Former Fed Governor's Analysis of Repo Market Disruption
https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content...Disruption.pdf
This is a long (as in very long) read - of which I understood maybe a third to a half of the points Mr. Tarullo raised. However, there was one observation/comment that really got my attention, summarized in the final sentence of the next-to-last paragraph on page 5:
Of course, all the considerations that have been discussed for years in debates on the right size of the balance sheet are relevant here, including how much of the increased supply of Treasuries resulting from the larger budget deficits the Fed wants to monetize.
Admittedly, I'm not an "expert" on any of this, but this is something I've wondered about for quite some time … If the CBO is correct in their projection of annual TRILLION dollar budget deficits for [at least] the next ten years, are we sitting on an economic powder keg that could explode at any moment?
A couple of factors to consider … There is already evidence that some creditor nations who have been financing our debt via Treasury purchases, especially China, have been cutting back. If more countries follow China's lead, the Fed will have to either: (a.) raise interest rates to attract buyers, or (b.) monetize the debt by printing money. Raising interest rates will increase the cost of all that borrowing - even I understand that. Printing money could lead to a repeat of the 1970's, (i.e. runaway inflation). Both are unpalatable options.
Then there's the issue of the economy. So far, we've been lucky … We're now in the tenth year of (more or less) sustained growth, low unemployment, and a booming stock market. The pertinent question: How long can our economy continue to defy gravity?
The CBO projections assume no recession over the next ten years. How realistic is that? If we get a serious recession while simultaneously running TRILLION dollar deficits, who can predict how bad things might get? Answer: Nobody.
Maybe what we have in the repo market is the canary in the coal mine. The canary is telling us to get our fiscal house in order - before it's too late.
It's a bit ironic that Republicans (and fiscal conservatives) dismiss Bill Clinton as a failed President, but who was in charge the last time we were actually running a budget surplus?