Basel III will exacerbate the continuing slump
By Steve H. Hanke
When former U.S. president Bill Clinton proclaimed  the end of the era of big government, he obviously hadn’t anticipated the  uncontrolled government spending that would accompany former president George W.  Bush’s eight years in office and the truly shocking two years’ worth of  government spending on President Barack Obama’s watch. All told, the Bush/Obama  administrations have added a whopping 5.6 percentage points to government  spending as a proportion of GDP. Current federal government outlays are at  23.8%. This is significantly above the average of 20.1% since 1950.
The surge in government spending — coupled with President Obama’s  anti-market, anti-business and anti-bank rhetoric — does not inspire confidence.  In consequence, the current U.S. fiscal stance has fuelled a slump.
That said, it is important to stress what the fiscalists refuse to  acknowledge: Money dominates. When fiscal and monetary policies move in opposite  directions, the direction taken by monetary policy will dictate the economy’s  course. During the Clinton era, fiscal policy was tight (confidence was “high”)  and monetary policy was accommodative. The economy boomed. Since the Panic of  2008-09, fiscal policy has been ultra-expansionary, while the growth in the  money supply has fallen from a peak annual growth rate of more than 15% to an  annual rate of contraction of over 5%.
No surprise that the economy suffered a serious recession and then became  mired in a slump. With the current anemic money-supply growth rate, it looks  like the slumping economy will, unfortunately, be with us for the foreseeable  future.
What makes that gloomy prognosis more likely is the prospect for continued  muted growth in the broad measure of the money supply, M3. To understand this,  we must understand the implications of the so-called Basel III capital-asset  standards for banks, which are set by the Bank for International Settlements in  Basel, Switzerland, of which Canada and the United States are among its 28  members.
Basel III, among other things, will require banks in member countries to hold  more capital against their assets than under the prevailing Basel II regime.  While the higher capital-asset ratios that are required by Basel III are  intended to strengthen banks (and economies), these higher ratios destroy money.  In consequence, higher bank capital-asset ratios contain an impulse — one of  weakness, not strength.
To demonstrate this, we only have to rely on a tried and true accounting  identity: Assets must equal liabilities. For a bank, its assets (cash, loans and  securities) must equal its liabilities (capital, bonds and liabilities that the  bank owes to its shareholders and customers). In most countries, the bulk of a  bank’s liabilities (roughly 90%) are deposits. Since deposits can be used to  make payments, they are “money.” Accordingly, most bank liabilities are  money.
Under the Basel III regime, banks will have to increase their capital-asset  ratios. They can do this by either boosting capital or shrinking assets. If  banks shrink their assets, their deposit liabilities will decline. In  consequence, money balances will be destroyed. So, paradoxically, the drive to  deleverage banks and to shrink their balance sheets, in the name of making banks  safer, destroys money balances. This, in turn, dents company liquidity and asset  prices. It also reduces spending relative to where it would have been without  higher capital-asset ratios.
The other way to increase a bank’s capital-asset ratio is by raising new  capital. This, too, destroys money. When an investor purchases newly issued bank  equity, the investor exchanges funds from a bank deposit for new shares. This  reduces deposit liabilities in the banking system and wipes out money.
As banks ramp up in the anticipation of the introduction of Basel III in  January 2013, we observe stagnation in the growth of broad money measures. And  if that isn’t bad enough, Federal Reserve governor Daniel Tarullo has suggested  that capital-asset ratios for some larger U.S. banks should be mandated to be  set at higher levels than those imposed by Basel III. Governor Tarullo’s views  appear to be widely shared by his colleagues at the Federal Reserve and most who  inhabit the environs of Washington, D.C.
The suggestion of ultra-high capital-asset ratios for some banks will not go  down without a fight, however. Indeed, Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan  Chase & Co., recently confronted the chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben  Bernanke. Dimon argued that excessive bank regulation, including ultra-high  capital-asset ratios, would put a damper on money supply growth and the U.S.  economy. While Dimon might have been arguing JPMorgan’s book, he was on the  right side of economic principles and chairman Bernanke was on the wrong  side.
Banks in the eurozone come under the purview of Basel III. Like banks in the  United States, eurozone banks are shrinking their risk assets relative to their  equity capital, so that they can meet Basel III. Broad money growth for the euro  area is barely growing and moving sideways. And Greece, which is at the  epicentre of Europe’s current crisis, is facing a rapidly shrinking money  supply. These money-supply numbers will ultimately be the spike that is driven  into the heart of the Greek economy and the false hopes of a peaceful resolution  of Greece’s fiscal woes. Greece will be yet another case in which money  dominates.
In China, money matters, too. During the 1995-2005 period, when China fixed  the yuan-U.S. dollar exchange rate at 8.28, China’s overall inflation rate  mirrored that of the United States and was relatively “low.” Once China caved in  to misguided pressure — notably from the United States, France and international  institutions such as the International Monetary Fund — and allowed the yuan-U.S.  dollar exchange rate to wobble around, problems arose.
The money-supply growth rate surged in the wake of the Panic of 2008-09. And  as night follows day, inflation has raised its ugly head in China. The monetary  authorities are scrambling to cool down the inflationary pressures by slowing  monetary growth — from almost 30% per annum to 15%.
The combination of Basel III (or Basel III, plus) and China’s attempt to  squeeze inflation out of the economy via tighter money leads to a less than  encouraging money-supply picture. Goodbye recession, hello slump.
Financial Post
Steve H. Hanke is a professor of applied  economics at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and a senior fellow at  the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C.
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