When Should the Fed Bailout the Economy?

Peter Bernstein, author of such books as Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk, has an interesting piece in the Sunday NYT, titled, When Should the Fed Crash the Party?.

"In the darkest days of the Depression, Treasury Secretary Andrew W. Mellon, one of the richest men in the United States, opposed any government action to stem the tide of plunging business activity and soaring unemployment. Instead, he urged a policy of supreme indifference.

“Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers, liquidate real estate,” he said. “It will purge the rottenness out of the system,” he added, and values “will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick up the wrecks from less competent people.”

John Maynard Keynes, for one, thought that prescriptions like Mellon’s were preposterous. The economist called those who held such views “austere and puritanical souls” who believed that it would “be a victory for the mammon of unrighteousness” if general prosperity were not “subsequently balanced by universal bankruptcy.” Keynes perceived too much good in prosperity to treat it as the enemy, and he revolutionized economic theory to prove his point.

Keynes won the argument, and government intervention to overcome rising unemployment and falling profits has been standard operating procedure forever after. Nevertheless, the debate over intervention is not ancient history. It replays in today’s headlines."

Its an interesting debate, but I read Bernstein as discussing the wrong debate. He is reviewing criticism of the treatment of the problem, namely, the Fed’s clean up duties. But there is a debate brewing on preventative measures, also.

What makes this go round somewhat different is that the Fed’s intervention was forced large numbers of people who were exceedingly reckless. Even by comparison to LTCM or the S&L crisis, the risk embracement was unusually widespread.

As we have seen, there is a cost to this.

This is more than a question of creative Federal Reserve intervention. Right now, the nation is only beginning a debate on several related issues — including, ansd perhaps most importantly, regulation versus deregulation. If unrestrained financial engineering can lead to catastrophe requiring massive Fed intervention with great costs to the public (inflation, debt, etc.) than the "re-regulation" of the financial markets is a very likely outcome.

This is an important issue worth watching as the election season progresses . . .

>

Source:
When Should the Fed Crash the Party?
PETER L. BERNSTEIN
NYT May 11, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/11/business/11view.html

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Discussions found on the web:
  1. John Borchers commented on May 11

    They shouldn’t because we are going to pay a price for this later. They have given people false confidence.

    Imagine if you followed the Fed’s false guidence and bought housing or stocks because you believed what they said last year?

    All they are trying to do is slow the decent that will occur. That’s the purpose of the housing bill they are trying to get through.

    With Citibank selling $500B of assets that shows how serious the problem is. Our banks have busted themselves by making bad risky bets.

  2. me commented on May 11

    I agree with John. Even now we have Jamie Dimon saying its all right.

    Anyone notice Brad Setser saying that while we crow about imports falling, notice that exports are falling also?

  3. praetorian commented on May 11

    Keynes won the argument

    Shocker that economists came to the conclusion that what was needed was more, better paid and more powerful economists. Who would have thunk that?

    Cheers,
    prat

  4. Rob Dawg commented on May 11

    It is more disturbing that the two mandatory preceding questions are no longer even being asked.

    1. Is government empowered to intervene? For instance, think about the following statement you’ve heard all the time; “the Fed manages the economy.” No, the Federal Reserve Act was last clarried in 1977 as being “to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.”

    2. Should government intervene? Not the trivial yes/no type of answer we have come to expect but an honest evaluation of the heavy hand and unintended consequences.

    Only then should the third question even be considered; what should be done.

  5. alexd commented on May 11

    Perhaps we need something a bit more draconian:

    If you invest other peoples money with excessive leverage or commit fraud with same then you suffer cap. punishment. Perhaps that would balance the temptation to throw gasoline on the fire After all we are dealing with human nature.

    For the sake of argument lets call excessive leverage more than 4 to one, if held overnight or longer.

    Perhaps that might give pause.

  6. alexd commented on May 11

    The above applies to the managment of other people’s money.

  7. Donny commented on May 11

    Excellent debate!

    What a sham … “Free Markets”. Let’s call it that until the crap hits the fan. Then we’ll bailout Bear Stearns, have emergency rate cuts (10 mins prior to the markets opening), open the lending window to reckless banks. And all this done to protect the people/institutions that created this mess.

    What’s next … Is the Fed gonna come in and backstop the deal for Bank of America to purchase Countrywide … and what’s to stop B of A from demanding it. After all, the FED has established the moral hazard.

    YES … our economy needs to purge.

