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[Thai Economics Library | Archives| Currency Crisis 2007| Entrepreneurs]
December 16, 2008

fed

Now it's time for...Super Central Banker !
Ben Bernanke set to change the way The Fed works

By Jon Fernquest

supermanBack in October, 2008 people were staring in disbelief at the balance sheet of the federal reserve (Read article).

The Fed's balance sheet was changing in ways never before seen.

Now deeply mired in a liquidity trap which makes tweaking interest rates useless, the Fed is preparing even more radical transformations.

Ben Bernanke is prepared (like Superman) to leap over tall regulations, laws, and traditional forms of central bank operations and....will it work?

First, will injecting money directly into the economy (quantitative easing) work?

Second, will direct purchase of a new more risky types of financial assets like home loans by The Fed work?

Financial Times: The Federal Reserve has already stated its intention to buy $600bn (€449bn, £401bn) of Fannie and Freddie securities and is interested in doing more." (Read article)

Economists are calling for immediate inflation creation (Read Rogoff and Berry)

Others are pointing to the limitations of monetary policy (in fact blaming it for creating the current problems) and insisting that government spending and tax cuts take place immediately (Read Mark Thoma's review of Krugman's new book).

a balance sheet - a written statement that shows the financial state of a company at one point in time, lists the companies assets, liabilities (money owed), and the value if the owner's interest in the company (equity) (See glossary)
mired in Y - caught in the mud, face a big problem difficult to solve
a liquidity trap - when short-term interest rates are near zero and the central bank can't do anything to help the economy (See Wikipedia and Google definitions)
tweaking - changing in small ways trying to fix something (See glossary)
radical transformations - very large changes (into something completely different)

Today's article is important NY Times published in the Bangkok Post that explains in simple language what is happening:

As Rates Near Zero, the Fed Turns to Unproven Methods               

By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, New York Times
Published: December 14, 2008

WASHINGTON — Having printed more than $1 trillion in new money since September, yet still failing to stop the economy from sinking, the Federal Reserve is expected to enter a new era of cheap money this week.

On Tuesday, policy makers are expected to lower their target for the overnight federal funds rate to 0.5 percent, a record low.

In itself, analysts said, the move will be anticlimactic. Because demand for interbank loans has been so low, the actual Fed rate has been close to zero for a month. The real change will be in how the Fed tries to fight the recession from here on.

After Tuesday, the Fed will have to resort to mostly untested tools for promoting growth, because it cannot reduce its benchmark interest rate below zero.

Its goal will be to drive down borrowing costs wherever credit markets remain paralyzed. But the approach is much more complicated than raising or lowering a single rate, and it could have unintended consequences.

quantitative easing - the central bank prints new money (injects it straight into the economy) in order to increase the supply of money, used by Japan to fight deflation in the early 2000s (See Wikipedia)
a bank balance - the money that a person keeps in a bank
federal funds -
the balance kept by US banks at the US central bank (The Fed)
the federal funds rate -
the interest rate used by US banks when they lend their federal funds to other banks, this intrerest rate is used by the US central bank to control the money supply and availability of loans (credit) in the economy
overnight federal funds rate -
the interest rate for banks borrowing federal funds to meet reserve requirements
a climax - the most important and exciting moment (after a series of events leading up to it)
anticlimatic - the series of events made you expect a climax that never happened (disappointing, a let down)
interbank loans - money lent between banks to meet reserve requirements:

"Banks are required to hold an adequate amount of liquid assets [can sell quickly], such as cash, to manage any potential withdrawals from clients. If a bank cannot meet these liquidity requirements, it will need to borrow money in the interbank market to cover the shortfall. Some banks, on the other hand, have excess liquid assets above and beyond the liquidity requirements. These banks will lend money in the interbank market, receiving interest on the assets." (See Wikipedia)

recession - a reduction in an economic activity and GDP for two or more than half a year (two quarters) (See Wikipedia)
benchmark interest rate - an important interest rate that is used to measure and set other interest rates
unintended - you did not plan for it to happen or want it to happen
consequences - results of some actions or events
unintended consequences - things that happened that you did not plan or want to happen

Analysts say the current recession, which officially began a year ago, is all but certain to break the postwar record for duration, 16 months. But it could also set a record for depth.

