option is to pay nobody. All three of these options face the same basic problem of seeming to be illegal. (The second one also faces the problem that Treasury says it lacks the logistical capacity to do it),” writes Yglesias.
Also, there are no legal provisions to decide which expenditure should be cut first. “There is no clear legal basis for deciding what programs to cut. Defense contractors, or Medicare payments to doctors? Education grants, or the F.B.I.? Endless litigation would follow. No matter how the cuts might be distributed, they would, if sustained for more than a very brief period, kill the economic recovery and cause unemployment to return quickly to double digits,” Aaron points out.
Given this, the Republicans and the Democrats need to start talking pretty soon, or we will have another crisis on our hands pretty soon.
The article originally appeared on www.firstpost.com on October 1, 2013

 (Vivek Kaul is a writer. He tweets @kaul_vivek)