  8. Eric commented on May 11

    Just below Bernstein’s piece is Lim’s weekly column on whether the “rally is real”. Setting aside for a moment the issue of whether such a small, brief move in stock prices is even worthy of such parsing, the more interesting “disconnect” is the difference between the endless data points, semantics, academic arguments, etc. on the one hand, and the way pundits (bullish *AND* bearish) both go long stocks to make money through it all. e.g. A few days ago, there was a blurb somewhere about Honeywell, so BR takes the opportunity to mention that he’s been long the name for years, selling only very recently. Yeah, yeah, I know that BR is no Fleckenstein. He’s not going to swear off buying stocks out of some ignorant, demented grudge against Alan Greenspan or something. And I’m in no way saying that BR doesn’t understand that opportunities still exist even in bear markets. But Honeywell? It really calls in to question the value of the endless pedantic bickering about the vast sea of data points. That BR would spend so much time mining for bearish, gloomy interviews and graphs only to mention that he’s been a long-term holder of Honeywell all this time reminds me of that scene in Seinfeld when Elaine is telling her coworker what a bad seed George is. Elaine: “Oh trust me. He’s a bad seed. He’s a horrible seed. He’s one of the worst seeds I’ve ever seen!” Anna: “And you two are friends?” Elaine: “Oh yeah, we’re good friends.” The fact of the matter is that BR made a heck of a lot higher percent return on his HON investment than nearly all of the big-time bears have made on their downside bets over the past 4-5 years. Look, if you think Citigroup is pathetic, then don’t buy Citigroup. If you think Pulte’s goose is cooked, then don’t buy Pulte. But if BR telling us that he’s been a long-term holder of Honeywell is what we hear in the midst of the worst ______ since the Great Depression, then it makes so much of the CNBC, blogs, graphs, shouting, definitions, wagers, etc. seem like a sideshow to the real thing — finding stocks to go long.

  9. Phil commented on May 11

    How can the Fed fix the problem when it is part of the problem?

    Kevin Phillips talks about the problem and the BS data that Fed keeps feeding the American people. Fabulous interview….

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIoEU1yK1_c

  10. m3 commented on May 11

    how about this question:

    “When should the fed KILL the economy?”

    Volcker killed the economy, and it led to spectacular long term results.

    the fed should have the authority to go both ways. it should punish people when they screw up, and reward them when they do well. that’s how capitalism works.

    too often they do the opposite.

  11. dave54 commented on May 11

    CANCER: Cancer is uncontrolled growth. Beirut would be a geo-political example. As
    a conduit of trade & travel between Europe and the Middle East it grew large. Then
    in the ~60’s jet travel & transport forced it’s long & violent collapse into chaos,
    as it’s reason for existance faded away…And so it is with the USA. We’ve fed (too much?) unsustainable growth and have (metaphorical) cancer too.

  12. DownSouth commented on May 11

    I think Peter Bernstein offers us a deliberate distortion of the historical record. He asserts that Andrew Mellon “opposed any government action to stem the tide of plunging business activity and soaring unemployment.”

    Mellon, however, certainly didn’t seem to have any reservations about bailing out the banks and big corporations, that is as long as it was done with somebody else’s money. As Frederick Lewis Allen points out in “Since Yesterday:”

    “Again Hoover acted, and again his action was financial. Something must be done to save the American banking system, and the bankers were not doing it; the spirit of the day was sauve qui peut. Hoover called fifteen of the overlords of the banking world to a secret evening meeting with him and his financial aides at Secretary Mellon’s apartment in Washington, and proposed to them that the strong banks of the country form a credit pool to help the weak ones. When it became clear that this would not suffice–for the strong banks were taking no chances and this pool, the National Credit Corporation, lent almost no money at all–Hoover recommended the formation of a big governmental credit agency, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, with two billion dollars to lend to banks, railroads, insurance companies.”

    So Mellon presided over, as Allen puts it, “a banking system dependent upon secret loans.”

    And then there is the moral question Allen poses as to whether Hoover and Mellon were “acting with a tory heartlessness in permitting financial executives to come to Washington for a corporate dole when men and women on the edge of starvation were denied a personal dole.”

    He goes on to state that: “What is certain is that at a time of such widespread suffering no democratic government could seem to be aiding the financiers and seem to be simultaneously disregarding the plight of its humbler citizens without losing the confidence of the public.”

    Now, back to Bernstein. He concludes that “the debate over intervention is not ancient history. It replays in today’s headlines.”

    But what Bernstein so conspicuously fails to point out is that, just like back in the days of Hoover and Mellon, there was NO debate over intervention to save Wall Street and the big banks. The debate, then and now and always, arises when we start pushing the envelope to help those farther down the feeding chain.

  13. Winston Munn commented on May 11

    What an incredibly deep subject for Mother’s Day – certainly way too deep for our Sidebar Society to think about for long – after all, American Idol comes on in a few mintues.

    As in any human concept, the problems occur when the extreme of that idea is indulged. Pure capitalism is not unlike law of the jungle; yet an ideal socialism is impossible due to the vagueries of mankind’s nature.

