Fed Virtually Funding the Entire US Deficit: Lindsey
The latest round of extraordinary
Federal Reserve stimulus is risky and leaves little room to maneuver should
another crisis hit, economist Lawrence Lindsey told CNBC’s “Squawk
Box” on Wednesday.
Lindsey said that with the Fed
purchasing at least $40 billion a month in mortgage debt through QE3, “they are
buying the entire deficit.” (Read more: Fed Pulls Trigger, to Buy Mortgages in Effort to Lower
Rates.)
“I have no problem doing
extraordinary things in extraordinary times,” said Lindsey, a former White House
economic advisor under former president George W. Bush who now runs his own
consulting firm.
Lindsay said he agreed with the
Fed’s first two rounds of quantitative easing. Now, with
the economy now growing closer to its trend rate, “doing something that’s really
out of the ordinary is risking things.”
He added, “If this becomes the new
ordinary, it’s hard to imagine the Fed’s maneuvering room” should another crisis
hit. (Read More: Why Fed Policy Just Like the NFL Refs:
El-Erian.)
The central bank's recently announced bid to
stimulate the economy has also taken the pressure off politicians to deal with
the U.S. fiscal cliff, Lindsay argued, which could result in destabilizing tax
hikes and spending cuts automatically taking effect early next year.
“The Fed, maybe because it can't
do otherwise, has told the Congress: 'We're going to buy your bonds no matter
what,'” Lindsey said. “I think that's keeping the pressure off the president,
off the Congress.”
The effective of QE3 on interest
rates may also keep Congress from reining in borrowing.
“If the (Fed) chairman’s estimates
of the effectiveness of QE3 on interest rates come true, we’re going to be down
to an average cost of borrowing for the government of 0.6 of a percentage
point,” Lindsey said. “Why would any Congress not borrow and spend if they could
borrow at 60 basis points?”
CNBC
CNBC
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