The economy has already lost two million jobs this year. Analysts predict that unemployment, now 6.5 percent, could hit 9 percent by the end of next year:

postwar - after World War II
duration - length of time it exists
depth - how bad it gets (how many people are unemployed, how low the growth rate dips)

The Fed must now turn to an approach called “quantitative easing,” because it involves injecting money into the economy rather than aiming at an interest rate. The Fed has almost no experience with this approach.

“This is a whole new world,” said Richard Berner, chief economist at Morgan Stanley. “You don’t have a whole lot of historical precedent for knowing how this is going to work and what the unintended consequences could be.”

The risks include provoking inflation or yet another speculative bubble. Economists generally agree that the Fed’s long stretch of easy money from 2001 through 2004 contributed to the bubble in housing prices and the surge in reckless lending.

[Comment: See this week's paper by Stanford economist Taylor article with many graphs summarized in Econbrowser blog that argues "excessively loose U.S. monetary policy in 2002-2005 was a factor contributing both to the housing boom and subsequent housing bust."]

quantitative easing - the central bank prints new money in order to increase the supply of money, used by Japan to fight deflation in the early 2000s (See Wikipedia)
a precedent, a historical precedent  - a past event that provides a good example and justification for doing it again
a bubble, a speculative bubble - when overenthusiasm raises asset prices rise to unreasonably high levels given long-term asset values (See glossary)
a surge - a sudden large increase
reckless -
done without being careful (without protecting you and others from harm)
surge in reckless spending -
suddenly spending a lot of money without thinking carefully

For now, neither Fed officials nor most private economists see evidence of inflation or a bubble. If anything, forecasters are worried about the kind of deflation Japan experienced in the 1990s.

Indeed, the Japanese central bank used quantitative easing for years when Japan was mired in chronic price deflation and had reduced its benchmark interest rate to zero. The results were not good, and it took Japan nearly a decade to break out of the mire.

[Comment: Read an undergraduate thesis on quantitative easing from Germany and a letter from the Cleveland Fed arguing for quantitative easing]

deflation, price deflation - when the the level of all prices in an economy decreases
mired in - stuck in the mud, facing a problem difficult to solve
break out of the mire - solve the difficult to solve problem
chronic - lasts a long time

Although Fed officials have denied it, they actually began a form of quantitative easing months ago. Since the financial crisis erupted in August 2007, the Fed has created a raft of new lending programs that have lent hundreds of billions of dollars to banks, Wall Street firms and money market funds.

Until three months ago, the Fed financed that lending with its existing reserves, mostly Treasury securities. Because it was simply exchanging its cash or Treasury securities for hard-to-sell [illiquid] securities, the programs did not increase the total amount of money in the financial system.

But since September, when the Fed started to run low on Treasuries, it has been creating new money at a blistering pace. As a result, the Fed’s “balance sheet” has ballooned to just over $2 trillion last week from about $900 billion in September.

denied - said it was not true
created a raft of new lending programmes -
created a lot of new lending programmes
money market funds - Funds investing at least 95% of their assets in short term cash and near cash investments. They offer a way for small savers to get ‘wholesale’ rates of interest and at the same time retain easy access to their money (See Source and Google definitions)
central bank reserve funds - assets held on the central bank balance sheet (See article explaining sources and uses of US Fed reserve funds as of October, 2008)
Fed financed that lending with its existing reserves - made loans using
the pace - the speed that an activity moves at (See glossary)
a blistering pace - a very fast pace
ballooned - grew very large very quickly

(Source: Bangkok Post, As Rates Near Zero, the Fed Turns to Unproven Methods, from New York Times, business, links)





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