    The best we can hope for is imperfect compromise. More regulation is required for the simple reason that deregulation is worse.

  14. Aaron commented on May 11

    Long time reader, first time poster.

    Just one thought: Where’s the
    Glass-Stegall Act
    when we really needed it?

  15. Jeff commented on May 11

    I’m not sure it’s a question of when the Fed should crash the party, per se, but that whatever they do, they do it consistently on both the inflation and deflation side of the bubble. That is, their policy needs to be symmetrical.

    So if the Fed is content to not prick asset bubbles as they inflate, it needs to have a similar lassiez faire approach now, as it is deflating. Otherwise we risk creating moral hazard.

  16. Jurgen commented on May 11

    “When Should the Fed Bailout the Economy?”

    I think the question is illogical, I don’t think the Fed is capable of bailing out the economy.
    The only way that the Fed can bailout anybody is by creating more money, this will increase M3 and therefore create inflation. Any bailout performed by the Fed must always be paid for by (relatively) lower wages. Lower wages in turn reduce consumer demand which causes unemployment. The question really is, should the Fed collapse the economy immediately or let it gradually decline. Whatever the choice, the dominos must fall.

  17. mock turtle commented on May 11

    FDR’s Folly” by Jim Powell argues that FDR’s policies merely prolonged the Great Depression. Excellent book…

    Posted by: LudwigVonMises | May 11, 2008 12:58:26 PM
    —-

    what folly was that???

    feeding starving people…

    halting the hemorrhaging of gold from us to Great Britain and buying gold above market price by force of law…

    providing jobs that private businesses could not…

    building infrastructure like grand coolee dam and bridges with the labor of desperate workers who alternatively could have become communists…

  18. dave54 commented on May 11

    POST-WAR GROWTH ENGINES:

    Korean War
    Elvis
    JFK/MLK/RFK
    Beatles/Stones/Zeppelin
    Vietnam War
    Nervous Nixon…Jimmy Carter
    Movie star elected President
    Cut worker wages/benefits/pensions
    Cut corporate taxes & regulation
    Open borders
    Off-shore manufacturing base
    Stock buy-backs
    Low interest rates…borrow/lend
    Commercial real-estate boom
    Internet
    Tech~stock~mania
    Clinton rocked & rolled
    Sherriff George elected President
    War in Middle-East
    Lengthen Super-Bowl halftime show
    Residential real-estate boom
    HARRY POTTER
    Earmarks
    Pharmaholics subsidizes
    Mega-yatchs servicing
    NASCAR on HD-TV
    Lower dollar/higher exports
    Stimulus checks
    Microsoft buys…[?]
    Elect Obama President
    Universal healthcare
    Alaska sold back to Russia
    Marijuana legalized & taxed
    Hyper-Inflation
    Adapt to coastal flooding
    Aliens from outer-space invade

  19. wunsacon commented on May 11

    Nice quotes/point, DownSouth. Good points, mock turtle.

    Dave54, don’t hold back. What comes next??

  20. dave54 commented on May 11

    WHAT’S NEXT?
    Fed takes more sketchy paper
    Great Lakes water piped west
    McDonalds switches to soy burgers
    Japan buys Hawaii

  21. SteveC commented on May 11

    The Fed should prioritize their mandates, inflation first and full employment second. If that were the case, they would be much more careful bowing to pressure and lowering rates at this time. The European Central Bank is in a better position than the US. Their first and only mandate is controlling inflation and protection of their currency. After all, they have real world experience with hyperinflation. Our Fed seems to be hell-bent on heading us down that path, although we’re only in the 2nd or 3rd inning with the raging fires still a few years away.

  22. BelowTheCrowd commented on May 11

    Bernstein makes another false claim:

    “This school favors government intervention on the upside, but wants no part of government action when trouble develops.”

    Much of this school (anti interventionists) are either explicity or closet gold-standard folks, who would prefer no intervention either way. They don’t want the fed spiking the bunch bowl OR taking it away, as they will typically argue that these actions typically make the swings greater than they otherwise would be.

    Even classic monetarists would argue that the fed should just be consistent and resistent to much moving at all. Remember Friedman’s claim that that the best thing to do would be to just set monetary growth to match long term GDP growth (about 3%) and leave it there.

    -btc

  23. Blissex commented on May 11

    «The Fed should prioritize their mandates, inflation first and full employment second. If that were the case, they would be much more careful bowing to pressure and lowering rates at this time. The European Central Bank is in a better position than the US. Their first and only mandate is controlling inflation and protection of their currency. After all, they have real world experience with hyperinflation.»

    The reason for that is that the USA government refuses to do fiscal policy except through the military-industrial complex (“national security keynesianism”), just as the USA government refuses to do legislation in many areas.

