Liquidity Trap with Causes, Signs, and Cures
A liquidity trap is an
economic situation where everyone hoards money instead of investing or spending
it. It occurs when interest rates are zero or during a recession. People are
too afraid to spend so they just hold onto the cash. As a result, central banks
use of expansionary monetary policy doesn't boost the economy.
Causes
Central banks are in
charge of managing liquidity with monetary policy. Their primary tool is to
lower interest rates to encourage borrowing. That makes loans inexpensive,
encouraging businesses and families to borrow to invest and spend. It's like
stepping on the gas to increase the engine's speed. When you push the gas
pedal, the car goes.
A liquidity trap often
occurs after a severe recession. Families and businesses are afraid to spend no
matter how much credit is available. It's like a flooded car engine. You've
released so much gas into the engine that it crowds out the oxygen. Pumping the
gas pedal doesn't help.
That's what happens in
a liquidity trap. The Fed's gas is credit and the pedal is lower interest
rates. When the Fed pushes the gas pedal, it doesn't rev up the economic
engine. Instead, businesses and families hoard their cash. They don't have the
confidence to spend it, so they do nothing. The economic engine is flooded.
There
are five signs that you're in a liquidity trap. All of them show that the
central banks efforts to boost the economy are not working.
Low-Interest
Rates
For a liquidity trap to
occur, interest rates must near or at zero. If it's been there for a while,
people believe that interest rates have nowhere to go but up. When that
happens, no one wants to own bonds. A bond bought today that pays low rates
won't be as valuable after interest rates rise. Everyone will want the bonds
issued then because it pays a higher return. The low-rate bond will be worth
less in comparison.2
Prices
Remain Low
Consumer prices remain
low. Typically, when the central bank adds to the money supply, it creates
inflation. During normal times, for each 1% increase in the growth of money,
inflation increases by 0.54%.1
In a liquidity trap,
it's more likely there will be deflation or falling prices. People put off
buying things because they believe prices will be lower in the future.
Businesses
Don't Spend the Extra Cash
Businesses don't take
advantage of low-interest rates to invest in expansion. Instead, they use it to
buy back shares and artificially boost stock prices. They don't use it to buy
new capital equipment, they make do with the old. They might also purchase new
companies in mergers and acquisitions or leveraged buy-outs. These activities
boost the stock market but not the economy.1
Wage
Remain Stagnant
Companies are also
reluctant to use the extra funds to hire new workers. As a result, wages remain
stagnant. Without rising incomes, families only buy what they need and save the
rest. This further contributes to the lack of demand.1
Lower
Interest Rates Don't Translate to Increased Lending
Banks are supposed to
take the extra money the Fed pumps into the economy and lend it out in
mortgages, small business loans, and credit cards. During a recession, people
aren't confident, so they won't borrow. Banks use the extra cash to write down
bad debt or increase their capital to protect against future bad debt. They
might raise their lending requirements, as well.
Five things can get the
economy out of a liquidity trap by stimulating demand.
Raise
Interest Rates
First, the Fed raises
interest rates. An increase in short-term rates encourages people to invest and
save their cash, instead of hoarding it. Higher long-term rates encourage banks
to lend since they'll get a higher return. That increases the velocity of money.
Price
Fall Enough
The economy could get
going again once prices fall to such a low point that people just can't resist
shopping. It can happen with consumer goods or assets like stocks. Investors
start buying again because they know they can hold onto the asset long enough
to outlast the slump. The future reward has become greater than the risk.
Expansionary
Fiscal Policy
The government can end
a liquidity trap through expansionary fiscal policy. That's either a tax cut or
an increase in government spending, or both. That creates confidence that the
nation's leaders will support economic growth. It also directly creates jobs,
reducing unemployment and the need for hoarding.1
Financial
Innovation
Fourth, financial
innovation creates an entirely new market. That makes financial assets, like
stocks, bonds, or derivatives, more attractive than holding cash.1
Global
Rebalancing
If some countries are
experiencing a liquidity trap, and others are not, then governments could end
the trap by coordinating global rebalancing. That's when countries that have
too much of one thing trade to those that have too little.
For example, China and the eurozone have too much cash tied up in savings. That's a result of consumer spending in the United States on Chinese exports. China must invest more in the United States to get that money back into circulation.