The Fed, Innovation and the Next Recession

Simon Johnson, New York Times

Simon Johnson, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, is an author of “13 Bankers.”

The Federal Reserve was created in 1913 to help limit the impact of financial panics. It took a while for the Fed to achieve that goal, but after World War II — with a great deal of help from other parts of the federal government — the Fed hit its stride. Today the Fed has not only lost that touch but, given the way our political and financial system currently operates, its own policies exacerbate the cycle of overexuberance and incautious lending that will bring on the next major crisis (and presumably another severe recession).

Sudden loss of confidence in the financial system was not uncommon toward the end of the 19th century, and while the private sector was able to stave off complete disaster largely by itself, the tide turned in 1907. In that instance J.P. Morgan could stand firm only because, behind the scenes, his team received a large loan from the United States Treasury (on this formative episode, see “The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned From the Market’s Perfect Storm” by Robert F. Bruner and Sean D. Carr). Leaders of the banking system realized they needed help moving forward, and there was general agreement that the widespread collapse of financial intermediaries was not in the broader social interest. The question of the day naturally became: How much government oversight would bankers have to accept in return for the creation of a modern central bank?

The skeptics from the left — but also from the nonfinancial private sector (including those speaking on behalf of small-business people) — pointed out that the presence of a “lender of last resort” (of the kind already operational in Western Europe) was likely to encourage less care on the part of major financial institutions and the people who lent to them. The issue we now call “moral hazard” was front and center in the political discourse at the very founding of the Federal Reserve (although with different terminology).

Nevertheless, the original deal turned out to involve only a very light supervisory touch. In part this was about the individuals involved — the New York Fed was run by Benjamin Strong, a close associate of Morgan, until 1928. In part it was about the choice of organizational structure and internal rules — so the Federal Reserve Board in Washington had little de facto power relative to the New York Fed. But mostly the structural weakness was that the central bank was not designed to keep up with the pace of financial innovation.

Read more here: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/23/the-fed-innovation-and-the-next-recession/

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Way Too Big to Save

Simon Johnson, Huffington Post

Listening to US officials, talking to legal experts, and waiting for an intense Senate debate on financial reform to begin, you can easily form the impression that “too big to fail” adequately describes our most serious future systemic banking problems. It does not.

In September 2008, the large banks and quasi-banks at the heart of our financial system faced failure — and they were saved in the most immediate sense through actions taken by the Federal Reserve, but TARP (passed by Congress and run Treasury) also played a significant supporting role.

The Bush administration threw a small fiscal stimulus into the mix in early 2008, hoping to stave off recession; the Obama administration committed a much larger package at the start of 2009, aiming to prevent anything like a Second Great Depression. This fiscal policy response was in direct reaction to problems caused by the overextension and near failure of the financial system

Do not make the mistake — for example of Secretary Geithner, talking to the New Yorker — of thinking (or implying) that “saving the financial system” did not involve spending a lot of taxpayer money to support the real economy. Remember that if the economy crashes, asset prices fall, and banks’ problems become even more severe.

And try to avoid three further mistakes that are currently common.

Read more hear: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/simon-johnson/way-too-big-to-save_b_491325.html

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Why No International Financial Regulation?

Simon Johnson, Huffington Post

As we fast approach the unveiling of the Dodd-Corker financial reform proposals for the Senate, it is only fair and reasonable to ask: Does any of this really matter? To be sure, some parts of what the Senate Banking committee (and likely the full Senate) will consider are not inconsequential for relatively small players in the US market. For example, putting consumer protection inside the Fed — which has an awful and embarrassing reputation in terms of protecting users of financial products — would tell you a lot about where we are going.

But our big banks are global and nothing in the current legislation would really rein them in — no wonder they and their allies sneer, in a nasty fashion, at Senator Dodd as a lame duck who “does not matter.”

For example, the resolution authority/modified bankruptcy procedure under discussion would do nothing to make it easier to manage the failure of a financial institution with large cross-border assets and liabilities. For this, you would need a “cross-border resolution authority,” determining who is in charge of winding up what — and using which cash — when a global bank fails.

To be sure, such a cross-border authority could be developed under the auspices of the G20, but there are not even baby steps in that direction. Why?

Part of the answer, of course, is that big cross-border banks know how to play governments off against each other — dropping heavy hints that “international competitiveness” is at stake. These are empty threats — if the US, the UK, and the eurozone cooperated on a resolution regime, this would get serious attention. If they went further and truly integrated their regulations — including communications and practices (and inspections) across regulators/supervisors — this could have major impact.

Read more here:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/simon-johnson/why-no-international-fina_b_482428.html

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