http://asheredelman.com/?p=215 If I were Chairman of the Fed right now, I would try to instruct the President, his advisors and Congress that monetary easing alone, or monetary policy alone, can never revive the economy. And that without fiscal intervention on the part of government, we will be a very long time before the consumer is able to revive his needs, and a very long time before our budget will, in any way, become balanced; that the foolishness of constricting a budget at this time, in the middle of a recession, is politically motivated, but absolute absurdity.
When you go to Reaganomics and you try to release money to the rich in the hope that it will trickle down to the others, we have proven time and time again that this is nonsense. It doesn’t trickle down anywhere! The man with a million-dollar income who makes another $100,000, is more likely to not to spend it. And if he invests, he generally invests it into a secondary investment, not a primary investment. He will create no jobs with it. He will create no consumption with it – normally! In contrast, the man who earns $30,000 a year, or right now nothing, and has some money added to that, will spend the additional money, because he needs to. And that will create velocity of money in the market place. And that will create the beginnings of a recovery.
What was interesting was that the CNBC anchors did not challenge him, really, except to say that the banks paid it all back, and what is that extra four hundred billion dollars he was talking about? That is when he noted that the taxpayers are paying interest on bonds it issues, but the bank is getting to borrow money free. So the four hundred billion is the difference by which the Fed is subsidizing the banks.
He also noted that the banks are speculating as much as ever, and that some are one bad trade away from failing, and that gambling has to be separated out from banking.