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3 - Helicopter Money Drops

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2020

Willem Buiter
Affiliation:
Citigroup
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Summary

Chapter 3 considers the analytics of helicopter money drops – monetized fiscal stimuli. These will always boost nominal aggregate demand because central banking is profitable (interest rates on assets exceed those on liabilities and/or central bank money is irredeemable). This Chapter also summarizes some of the key results of the first three chapters in the following propositions.

1: A central bank can be solvent with negative conventional equity.

2: Central bank current and future resources are ‘tax payers’ money,’ because the Treasury is the beneficial owner of the central bank.

3: The cancellation of Treasury debt purchased by the central bank is equivalent to the central bank holding that additional Treasury debt forever.

4: QE that is permanent/irreversible in present discounted value terms creates fiscal space for a deferred helicopter money drop.

5: A helicopter money drop today boosts demand even in a permanent liquidity trap, when the nominal interest rate is at the zero lower bound (ZLB) forever.

6: Lack of nominal effective demand is a policy choice or the result of a failure of cooperation and coordination between the central bank and the Treasury, not an unavoidable fate, even for an economy apparently stuck at the ZLB.

Type
Chapter
Information
Central Banks as Fiscal Players
The Drivers of Fiscal and Monetary Policy Space
, pp. 73 - 88
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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