Tuesday, May 19, 2009

To understand the role of the Federal Reserve in the causation of the current depression, we must understand its influence on interest rates

From The Atlantic Business Channel:

May 19 2009, 12:09PM

A Failure of Capitalism (III)--Blame the Fed, the Government in General, and the Economists

To understand the role of the Federal Reserve in the causation of the current depression, we must understand its influence on interest rates, and how interest rates influence economic activity.

The Treasury Department borrows money to finance government activities by issuing bonds, which are bought by banks and other investors, and also by the Federal Reserve. When the Fed wants to stimulate economic activity, it buys Treasury bonds from banks and other investors, paying cash, which increases the balances in bank accounts and by doing so provides more money for lending and spending. (The process is actually somewhat different and more complicated, but I am presenting an intuitive version that will be easier for readers who are not experts to understand.) As the supply of money for loans rises, interest rates fall (the larger the supply of a good, including loans, the lower the price, which in the case of a loan is the interest rate). As interest rates fall, borrowing becomes cheaper, and people borrow more and go deeper into debt, rather than saving. With more borrowing, banks need more money to lend, so they borrow too; as it is cheaper to borrow capital than to raise it by issuing more stock (because interest is deductible from income tax and the compensation that providers of equity capital to firms receive from those firms is not) banks become more indebted too, and hence more risky. And because houses are a product bought mainly with debt (for example, an 80 percent or 90 percent or even 100 percent mortgage), the demand for houses rise. So more houses are built, but in addition, because the overall stock of housing is so durable and is therefore not replaced frequently, the increase in demand pushes up prices. If nothing else besides low interest rates is pushing up housing prices, we have a bubble, in the sense that, as soon as the crutch of low interest rates is withdrawn, prices are likely to fall, as houses become more expensive to buy, the higher interest rates are. It was the collapse of the housing bubble when interest rates rose (mainly in 2005 and 2006) that started the economic collapse, and because banks were so heavily invested in housing through their role in issuing mortgages, they came near to collapse as well, triggering the depression.

The Federal Reserve pushed interest rates way down at the end of 2000 and kept them there until 2005 and during this period of low interest rates (in part of the period, the short-term interest was negative in real terms, because it was lower than the inflation rate). This was the decisive error that put too much risk into the economy, against a background of deregulation that allowed the banking industry to take whatever level of risk was profit maximizing given interest rates. The Fed was fooled by the fact that the usual indices of inflation, such as the Consumer Price Index, did not indicate a high rate of inflation. But the reason was that low-cost imports from China and other East Asian countries kept prices of most goods and services down. Inflationary pressures caused by an overheated economy flooded with lending were deflected into assets such as houses and common stocks.

The Federal Reserve missed all this. As late as October 2005, as the housing bubble was beginning to leak air, Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers--and about to be appointed the chairman of the Federal Reserve--stated publicly that the rapidly rising housing prices were not the product of a bubble. And so the finance industry, reassured, continued making risky mortgage loans and selling risky securities backed by those loans.

There were plenting of warnings of a housing bubble, going back to 2002 and found even in local newspapers. But most economists missed the bubble, and so it was easy to dismiss the few who warned as Cassandras and sourpusses. I do not fault the Federal Reserve for following the conventional wisdom. I do fault it for having failed either to take the warnings seriously enough to evaluate them in depth (the Fed has 250 Ph.D. economists), or to prepare contingency plans in the event that the ascent of housing prices proved to indeed be a bubble and the bubble collapses and brought the banking industry (so heavily invested in housing) down with it. As a result of the Fed's unpreparedness, when the banks began collapsing in September of last year the government was caught by surprise, improvised spasmodically, failed critically to prevent the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, and by its pratfalls deepened the downturn.

I read recently the statement by one business economist that if there is any hero in this mess we find ourselves in, it is Ben Bernanke. As far as I can judge, he has since last October managed the response to the crisis competently--perhaps more competently than his predecessor Greenspan would have done, or other possible replacements for Bernanke. But he is like a general who having been defeated in battle because of his errors manages the retreat of his army competently. He does not thereby escape blame for the defeat, and should not be permitted to shift blame to the soldiers under his command who gave way under attack."

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat

"As interest rates fall, borrowing becomes cheaper, and people borrow more and go deeper into debt, rather than saving."

Are people's wages rising as well? If you think that something is cheap, why rush out and buy it unless you think that it will be more expensive later? If you think that x is cheap because of low interests rates, you must assume that they will eventually go higher. Otherwise, they're not cheap. So, two simple points:

1) How are incomes faring as compared to housing prices or even payments?
2) If rates are low, then they must at some point be high.

In other words, borrowing becoming cheaper takes place in a context. Nothing in that context necessitates lowering capital requirements, lending standards, etc. If a product keeps getting more expensive, wouldn't you expect people to be buying less of it?

Lower interest rates are an incentive for investment. They take place in a context of competing incentives and disincentives. But an incentive is just that. Raising interest rates on the entire economy seems a rather blunt instrument to stop a housing bubble. The bubble part came from housing prices going up in an extraordinary amount as against most other purchases and parts of the economy. Had down payments been 20% or based on a reasonable percentage of income, then this crisis might not have taken place. Why focus on interest rates if there are other possible cures for the disease? For all we know, raising interest rates could have also meant that many potentially valuable businesses might never come into existence.

Perhaps the Fed should have done things differently, but why not focus on the industry itself where the problem existed?

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