Cash in circulation is soaring, and that usually means good things for the economy
Vehicles drive by the US Treasury Building in Washington, DC on November 15, 2011.
Karen Bleier | AFP | Getty Images
The amount of currency in circulation soared at a rate unseen since World War II last year, providing what historically has been a good sign for the economy.
Amid a massive influx of cash both from fiscal and monetary authorities, the total currency in circulation soared to $2.07 trillion by the end of the year, according to Federal Reserve data.
That marked an 11.6% gain from a year ago and was the biggest one-year percentage increase since 1945, as the nation was coming out of World War II and the military-industrial complex took hold.
A major reason was the $2.2 trillion stimulus bill the government passed in May, along with Federal Reserve digital money-printing that took saw the central bank balance sheet swell by more than $3 trillion.
There are other dynamics at play, though, when cash in circulation increases.
Huge demand from foreign central banks has been a significant component in the current run. Also, a need for cash on hand during times of uncertainty also increases the level.
Times of economic peril have historically coincided with rises of currency in circulation. Conversely, when all that cash builds up it tends to look for a place to go, leading then to economic boom times.
“Annual growth of US cash in circulation always peaks at the start of economic cycles,” Nick Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, said in his daily report.
This was the case in 1983 when the U.S. was heading out of its inflation-induced recession; 1991, as the country was coming out of a downturn, 2002 following the hangover from the dotcom bust, and 2009 as the financial crisis was coming to an end.
Using M1 – a country’s basic money supply – as the yardstick, those years saw respective circulation growth of 9.6%, 10.2%, and 9.8% in both 2002 and 2009.
“While this may be a quirky indicator, it has a solid history of marking economic turning points,” Colas wrote. “In all the buzz about how the pandemic economy favors virtual money over physical cash, it is worth noting that demand for the latter is at Y2K levels and higher than any other recession. This gives a fresh perspective to the idea of ‘cash on the sidelines,’ and one that should foretell improved US consumer spending in the months to come.”