    The results are that the Fed and the Supreme Court have to step in with monetary policy and Constitutional policy as “technical” bodies which however do a lot of not-so-hidden politics because USA national politics are gridlock.

    USA national politics are gridlocked because the South was defeated but did not accept the defeat, and are still waging a guerrilla war against the yankees, and the West allies with the South or the North but only to pursue their own interests, and to keep both weak so that the West can do as they damn please.

    So the great socialization of the involvency of the investment banks (done leaving all the scoundrels in place to continue tunneling as hard as they can) is done by the Fed because this Dixie administration cannot bear to use fiscal means even to save their generous sponsors (and to fool the loser voters as to whom is paying for recharging the great Wall Street Bonus Machine), and so on.

  24. John commented on May 11

    Some people think both Roosevelt’s had the wisdom of the old aristos who know it is better to intervene and keep the villagers from suffering too much so they don’t get the pitchforks and torches out and start burning and looting.
    The parvenue Mellon, as with most parvenues, did not understand this and probably thought non intervention along with private security forces would be sufficient for the day.
    Same discussion and issue going on today. All the free marketeer non interventionist parvenues out there who lost nothing on the deal probably think a good Blackwater security contract will be enough no matter how bad it gets down in the village.
    Of course those who lost any money would take compensation from whomever, even the evil government.
    And of course, America is a classless society so all of the above is nonsense.

  25. Blissex commented on May 11

    «He is reviewing criticism of the treatment of the problem, namely, the Fed’s clean up duties. But there is a debate brewing on preventative measures, also.»

    It is also a debate on punitive measures.

    «What makes this go round somewhat different is that the Fed’s intervention was forced large numbers of people who were exceedingly reckless. Even by comparison to LTCM or the S&L crisis, the risk embracement was unusually widespread.
    As we have seen, there is a cost to this.»

    To say this more clearly, that the investment banks have become bankrupt has been due to their management tunneling away a lot of their their capital by underestimating the reserves needed thanks to exceptionally generous ratings on their loans, and thus creating imaginary profits of which they took 50% in compensation and bonuses, and even more as vested stock options.

    Now the debate is not as Peter Bernstein puts it about whether the Fed should rescue the economy or “crash the party” instead, because there are more than two positions:

    #1 When there has been a widespread insolvency due to widespread tunneling by management, effectively suspend bankruptcy provisions, by rescueing the creditors, the debtors, and even the shareholders of the banks while letting the management get away scott free, keeping 100% of what they have taken out of those banks.

    #2 When there has been a widespread insolvency due to widespread tunneling by management, let them fail drag down the financial system and their creditors and their debtors too by letting them go bankrupt.

    #2 When there has been a widespread insolvency due to widespread tunneling by management, let them fail drag down the financial system and their creditors and their debtors too by letting them go bankrupt, and initiate vigorous investigations into the causes of the crash leading to a massive wave of prosecutions leading to convictions and restitutions of the ill-gotten gains, to deter management from doing it again.

    #4 When there has been a widespread insolvency due to widespread tunneling by management, effectively suspend bankruptcy provisions, by rescueing the creditors, the debtors, but not management, by letting those investment banks go bankrupt, recapitalize them but at the same time initiate vigorous investigations into the causes of the crash leading to a massive wave of prosecutions leading to convictions and restitutions of the ill-gotten gains, to deter management from doing it again.

    And all of the above can be done stealthily by the Fed using pseudo-monetary means or explicitly by Congress using the commerce powers granted to Congress by the Constitution using the fiscal lever.

    #1 is worse than #2 or #3, and the only sensible option is #4, done by Congress. But the need to keep the Republican campaign donor class safe and rich, and to delude the losers as to who is paying, has led to the Bush and Bernanke administration to choose #1.

    The issue in other words is not whether to do a bailout of the “economy” as the vested sycophants do say, but whether to do a bailout of investment bankers as well as the economy, and whether to do openly via fiscal means or surreptitiously via pseudo-monetary means.

  26. ac commented on May 11

    The economy recovered sharply during the FDR years. The problem with the idiots is they can’t except the depths of the GD and the time it would take to rerise out.

    Hence, FDR is probably a non-issue when it comes to the GD.

  27. Blissex commented on May 11

    «Much of this school (anti interventionists) are either explicity or closet gold-standard folks, who would prefer no intervention either way. They don’t want the fed spiking the bunch bowl OR taking it away, as they will typically argue that these actions typically make the swings greater than they otherwise would be.
    Even classic monetarists would argue that the fed should just be consistent and resistent to much moving at all. Remember Friedman’s claim that that the best thing to do would be to just set monetary growth to match long term GDP growth (about 3%) and leave it there.»

