There has been a lot of talk in the news recently about
the Federal Reserve and the actions it has taken over the
past few months. Many media pundits have been bending over
backwards to praise the Fed for supposedly restoring stability
to the market. This interpretation of the Fed's actions couldn't
be further from the truth.
The current market crisis began because of Federal Reserve
monetary policy during the early 2000s in which the Fed lowered
the interest rate to a below-market rate. The artificially
low rates led to overinvestment in housing and other malinvestments.
When the first indications of market trouble began back in
August of 2007, instead of holding back and allowing bad decision-makers
to suffer the consequences of their actions, the Federal Reserve
took aggressive, inflationary action to ensure that large
Wall Street firms would not lose money. It began by lowering
the discount rates, the rates of interest charged to banks
who borrow directly from the Fed, and lengthening the terms
of such loans. This eliminated much of the stigma from discount
window borrowing and enabled troubled banks to come to the
Fed directly for funding, pay only a slightly higher interest
rate but also secure these loans for a period longer than
just overnight.
After the massive increase in discount window lending proved
to be ineffective, the Fed became more and more creative with
its funding arrangements. It has since created the Term Auction
Facility (TAF), the Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF),
and the Term Securities Lending Facility (TSLF). The upshot
of all of these new programs is that through auctions of securities
or through deposits of collateral, the Fed is pushing hundreds
of billions of dollars of funding into the financial system
in a misguided attempt to shore up the stability of the system.
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The PDCF in particular is a departure from the established
pattern of Fed intervention because it targets the primary
dealers, the largest investment banks who purchase government
securities directly from the New York Fed. These banks have
never before been allowed to borrow from the Fed, but thanks
to the Fed Board of Governors, these investment banks can
now receive loans from the Fed in exchange for securities
which will in all likelihood soon lose much of their value.
The net effect of all this new funding has been to pump hundreds
of billions of dollars into the financial system and bail
out banks whose poor decision making should have caused them
to go out of business. Instead of being forced to learn their
lesson, these poor-performing banks are being rewarded for
their financial mismanagement, and the ultimate cost of this
bailout will fall on the American taxpayers. Already this
new money flowing into the system is spurring talk of the
next speculative bubble, possibly this time in commodities.
Worst of all, the Treasury Department has recently proposed
that the Federal Reserve, which was responsible for the housing
bubble and subprime crisis in the first place, be rewarded
for all its intervention by being turned into a super-regulator.
The Treasury foresees the Fed as the guarantor of market stability,
with oversight over any financial institution that could pose
a threat to the financial system. Rewarding poor-performing
financial institutions is bad enough, but rewarding the institution
that enabled the current economic crisis is unconscionable.