https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2005/S00164/monetary-policy-government-debt-and-bonds.htm
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Monetary Policy, Government Debt And Bonds
Thursday, 21 May 2020, 10:22 am
Article: Dugald MacTavish
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Open letter to Hon Grant Robertson, Minister of
Finance
Parliament
Buildings
Wellington, 6160
20 May
2020
Cc Right Hon Jacinda Ardern
Dear
Minister Robertson
First, let me express our
Society’s deep appreciation of the overall manner in which
your Government is responding to the Covid-19 crisis. We
recognise the perfect storm of events you are having to
navigate - tourism collapse, drought, volatile commodity
prices and epidemic. Under such circumstances we understand
the need to run a large fiscal deficit. However, it is the
manner in which that deficit is financed that concerns our
Society and which is the reason for this
letter.
Currently, the Reserve Bank (RBNZ) is buying
bonds from the secondary market, so Treasury (or future
taxpayers) will be indebted to them and have to honour
interest charges for the foreseeable future. At the time of
writing, the RBNZ has just doubled its quantitative easing
borrowing programme, with a commitment to purchasing up to
another $27 billion of bonds over 12 months. This brings the
value of the RBNZ’s Large Scale Asset Purchase programme
from the previous $33 billion limit, up to $60
billion.
The assumption is that at some point in the
future, better times will enable the loan to be cleared.
However, global debt is continuing to grow and all the while
the quantity and quality of our resources is steadily
declining, so this prospect is looking increasingly
unlikely.
Thus, we think it would be far preferable
for the Reserve Bank to purchase bonds directly from
Treasury instead and ask that you advise us of the
Governments reasoning for not, to date, doing so.
Key
reasons why we think it is a prudent course at this time
include the following:
- Since the loan is
from one Government agent to another, does
not impose any burden on society. Such an internal debt is
owed by a nation to its own citizens, so can just lie on the
books indefinitely and is thus effectively forgiven.
Government debt per se is more of an issue for a
neoclassical perspective than modern monetary theorists,
where government is seen as playing a small role - a view
Covid-19 has dramatically exposed.
- Right
now, the risk of inflation is very low as we are
approaching a deflationary period, so could be managed with
taxes if required. There is spare capacity in the form of
plant and labour lying idle and the velocity of money has
slowed right down. Key to controlling inflation is of course
to keep this money supply in balance with the goods and
services available. The time to worry about inflation is
when we have fully employed all our labour and
resources.
- It doesn't result in an unfair
transfer of wealth and disproportionately penalise
certain sets of people. Borrowing on the market
transfers wealth from younger taxpayers to older individuals
and institutions with the largest portion going
offshore.
- Buying bonds on the secondary
market will not promote banks to lend to business.
The interest-free loans that the government is offering
appear to be an acknowledgement of this.
- It
is cheaper. Treasury can sell bonds at zero
interest to the RBNZ whereas the rate at the moment is 0.9%
or less. The interest is very low. Even if the Treasury sold
bonds to RBNZ at the going rate, legislation requires that
the interest payments they received be returned to
Government, making the transaction effectively
interest-free.
Under current circumstances, it
appears to our Society that there is little other than
convention preventing Government from borrowing directly
from the RBNZ. For example, the Bank of England has
purchased 30% of its Government bonds directly from Treasury
without linked currency stability issues.
Thus, for
the reasons provided above, and particularly to mitigate
issues around intergenerational justice, we appeal to you to
give the option of borrowing internally your serious
consideration.
I wish to acknowledge the following
Wise Response supporters in the preparation of this letter
– Dr Geoff Bertram, Dr Marjan van den Belt, Dr Robert
Howell, Peter Fraser, Deirdre Kent and Cath Wallace. A brief
background note to the Wise Response Society is
appended.
I look forward to your reply and better
understanding your thinking on this matter.
Yours
sincerely,
Alan Mark PhD, ΦΒΚ (Duke), Hon DSc
(Otago), FRSNZ, KNZM
Chair
Dugald MacTavish,
QSM
Secretary
Annex A: Wise Response Society
Inc
- Wise Response is an Otago-based but New
Zealand-wide, non-partisan Society, launched in 2013, with
the purpose of persuading the New Zealand Parliament,
Government and New Zealand society in general, to confront
and respond effectively to any confirmed threats arising
from the question: "As demand for growth exceeds
earth’s physical limits causing unprecedented risks, what
knowledge and changes do we need to secure New Zealand’s
future wellbeing?"
- The Society has no formal
membership beyond the 15 persons who formed the Society. But
its strength is in the wide range supporters who participate
in online discussions around the "limits" theme, many being
experts in their professional fields are able to provide
multidisciplinary input into our initiatives. Our Patron is
Sir Geoffrey Palmer QC.
- In April 2014, we presented
our 5,000-signature petition to Parliament, that recommended
they undertake a Risk Assessment of New Zealand, in five
subjects as follows:
- Financial
security: the risk of a sudden, deepening, or
prolonged global financial crisis.
- Energy
and climate security: the risk of continuing our
heavy dependence on fossil fuels.
- Business
continuity: the risk exposure of all New Zealand
business, including farming, to a lower carbon
economy.
- Ecological/Environmental
security: the risks associated with failing to
genuinely protect both land-based and marine ecosystems and
their natural processes.
- Genuine
well-being: the risk of persisting with a
subsidised, debt-based economy, preoccupied with maximising
consumption and GDP and increasing inequality.
- The
Appeal sought a commitment to a quantitative, cross-party
risk assessment of how and exactly where New Zealand is
exposed, as a rational, integrated basis for planning a more
secure future. The petition was referred to the Finance and
Expenditure Select Committee, with a hearing on July 1,
2015. The majority response was negative, claiming
Government was adequately addressing the issues of concern,
but the three minority parties (Labour, NZ First, Greens)
offered strong endorsement.
- Since then the Society
has continued to promote the idea of squarely confronting
biophysical limits though various avenues, including the
Royal Society, petitioning parliament through GLOBE NZ,
arranging seminars and public meetings and submitting on
proposed government policy.
- Further information is
available at our website:
www.wiseresponse.org.nz
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