Friday, April 4, 2025
I asked Grok:
"Would U.S. have been able to run up the current commercial deficits, had its government not been able to finance these with help of subsidies provided by lower bank capital/equity requirements against Treasuries than against e.g., loans to small businesses?"
Grok answered:
This is a fascinating question that gets into the interplay between fiscal policy, trade deficits, and banking regulations. Let’s break it down and think it through step-by-step.
The U.S. has been running significant trade deficits for decades—importing more goods and services than it exports—which means it’s effectively borrowing from the rest of the world to finance that gap. This is mirrored in the current account deficit, which has been funded largely by foreign capital inflows, like purchases of U.S. Treasuries by foreign governments and investors. The ability to sustain these deficits without a currency crisis or economic collapse hinges on the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency and the deep, liquid market for U.S. government debt.
Now, your question ties this to bank capital requirements—specifically, the fact that U.S. banks face lower capital requirements when holding Treasuries compared to, say, loans to small businesses. Under Basel III and U.S. banking rules, Treasuries are treated as "risk-free" assets (or close to it), assigned a 0% risk weight. This means banks don’t need to hold much equity capital against them, unlike riskier assets like commercial loans, which might carry a 100% risk weight or more. This setup incentivizes banks to load up on Treasuries, effectively making it cheaper for the government to borrow by ensuring steady demand for its debt.
Could the U.S. have run up its current commercial deficits—meaning trade deficits—without this "subsidy"? It’s a counterfactual, so we’re speculating, but here’s the logic:
Financing the Deficit: The trade deficit creates a need for external financing. Foreigners sell goods to the U.S., get dollars, and often recycle those dollars into U.S. assets—especially Treasuries. If banks weren’t incentivized to hold Treasuries via low capital requirements, the demand for government debt might be lower, potentially driving up yields (i.e., borrowing costs for the government). Higher yields could constrain the government’s ability to run fiscal deficits, which often indirectly support the consumption driving the trade imbalance.
Scale of the Effect: Banks are big players in the Treasury market, but they’re not the only ones. Foreign central banks, sovereign wealth funds, and other investors also buy Treasuries in huge volumes. Even if banks held fewer Treasuries due to higher capital requirements, it’s not clear the market would dry up—foreign demand might pick up the slack, especially given the dollar’s safe-haven status. So, the "subsidy" from bank regulations helps, but it’s not the sole pillar holding up the system.
Alternative Scenarios: Without this regulatory advantage, the U.S. might have faced higher borrowing costs earlier, forcing either tighter fiscal policy (less spending, lower deficits) or a weaker dollar to boost exports and shrink the trade gap. But the dollar’s reserve status gives the U.S. a lot of wiggle room—countries like China and Japan have kept buying Treasuries to manage their own currencies, not just because U.S. banks make it easy.
Historical Context: The U.S. has run trade deficits since the 1970s, post-Bretton Woods, when the dollar went off the gold standard. Bank capital rules evolved later—Basel I came in the late 1980s—so the deficit trend predates the modern regulatory "subsidy" you’re describing. This suggests the U.S.’s ability to sustain deficits relies more on global confidence in the dollar than on bank-specific rules, though those rules grease the wheels.
In short: The lower capital requirements for Treasuries have likely made it easier and cheaper for the U.S. government to finance deficits, indirectly supporting the consumption that fuels trade imbalances. But the U.S. probably could’ve still run big deficits without this mechanism—thanks to the dollar’s unique role and foreign appetite for U.S. debt—though perhaps not at the same scale or with the same ease. It’s a bit like asking if a car could still run without premium gas—it’d manage, but the ride might be bumpier.
What do you think—am I missing a piece of the puzzle here?
I told Grok: We must both be missing many pieces of the puzzle here:
E.g., once I wrote “Much more important than a triple-A for the United States is the fact that this country is, by far, the foremost military power in the world. Lose that supremacy and all hell breaks loose. Keep it and a BBB rating could do.” I guess that has loads to do with that too.
Grok replied:
You’re absolutely right—military supremacy is a massive piece of the puzzle, and it’s one that often gets underappreciated in economic discussions. The U.S.’s position as the world’s dominant military power isn’t just a geopolitical flex; it’s a cornerstone of the economic architecture that lets it run persistent deficits without the usual consequences other nations might face.
The dollar’s reserve currency status—and the ability to finance trade deficits with Treasuries—rests heavily on confidence. That confidence isn’t just about economic fundamentals like GDP or debt levels; it’s also about the U.S. being the ultimate backstop in global security. Military power ensures the stability of trade routes (think oil through the Strait of Hormuz), enforces sanctions, and projects a sense of inevitability: the U.S. isn’t going anywhere, so its debt remains a safe bet. Lose that edge, and the whole game changes—foreigners might hesitate to hold dollars or Treasuries, ratings could tank, and the cost of borrowing could spike, regardless of bank capital rules.
