The Economist - USA (2021-07-10)

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The Economist July 10th 2021 65
Finance & economics

Quantitativeeasing


The quest to quit QE


T


he debateover  the  effect  on  markets
and the global economy of quantitative
easing  (qe),  the  purchase  of  bonds  with
newly  created  money,  is  almost  akin  to  a
culture  war.  To  its  critics  unrestrained  qe
during the pandemic has covertly financed
governments  while  inflating  asset  prices
and boosting inequality. To its fans qeis an
essential  tool  in  which  economists  have
justified  and  growing  confidence.  This
high­stakes debate is about to enter a new
phase.  Rich­world  central  banks’  balance­
sheets  will  have  grown  by  $11.7trn  during
2020­21,  projects  JPMorgan  Chase,  a  bank
(see chart 1 on next page). By the end of this
year  their  combined  size  will  be  $28trn—
about three­quarters of the market capital­
isation  of  the  s&p500  index  of  stocks  to­
day.  But  central  bankers  are  about  to  turn
this mega­tanker of stimulus around. 
The  justifications  for  qehave  almost
dissipated.  At  the  start  of  the  pandemic,
central  banks  bought  bonds  to  calm  pan­
icky  markets  amid  a  flight  to  safety  and  a


dash for cash. Then it became clear that the
pandemic  would  cause  a  huge  economic
slump that would send inflation plummet­
ing; qewas needed to stimulate the econ­
omy. Today, however, markets are jubilant
and inflation is resurgent (see Briefing). 
In  America  it  looks  increasingly  weird
that the Federal Reserve is the biggest buy­
er of Treasuries, as it was in the first quar­
ter  of  2021.  The  economy  is  powering
ahead.  In  June  it  added  a  heady  850,000
jobs,  according  to  figures  released  on  July
2nd.  On  Wall  Street  cash  is  so  abundant

that  over  $750bn  gets  parked  at  the  New
York  Fed’s  reverse­repo  facility  most
nights,  mopping  up  some  of  the  liquidity
injected  by  qe. On  June  30th  it  absorbed
nearly $1trn. The Fed’s purchases of mort­
gage­backed  securities,  given  America’s
red­hot housing market, now look bizarre.
Some central banks have already begun
to scale back their purchases. The Bank of
Canada  began  curtailing  the  pace  of  its
bond­buying in April. The Reserve Bank of
Australia said on July 6th that it would be­
gin  tapering  its  purchases  in  September.
The  Bank  of  England  is  approaching  its
£895bn ($1.2trn) asset­purchase target and
looks likely to stop qeonce that is reached;
Andrew  Bailey,  its  governor,  has  mused
about  offloading  assets  before  raising  in­
terest  rates,  contrary  to  the  normal  se­
quencing. In May the Reserve Bank of New
Zealand  said  it  would  not  make  all  of  the
nz$100bn  ($70bn)  asset  purchases  it  had
planned to. And the European Central Bank
is debating how to wind down its pandem­
ic­related scheme.
By  comparison  the  Fed  has  been  reti­
cent.  Last  month  Jerome  Powell,  the  Fed’s
chair, said that the central bank is “talking
about talking about” tapering its purchases
of  assets.  Minutes  of  the  meeting  preced­
ing his comments, released on July 7th, re­
vealed that officials thought it “important
to be well­positioned” to taper. Most econ­
omists  expect  an  announcement  by  the

Central banks face up to the daunting task of shrinking their presence
in financial markets


→Alsointhissection
67 Buttonwood:Convertiblebonds
68 A newkindofriftwithinOPEC
68 SPACsv privateequity
69 ForeigninvestmentinAfrica
70 Free exchange: Wealth inequality
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