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JANE D'ARISTA: The Federal Reserve system was created in 1913, and in 2013 it turns
100.
In the midst of the Depression, there was important legislation that dealt with the
structure of the Federal Reserve, and the effort was to move the economy forward by
making monetary policy more effective and more able to contribute to economic regrowth.
We have not done this in the aftermath of the Great Recession. We have not looked at
the problems we have with an essentially sclerotic Federal Reserve that has no longer the tools
that it needs to exercise its mandate to prevent inflation and promote employment.
What we don't always talk about and realize is the extent to which the structure of the
Fed as it is now actually contributed to the crisis that we have experienced. In 2008,
coming into the crisis, we had a central bank that essentially was based on the notion of
a bank-centered financial system. That certainly was no longer the case. The configuration
which we face now, all the other institutions--mutual funds, investment banks, asset issuers, insurance
companies--contribute three times as much credit to the system as does the Federal Reserve--or,
excuse me, as does the banking system. And we have also not taken into account the important
changes in instruments, innovations, etc., that have taken place since 1935, when the
act was revived, as it were.
We need to do that now. It's a very important mission that needs to be accomplished. And
part of the reason is this, that over the time period, what we have seen is the Federal
Reserve succumb to the siren call of deregulation. It allowed the creation of a market offshore
in which there was no regulation and no influence by the Federal Reserve or any other central
bank. The potential for this was enormous and ended up allowing the financial system--or
market forces, if you will--to be able to create liquidity in a way that the central
bank alone should do.
In the process of deregulation, the Federal Reserve lost the important tool that it had
used traditionally over time and since its inception to control the supply of credit,
and that is reserve requirements. When the Federal Reserve buys and sells government
bonds, it changes its balance sheet and either adds to or subtracts from the supply of bank
reserves that it holds. Banks have complained over the years about being subject to reserve
requirements because, as they said, it means they have a competitive disadvantage with
other sectors of the financial system, which is that they have to hold an asset on the
balance sheet which does not earn any income. The Fed was very sympathetic to this argument,
and, beginning of the 1980s, in addition to allowing no reserve requirements offshore,
removed reserve requirements from savings balances as well, and it allowed sweep accounts,
and it allowed--which permitted deposits to be put into a different category and therefore
not subject to reserves, and other strategies that were invented by the banks, which ended
up in 2008 with a miniscule amount of reserves held by the Fed for the banking system, a
missing cushion against the onslaught of what came to be the worst financial crisis in over
75 years.
The absence of influence on the supply of credit by the central bank became the most
important aspect that created the crisis, because the banks were then allowed to do
a particular kind of practice that they had invented in the external market, which was
to trade among themselves. They were able to take an asset, borrow against it, and buy
more assets to borrow against further. In other words, they were building positions.
This was creating liquidity like nothing had ever been done before in the global market,
not just in the domestic market. And it was, of course, a house of cards. As the demand
for assets grew, weaker credits came into the game, and the game was certain to fail
at that point, as indeed it did.
So the collapse, then, if you will, of--what happened was a run on the financial system
by the financial system as asset prices began to fall and there was no recourse and no cushion.
The Federal Reserve entered the crisis period with only one tool, a very important tool,
and one which went very far in helping with the crisis, and that is its inability to create
liquidity, lower interest rates, and hopefully, though not in reality in this event, increase
the demand for credit.
They were able--as the house of cards collapsed and liquidity contracted, the Fed was able
to come in and restore that problem to some extent. But at the same time, it got into
a situation in which the politics, perhaps, were such or the ideology was such that the
mission was to save the financial system rather than save the economy.
There was no nationalization of banks in the aftermath of the crisis. Nationalization would
have required separating a bank out, having good parts, bad parts, good banks, bad bank.
You take the toxic assets, you put them to the side; you create a functional institution
that can then go on to lend to the economy as you go forward. This was not done. Instead,
there was assistance to buy weaker institutions, which is still going on, especially in Europe,
and to proceed there. What happened was that you then had these huge institutions full
of toxic assets mixed in with the good assets.
There was, therefore, no way to go forward except to have a massive infusion of public
financing--taxpayer financing and Federal Reserve financing. The GAA says that the Federal
Reserve loans to banks over the crisis period amounted to $4 trillion. This was augmented,
of course, by infusions from the Treasury not only for capital but also for guarantees,
enormous guarantees to troubled--the larger troubled institutions in particular.
In addition, there was another kind of support that came to the banks, and that was, ironically,
the creation of new reserves. In the process of expanding its balance sheet enormously,
as the Fed did, it created a new cushion of reserves from just a little over $2 billion,
the reserve cushion held by the Federal Reserve Bank climbed to about $1 trillion in a six-month
period. This was very helpful, in that it gave the banks a face value asset to pay one
another, and therefore it freed up the credit freeze that was basically within the financial
sector itself and allowed institutions to begin to unwind their very troubled positions.
So that was a very helpful thing going forward for the banking system--very ironic, since
the problem was always that there were no discussions of reserve requirements as the
Fed had gone into the situation.
On the other hand, noting that this was helpful, the Fed then goes and asks for authorization
to pay interest on reserves for fear that the banks might not want to hold them. Why
they would not want to hold them is amazing, because there they had an interest-earning
asset now and know the Fed was making it possible to pay zero interest on liabilities, and so
the banks were above water in that respect. So going forward, it was very good for the
banks.
But what incentive to lend outside? I mean, it undercut all potential for the incentive
to lend going forward.