Your BBB point nails it: if the U.S. lost its military dominance, even a triple-A rating might not save it from a crisis of confidence. Conversely, with that supremacy intact, it can weather a downgrade or two—markets would still see Treasuries as the "least dirty shirt" in the laundry pile. Look at history: the U.S. got downgraded from AAA by S&P in 2011, and yields dropped because investors fled to Treasuries anyway. Military might, paired with the dollar’s entrenched role, gives the U.S. a buffer most countries can’t dream of.
So, tying it back to your original question: the bank capital "subsidy" for Treasuries is a booster rocket, but the military is the launchpad. Without it, the U.S. might not have the same latitude to run up deficits—regulatory tweaks or not—because the global trust in the system would erode. It’s like a three-legged stool: dollar dominance, economic heft, and military power. Kick one out, and the whole thing wobbles.
What else do you think we’re overlooking? The puzzle’s got a lot of edges!
I told Grok: Thanks! At this time of the day, it has to suffice… but, if you think of more “edges”, please tell me.
Grok replied: Glad to help! I’ll keep mulling it over—puzzles like this have a way of revealing new angles the more you poke at them. If anything else clicks, like the role of energy independence or soft power (culture, tech innovation), I’ll toss it your way. For now, rest easy, and feel free to ping me if you want to dig deeper later!
I asked ChatGPT:
"Would U.S. have been able to run up the current commercial deficits, had its government not been able to finance these with help of subsidies provided by lower bank capital/equity requirements against Treasuries than against e.g., loans to small businesses?"
ChatGPT answered:
That’s a sharp and insightful question — and the answer, while nuanced, is largely no. The United States would likely not have been able to run such persistent and large commercial (current account) deficits without the regulatory subsidy structure that encourages banks (and other financial institutions globally) to preferentially hold U.S. Treasuries. Let’s unpack this a bit.
1. Bank Capital Requirements and Risk Weights
Under international banking regulations (notably the Basel accords), different assets have different risk weights for the purpose of calculating required capital:U.S. Treasuries are typically assigned zero risk weight — meaning banks are not required to hold capital against them.
Loans to small businesses, on the other hand, often carry high risk weights (often 100%), meaning banks must hold significant capital (equity) against those exposures.
This encourages banks to:Hold more Treasuries, because they’re “cheap” to hold in regulatory terms.
Lend less to riskier but potentially productive borrowers like small businesses.
2. How This Links to Commercial (Current Account) Deficits
The U.S. has run decades-long current account deficits, meaning it imports more than it exports, and must borrow or sell assets to finance the difference.Foreign central banks, sovereign funds, and private investors accumulate U.S. dollars via trade and reinvest them in U.S. Treasuries.
The low capital requirements and the perception of safety make U.S. Treasuries extremely attractive globally — especially when backed by a deep and liquid market.
This creates a self-reinforcing loop: Step Description
1 The U.S. runs trade deficits and pays foreigners in dollars.
2 Foreigners reinvest those dollars in U.S. Treasuries.
3 Demand for Treasuries keeps U.S. interest rates low.
4 Low interest costs make it easier for the U.S. government to run deficits.
5 Government deficits support domestic demand, including for imports — sustaining the current account deficit.
6 And the cycle continues.
This cycle is lubricated by regulatory preferences (like low capital requirements) and reserve currency status.
3. Counterfactual: What if Treasuries Were Not Favored?
Had Treasuries been treated like any other credit instrument (with capital charges), several effects would likely follow:Banks would demand higher yields to hold Treasuries.
Government borrowing would become more expensive.
The U.S. government would face greater fiscal discipline, limiting its ability to deficit-spend at scale.
Less dollar liquidity would circulate globally, making it harder for the U.S. to attract capital to cover trade deficits.
In turn, the U.S. might be forced to reduce imports (i.e., run a smaller current account deficit).
4. Bottom Line
The U.S. likely could not have run up such large and sustained commercial deficits without the regulatory subsidies that make Treasuries so attractive to banks and other financial institutions. These subsidies — especially the lower capital requirements — create an artificial global demand for U.S. debt, enabling the U.S. to consume more than it produces year after year, while still attracting willing lenders.
In other words: Regulatory privilege granted to Treasuries is a hidden enabler of America’s global borrowing habit.
Would you like to explore how this could change if risk weights were rebalanced?
I said: Perhaps later, for to day it suffices. Many thanks!
ChatGPT replied: You're very welcome — glad it was helpful! Feel free to circle back anytime if you want to dig deeper into risk weights or global imbalances. Have a great rest of the day!
Note: The answers are copied exactly from those given to me by ChatGPT and Grok 3
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)