    There are actually four schools:

    #1 [The Fed and/or fiscal policy should be pro-cyclical: spike the punch bowl to make investment bankers happy, and then stand by when after those bankers have looted the financial system it collapses]

    #2 [The Fed and/or fiscal policy should be pro-Republican donor class, spike the punch bowl to make them happy with higher asset prices, and then whenever asset prices threaten to go down because investment bankers have looted the financial system, spike it again and again and again and again]

    #3 [The Fed and/or fiscal policy should be anti-cyclical, because wide swings in finance etc. depress productivity and investment by raising risks and the hurdle rate, and tighten a bit whenever the economy overheats for any reason, even “good” reasons, because too much growth is not fine, and loosen a bit when the economy slows down as underused capacity is not very efficient either.]

    #4 [The Fed and/or fiscal policy cannot be trusted to do #3, as that is “fine tuning”, and therefore they should just aim to do the same with same by stabilizing two undefinable quantities, money and its velocity (usually the buffoons who write this forget “and its velocity”, never mind defining either).]

    The ideal situation is #3, because it does not require fine tuning and there is ample literature that too fast growth is almost as bad a too slow growth, and it is technically realistic. #4 is technically unrealistic, but #3 and #4 are politically unrealistic, because #1 and #2 greatly benefit the party of inflation or anyhow the vast majority of real-asset holders who are generous Republican campaign donors, and who pays the pipers calls the tunes.

  28. Estragon commented on May 11

    BR – “with great costs to the public (inflation, debt, etc”

    The costs are not to “the public” in the case of inflation and debt. In fact, these are redistributions from one public (prudent investors and savers) to another (imprudent investors, intermediaries, and debtors). The debate on whether to make the redistribution now appears moot. It’s happening.

    All that remains is a debate on the mechanics of the redistribution. The traditional conservative methods would be implicit force (regulation and fiat), whereas the traditional liberal methods would be fiscal (tax & spend).

    The objective of those imposing the redistribution, by whatever means, isn’t so much to effect the redistribution, but rather to get and retain the power to do so. My guess is the debate will appear to be about how to protect “the public”, but will actually be about how to get and stay in power.

  29. Winston Munn commented on May 11

    Interesting comment, Blissex, but it would help if you formatted into an easier read.

    Your position leads me to a secondary question – if there is to be a rescue, which economy are we to save, the real economy or the banking economy?

    I remember – as do most – how fervently Bernake, Paulson, and the rest denied that subprime would spill over into the “real economy”. As Barry has been pointing out all along, the reduction in home equity loan availability at some point in time had to work its way into the consumer’s ability to buy and hence into the “real economy”. (I hope that is close enough to an accurate depiction of Barry’s position not to be banned as an asshat!)

    However, all the bailout plans involve one goal at their core – preventing further declines in housing prices. The further drop in housing prices will affect most the banking and the shadow banking industries. The consumer all along has been spending from a gift card that was issued on a bogus account – now that it is known that the account was bogus, no amount of hocus-pocus or accounting gimmickry will make the owners of those cards solvent.

    The only true fix is the fix imposed by the marketplace – losses taken and falling prices – and any other solution is simply slight-of-hand deception while the rabbit is pulled out of the taxpayer’s oven and a day-old rat is substituted.

    Hedonically, of course.

  30. Estragon commented on May 11

    Winston Munn – “no amount of hocus-pocus or accounting gimmickry will make the owners of those cards solvent”

    Inflating away the real value of housing debt would do the trick, would it not?

  31. Blissex commented on May 11

    «In fact, these are redistributions from one public (prudent investors and savers) to another (imprudent investors, intermediaries, and debtors). The debate on whether to make the redistribution now appears moot. It’s happening.
    All that remains is a debate on the mechanics of the redistribution.»

    The redistribution may well be in the interests of the “prudent investors and savers” because the ruin of the system looted by the reckless (Republican campaign donors) may ruin them too, because nobody is an island. The prudent choice is not to risk it if the mechanics can be adjusted so that it is less likely in the future. But if the reckless (and often fraudulent) are not punished, who’s to stop the next generation of the reckless (and those tempted by fraud) to learn that looting and threatening the stability of the financial system is not only highly profitable, but risk free?

  32. Blissex commented on May 11

    «However, all the bailout plans involve one goal at their core – preventing further declines in housing prices.»

    Not quite — some involve making the public sector absorb the losses, and then whose losses to absorb. If there are $500,000 mortages on $250,000 houses there are two/three alternatives:

    #1 The Fed or Congress make good $250,000 of each of those mortgages.

    #2 The value of the house rises to $500,000 in nominal terms.

