Thursday, November 11, 2021
Paul Volcker, in his autography “Keeping at it”, penned together with Christine Harper in 2018, wrote: “The assets assigned the lowest risk [in 1988], for which capital requirements were therefore low or nonexistent, were those that had the most political support: sovereign credits and home mortgages… The American ‘overall leverage’ approach had a disadvantage as well in the eyes of shareholders and executives focused on return on capital; it seemed to discourage holdings of the safest assets, in particular low-return US government securities."
Washington Post, in reference to your “Do not underestimate inflation” November 11 let me assure you that, just as lower bank capital requirements against residential mortgages fuels house prices; lower bank capital requirements against Treasuries, by artificially lowering the interest rate on these, sooner or later, are bound to facilitate those excessive injections of liquidity that fuels inflation.
I’m not an expert on the US Constitution, I’m not even an American citizen, but I cannot understand how Section 8’s "The Congress shall have the power to borrow Money on the credit of the United States" could be read as to include the assistance of a Federal Reserve quantitative easing; and bank capital requirements with risk weights: 0% the Federal Government, 100% We the People.
PS. Fight inflation, from bottom up! Injecting liquidity while banks obtain higher risk adjusted returns on equity with Treasuries & residential mortgages (carbs) than with loans to small businesses & entrepreneurs (proteins), that favors demand over supply, something which can only help to inflate inflation.
PS. To top it up, are we really sure that the inflation that's pursued is the inflation that matters?
@PerKurowski
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