2012 Redux: They Really Don’t Know What They Are Doing

 | Apr 12, 2016 01:19AM ET

The old adage is that strong and sustained economic growth cures many ills, if not all of them, so it is unsurprising that so many central banks would be so determined to create it. They are, surprisingly, limited in that endeavor as they always stop one step short of recognizing the shortfall. In other words, they will do everything (as they are now forcing themselves to prove) in the orthodox toolkit to achieve that goal but absolutely refuse any other means outside of it – including actual free markets.

The big news over the weekend came from Italy, and it was more rumor and innuendo than anything. Some very ugly patterns have resurfaced in events everyone assumed had been put to rest in 2011. Bank stocks, European in particular, have had a difficult time since the middle of last year, so the actual condition of European banks is undoubtedly a primary topic of policy discussions – both fiscal and monetary. Nowhere is that more pressing than Italy, where Italian banks stocks are off 35% (in the FTSE Italia All Share Banks Index) vs. “just” 25% for European banks within the Stoxx Europe 600.

Representatives of Italy’s leading (I’m not sure what qualifies a bank for that description since it is a pretty dubious distinction in this specific case) banks met with government officials to discuss yet another bailout scheme. The banks want the government to fund and established a financial vehicle in order to offload the still “somehow” rising epic of non-performing loans. They argued the same all through 2012 until Mario Draghi made his dramatic “promise” that sent sovereign and bank yields plummeting as “markets” assumed that would be the end of the matter.

It’s yet more evidence of the main flaw in orthodox theory. It was presumed that the Great Recession was a temporary interruption in the prior economic trend (which wasn’t itself all that robust); a very serious deviation brought about largely by the financial “shock” of the global banking panic. Recovery theory proceeded on that assumption, whereby central banks’ primary task was to restore banking function. From there, with a clear financial path, the economy could fully recover and that growth would over time alleviate these major imbalances left over from both the pre-crisis and the policy efforts in the aftermath.

It never happened that way, especially in Europe and especially with the events of 2011. Once more the ECB made “normal financial function” its priority first with OMT’s and then the massive LTRO’s. All of that seemed to have worked and December 2011 was the last of major public near-panics. With bond yields and spreads very, very low and no further disruption to banking there should have been recovery; but there hasn’t been.

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