    The Fed is trying to do both: the Bernanke CDS facilities are used to give insolvent investment bank and their accomplices the right to collect $500,000 cash for each $500,000 mortgage, and deeply negative real interest rates are meant to achieve #2.

  33. Winston Munn commented on May 11

    Estragon wrote, “Inflating away the real value of housing debt would do the trick, would it not?”

    Only if there were a pass-through of the inflation to those who pay the mortgages; more of the same asset inflation without wage inflation would simply exacerbate the problem, would it not?

    And as we know, the Fed is dead against higher wages because in the Kingdom of Fed higher wages cause inflation.

  34. Winston Munn commented on May 11

    Blissex,

    I take it you mean door #3, i.e., nationalisation of the risk first and o-n-l-y then will the marketplace be allowed to function.

    Can’t have those who are too-big-to-fail in jeopardy now, can we?

  35. DownSouth commented on May 11

    ☺☺”And as we know, the Fed is dead against higher wages because in the Kingdom of Fed higher wages cause inflation.”–Posted by: Winston Munn | May 11, 2008 7:08:09 PM

    Things look pretty grim for the working man. The unions have been defanged. The elite media gatekeepers work for the plutocrats, setting the agenda and framing the debate at major newspapers and television outlets. Politicians and policy makers (such as the Fed) on both sides of the aisle have sold out to the “economic royalists.”

    The princes of Wall Street have spent years and millions of dollars in lobbying to create a shadow banking system free of government regulation. They will not give it up without a huge battle.

    So the odds of any significant re-regultion of Wall Street seem remote.

    But I wouldn’t consider it a knockout just yet. The reason is the internet, which I consider to be the greatest facilitator of democracy since the invention of the printing press.

    Its use as a political tool is still in its infancy, but we have already seen its amazing potential:

    1) Howard Dean’s meteoric rise from nowhere

    2) Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s defeat of Jose Maria Aznar for president of Spain

    3) Ned Lamont’s defeat of Joe Lieberman in the 2006 Democratic primary

    4) And the latest: Barak Obama’s defeat of Hilary Clinton in this year’s presidential primary. As Frank Rich observed in today’s NY Times:

    “The millennials’ bottom-up digital superstructure was there to be mined, for an amalgam of political organizing, fund-raising and fun, and Mr. Obama’s camp knew how to work it. The part of the press that can’t tell the difference between Facebook and, say, AOL, was too busy salivating over the Clintons’ vintage 1990s roster of fat-cat donors to hear the major earthquake rumbling underground.”

    So I am of the firm belief that, if there is any deliverance for the working and middle classes in America, it will be acheived through this incredible new tool called the internet.

  36. wally commented on May 11

    “As we have seen, there is a cost to this.”

    I think the debate comes down to that. How much do we have to see before understanding? Charts and stats on the internet? Every tenth man beheaded? Babies ripped from the arms of screaming mothers? There is no question that fear of the consequences is needed for some, many or most people to exercise restraint. How much and to whom are the issues.

  37. Greg0658 commented on May 11

    Winston asks – “if there is to be a rescue, which economy are we to save, the real economy or the banking economy?”

    Its got to be the real economy. Gaming will not continue to provide.

    Educating up to a job and then Laboring in that job must be properly rewarded.

  38. kwikpop commented on May 11

    «However, all the bailout plans involve one goal at their core – preventing further declines in housing prices.»
    Not quite — some involve making the public sector absorb the losses, and then whose losses to absorb. If there are $500,000 mortages on $250,000 houses there are two/three alternatives:
    #1 The Fed or Congress make good $250,000 of each of those mortgages.
    #2 The value of the house rises to $500,000 in nominal terms.
    The Fed is trying to do both: the Bernanke CDS facilities are used to give insolvent investment bank and their accomplices the right to collect $500,000 cash for each $500,000 mortgage, and deeply negative real interest rates are meant to achieve #2.

    I agree with Blissex. #2 is the only solution but I am still confused. Most comments seem to assume that the Federal Reserve is a constitutionally authorized entity. It is my understanding that the Federal Reserve is a banking cartel in partnership with the US government. Why is everybody always shocked and dismayed when the banking cartel protects their interests first at the expense of the public? Partners protect partners. There can never be transparency in bank ledgers unless the Federal Government is willing to open up it’s books to the public as well. In this ‘Brave New World’ of fiat currency that will never happen.
    We are now moving into an era of corporate facism as we witness a turf battle between the Fed and Wall Street. The Fed lost control of the credit mechanism and Bear Stearns was the first ‘hit’ in an intriguing power struggle that will take more victims over the next 18 months. The Fed is moving to consolidate it’s power and ‘Big Brother’ is right there with them. Accept the reality of what you see taking place. The Fed has opened up the punch bowl and is accepting worthless credits on a short term basis which will slowly evolve into long term sludge rolled over and over until it can be monetized discreetly after the current furor dies down. Those that play along with the Fed will be saved and those that resist will be purged.
    Uncle Ben has the helicopters gassed up and ready to take flight anytime the call goes out.

