Follow Us

FacebookTwitterRSSStumble UponDigg

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Time for a new round of quantitative easing to spur growth

But this one should be aimed at families and not banks


August 31, 2012

TORONTO, ON, Aug 31, 2012/ Troy Media/ – By now, we all know that the last global financial crisis, which started in 2007, was caused by too much leverage in financial assets. The crisis produced a pile of interlocking debts that threatened to bring the global economy down.

So how did governments respond? They stepped in and bailed out the world banking system.

To every financial crisis – remember the dot-com stock market crash of 2000, the ‘savings and loan’ crisis of the ’80s and ’90s? – governments have responded by pumping more credit (i.e. adding debt) into the economy to get it moving.

Unfortunately, the more credit we pump into the system the more growth we need – and too much debt kills growth.

University of Western Sydney (Australia) economist Steve Keen has come up with a different answer, one that would kill the debt in an intelligent manner. Keen says people – you and I – should come ahead of banks, companies even governments.

He is calling for one massive new round of quantitative easing, but this time aimed at citizens and not banks. He wants every citizen or family to receive serious money – $500,000 is a number he’s been quoted for in Australia – which you would use to pay off your credit cards, lines of credit, mortgages . . . Any money left over after paying your debts is yours to keep.

Of course, governments would still have to restructure themselves. After all, the promises they have made can’t financially be kept. But individuals would be pretty much debt free, maybe even with money to spare. That would relieve the pressure on government programs and pensions, giving them room to make changes.

Keen is even be in favour of governments defaulting on their debts at that point, just to clear the books. Yes, they’d have to live within their taxes after that – but the pressure would be off.

Fair enough. But Keen needs to take a look at an idea from Canadian Senator Hugh Segal to really make it work.

For years now, Segal has been proposing a negative income tax that would cover basic welfare. A negative income tax would do away with the need for welfare, disability pensions, Employment Insurance, the Canada Pension Plan, etc., as we know them.

Instead, everyone would be entitled to a basic annual income. Numbers on the order of $30,000 per year have been floated.

Any earnings above that would be taxable, but wouldn’t eat into the basics: if you earn more it ends up being whittled away through the tax system.

That would mean the end for the need for armies of people judging claims for support, doing investigations for fraud . . . all while guaranteeing basic needs.

Set the limit higher, and we could do away with all the programs for innovation and small business support, too. It would be easy enough to feed your family while being an entrepreneur.

Bailing out the world’s banking system hasn’t worked. It simply pushed governments into the too-much-debt category, even while interest rates dropped to near zero levels. Add in the ineffective economic action plans and stimulus programs governments initiated in a futile attempt to spur growth and the result has only been a further increase in national debts levels soaring even further.

Now more and more countries are borrowing just to pay interest or keep making payments.

We should be paying attention to people like Keen and Segal. After all, Canadian governments are also slipping past the same points-of-no-return as the Greeks, the Spaniards, the Americans and others are experiencing. Taxes can’t go up enough to pay off their debts, austerity can’t tighten enough, and their economies drift.

We need better ideas than ‘stimulus’ and ‘cuts’. Maybe it’s time to start a national conversation.

Troy Media columnist Bruce A Stewart is a Toronto-based management consultant. You can reach him at http://about.me/bastewart.

Read more Bruce Stewart.

Receive Bruce via RSS

This column is FREE to use on your websites or in your publications. However, Troy Media, with a link to its web site, MUST be credited.  

Editor's suggestions
Canadian students outside Quebec have much more reason to protest
August 30, 2012 VANCOUVER, BC, Aug 30, 2012/ Troy Media/ - Many outside of Quebec are bemused that the province's September 4th election was triggered largely by student protests in the ...
READ MORE
Tips to thriving in an economic mess
August 10, 2012 TORONTO, ON, Aug 10, 2012/ Troy Media/ - A quick tour of the world news can turn up no end of reasons to worry about the future. And ...
READ MORE
Bruce Stewart
Columnist Business Bruce Stewart writes a weekly column about business. His business column is distributed every Friday. Each provides you with a perfect advertising opportunity. Bruce's columns are FREE to use in your ...
READ MORE
China has plenty of oomph left
July 29, 2012 CALGARY, AB, Jul 29, 2012/ Troy Media/ - Economists love to worry. Their penchant for taking any random point of data and whipping it into a crisis has ...
READ MORE
Tips to thriving in an economic mess
Bruce Stewart
China has plenty of oomph left

© Troy Media

ADVERTISEMENT
0 comments
Sort: Newest | Oldest