  39. ECONOMISTA NON GRATA commented on May 11

    Barry:

    This is a most interesting story, thanks.

    However, The aspect of the tone that I read into this story is, that the Fed has successfully intervened. I’m having a problem with this for two reasons. The first is a question of velocity, or better said discounted velocity. And the second is a question of inflation.

    Can the Fed reasonably announce “MISSION ACCOMPLISHED….!”

    Perhaps the regulation should be focused on the Fed.

    My best regards,

    Econolicious

  40. kwikpop commented on May 11

    «However, all the bailout plans involve one goal at their core – preventing further declines in housing prices.»
    Not quite — some involve making the public sector absorb the losses, and then whose losses to absorb. If there are $500,000 mortages on $250,000 houses there are two/three alternatives:
    #1 The Fed or Congress make good $250,000 of each of those mortgages.
    #2 The value of the house rises to $500,000 in nominal terms.
    The Fed is trying to do both: the Bernanke CDS facilities are used to give insolvent investment bank and their accomplices the right to collect $500,000 cash for each $500,000 mortgage, and deeply negative real interest rates are meant to achieve #2.

    I agree with Blissex. #2 is the only solution but I am still confused. Most comments seem to assume that the Federal Reserve is a constitutionally authorized entity. It is my understanding that the Federal Reserve is a banking cartel in partnership with the US government. Why is everybody always shocked and dismayed when the banking cartel protects their interests first at the expense of the public? Partners protect partners. There can never be transparency in bank ledgers unless the Federal Government is willing to open up it’s books to the public as well. In this ‘Brave New World’ of fiat currency that will never happen.
    We are now moving into an era of corporate facism as we witness a turf battle between the Fed and Wall Street. The Fed lost control of the credit mechanism and Bear Stearns was the first ‘hit’ in an intriguing power struggle that will take more victims over the next 18 months. The Fed is moving to consolidate it’s power and ‘Big Brother’ is right there with them. Accept the reality of what you see taking place. The Fed has opened up the punch bowl and is accepting worthless credits on a short term basis which will slowly evolve into long term sludge rolled over and over until it can be monetized discreetly after the current furor dies down. Those that play along with the Fed will be saved and those that resist will be purged.
    Uncle Ben has the helicopters gassed up and ready to take flight anytime the call goes out.

  41. Winston Munn commented on May 11

    Kwikpop wrote, “It is my understanding that the Federal Reserve is a banking cartel in partnership with the US government. Why is everybody always shocked and dismayed when the banking cartel protects their interests first at the expense of the public?”

    The Federal Reserve is a quasi-governmental agency that is in essence an intermediary for the Trasury Department.

    Our monetary system is not a strict fiat but is debt-currency, i.e. that value of the note is in the worth of the debt it represents. A debt-currency system is dependent upon debt expansion for continued growth. The reason the Federal Reserve has a bias toward banking is because that is where the debt-currency is created – without solvent banks there is no real economy under this system. (While it is true the Federal Reserve has the right to issue debt-currency, it does so in response to demand from commercial banks and the U.S. treasury.)

    The questions to me are not of conspiracy but ones of limits of power,Congressional reposibility, moral hazard, and systemic risk.

  42. Alfred commented on May 11

    At the end of the NYT article Bernstein asks the question: “Was it worth the risk of taking no action, and the resulting social and political consequences, in order to clean house and start fresh?”

    Maybe that is the wrong question. The real question should be: Is Mellon’s purgatory action avoidable at the end? My answer to that would be no.

    If we look at the situation today with oil at $126 and the price of oil decoupling from the dollar, suggesting further run up in prices. GS forecasts a super-spike to $200 by the end of this year.

    It is clear that recent actions the Fed has taken are coming with a high price. It might very well herald the end of a 60 year long super boom in financial markets.

  43. brion commented on May 12

    “It might very well herald the end of a 60 year long super boom in financial markets.”

    or the end of the super-debt cycle?
    in the 60’s, a dollar of debt would get you 90 cents of GDP yes?
    What is it now? Something like 20 cents of GDP…..
    Do i hear zero?

    To the question/premise of a contemporary debate on “regulation versus deregulation” , that seems like a no brainer to ME but what do i know?
    If there were no referee in hockey could you still call it hockey
    or would it just be 2 1/2 hours of cage fighting on ice?
    Also an exciting pastime i’m sure but could you call it “Hockey”?

    Of course you need refs/regs in the game. That is, unless one is more interested in fleecing people as opposed to participating in a “free market” (i get a lump in my throat every time i say “free market” don’t you?)

    For any who are interested by the way, there is an EXCELLENT indirect object lesson on the topic (and the housing/credit catastrophe directly) at “This American Life” here….
    “The Giant Pool Of Money”

    http://www.thislife.org/Radio_Episode.aspx?episode=355

  44. Blissex commented on May 12

    «in the 60’s, a dollar of debt would get you 90 cents of GDP yes?
    What is it now? Something like 20 cents of GDP…..»

    That’s a very good and startling observation. I have seen for a long time (since the oil shock) the ratio between barrels of oil per GDP %, but the ratio between financial energy and GDP is an equally good concept.

    The USA economy now needs a lot less oil per dollar of GDP than 3 decades ago, but a lot more debt per dollar of GDP. This almost surely means that as the economy has become more efficient at making use of oil (and there is a long way to go) because its price has being going up, it has become less efficient at making use of financial capital as its price has been kept way down by the Fed.

    «Do i hear zero?»

    For example every dollar of finance used to speculate on real estate does not generate a cent of GDP. But it surely generate a lot of cash in commissions, bonuses and cashed in options for the best and brightest at the investment banks and a lot of opportunities for the Fed*mart to help whitewash the consequences.

    «(i get a lump in my throat every time i say “free market” don’t you?)»

    So do investment bankers whenever they think how much they paid in campaign donations to purchase the market rules they wanted. They surely did not get those market rules for free. Isn’t it just scandalous that greedy USA politicians will charge a lot of money to the best and brightest to give them the market they want instead of doing it for free? :-)

  45. PureGuesswork commented on May 12

    In reading through the comments I was struck (but not surprised) by the ratio of emotional content to intellectual content. More heat than light, as usual. On the other hand, Peter Bernstein is someone who began his career in financial markets in the 1940’s. He lived through the great depression as a child. He lived through the runaway inflation of the late 70’s-early 80’s. It is always refreshing to read his views.

  46. Jurgen commented on May 12

    “If there are $500,000 mortages on $250,000 houses there are two/three alternatives:”

    actually there is a third; people can default on their mortgages and make the lenders eat the difference.

  47. gianluca carrera commented on May 12

    you just need to take economy 101 or be 20 yo+ to know that the economy goes through cycles. There are ups and downs. When is an up moment, you take more risk, grow and set something aside for the downs. If you are lucky, you get rich. But if you are smart and prudent enough, at least you won’t starve in the downs. Now, if you took too much risk and pretended to live like a rich during the up, please don’t knock my door during the down. I can’t understand why I should pay up the debts you accumulated to live in largess with the money I put aside by bein prudent during the very same years you were westing your bucks! And please, don’t pretend you didn’t know, cause if you didn’t, then you weren’t worth the credit you had been given!

  48. Blissex commented on May 12

    «”If there are $500,000 mortages on $250,000 houses there are two/three alternatives:”
    actually there is a third; people can default on their mortgages and make the lenders eat the difference.»

    I actually wanted to mention the third alternative but than forgot, and it is the one chosen by the Japanese: reduce the difference over time by freezing the financial system in a time capsule.

    Your third (fourth?) way has two large problems:

    * It is politically unfeasible because those who lose from it are huge campaign donors, and elections are approaching.

    * It is practically dangerous because there is a non insignificant risk that it could damage the the real economy.

    Anyhow there is a war or two or three going on, and home front morale demands a solution where everybody but the taxpayers come out ahead. The good times must keep rolling.

    Given the practical risks of a sharp contraction, of high inflation, or a slow motion one like in Japan, some kind of government intervention is probably a good idea, as long as it is not a whitewash.

    In the SandL bust of the 90s a number of banks went bankrupt and their management was prosecuted and convicted. The Republican donor class are determined not to let this “mistake” happen again, and they have made sure that the Fed provide no-bankruptcy, bury-all-skeletons rescues to their members who are in difficulty, with the Greenspan Put (deeply negative real rates as soon as asset prices decrease) and the Bernanke Cds (100% insurance of loans to insolvent investment banks, laundering of insolvent assets into treasuries but only for insolvent investment banks).

    If someone in the 90s SandL bust has said “this is going to happen again, only with investment banks instead of SandLs, rating agencies stock prices quintupling in a few years, and no-bankruptcy, no-fault Fed bailouts” nobody would have believed it could get that worse.

  49. brion commented on May 12

    “I was struck (but not surprised) by the ratio of emotional content to intellectual content. More heat than light”

    Yesss. I quite agree Guesswerks…..snuff? No?…
    …at any rate for intellectuals such as ourselves, (so clinical, so…detached and yet, unerring) the Big Picture can seem such a small pond…(sigh)

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