Authors: David Wessel
By early summer 2009, the Fed had purchased more than $550 billion of mortgage-backed securities and more than $150 billion in U.S. Treasury bonds. But the bond market pushed up interest rates anyhow, prompting tension inside the Fed. Some wanted to step up the bond-buying to help the economy. Others worried the more bonds the Fed bought, the more difficult it would find “the exit strategy,” the timely retreat from intervention.
The Fed’s actions may have saved the U.S. economy from catastrophe but an increasingly vocal band in Congress found it uncomfortably undemocratic to head off future crises by making the Fed the overarching overseer of financial stability and monitor of the nation’s biggest financial companies, as Obama proposed in June 2009. “We should not ignore that the Fed has had some responsibility for systemic risk regulation under the current structure” and thus the current crisis, said Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of Virginia, on the Senate floor, making a case heard with growing frequency at the time. The Fed and the Treasury, he complained, had struck “private deals” that put “smaller, less powerful but often better run institutions at a competitive disadvantage.” The answer to the Great Panic, he said, was not to make the Fed more powerful, but to diffuse its regulatory powers in a grand council of regulators. Geithner thought that a dangerous idea, akin to running a firehouse by committee and calling meetings before responding to alarms. But Obama did propose amending the law to require the Fed to get the Treasury secretary’s written approval before exercising its authority to lend to nearly anyone in “unusual and exigent circumstances.” The Democratic and Republican leaders of the Senate Banking Committee sponsored a nonbinding resolution calling for “an evaluation of the appropriate number and the associated costs of Federal Reserve banks,” a flare
across the bow of the Fed and regional Fed presidents who are neither appointed by the president nor confirmed by Congress. Even if those efforts fizzled, Congress was likely to reopen the Federal Reserve Act as it renovated the financial regulatory apparatus. As Greenspan had warned privately for years, once the law was reexamined, the Fed was vulnerable to changes that it might not welcome.
Bernanke, like Greenspan and Volcker before him, subscribed to the view that the best way to protect a democratic society from undesirable rates of inflation was to keep control of interest rates and the supply of money away from elected politicians. Politicians need the frequent approval of voters and are naturally tempted to settle for a little more economic growth today and defer the fight against inflation until after the next election; the only case for an independent central bank in a democracy is that it can take a longer-term view and do what is in the interest of the people in ways that elected politicians cannot. By going directly to the politicians’ constituents, the voters, through the nonfinancial press, Bernanke was seeking to build public support to resist any changes to the Federal Reserve Act that would curtail the Fed’s ability to fight inflation.
Sitting on a bench on Main Street in Dillon, South Carolina, Bernanke made a pitch that would have done a congressional candidate proud. “I come from Main Street. That’s my background,” he told
60 Minutes
. “I’ve never been on Wall Street. And I care about Wall Street for one reason and one reason only: because what happens on Wall Street matters to Main Street.”
BERNANKE’S DASHBOARD
June 12, 2009
| | Change from August 7, 2007 |
Dow Jones Industrial Average: | 8,799 | down 34.8% |
Market Cap of Citigroup: | $18.9 billion | down 92.2% |
Price of Oil (per barrel): | $72.68 | up 0.3% |
Unemployment Rate: | 9.4% | up 4.7 pp |
Fed Funds Interest Rate | 0%-0.25% | down 5 to 5.25 pp |
Financial Stress Indicator | 0.43 pp | up 0.31 pp |
* * *
So, with the benefit of a bit of hindsight, what did the Bernanke Fed get right and what did it get wrong? What lessons have been learned so far?
The Fed failed to see the problems percolating under the surface of a prospering economy. Once the housing bubble and credit bubble began to burst, the Fed’s diagnosis was wrong. It saw risks, but not their full dimensions. It thought the housing bust would be “contained,” and it wasn’t. The Fed was hardly alone; plenty of others made the same mistakes. But as Congress moves toward designating the Fed to be the guardian of the nation’s financial stability, the Fed’s inability to see the Great Panic coming is worrisome. Unless it understands what it failed to see then, it will not be any better at seeing the approach of the next crisis in time to avoid it. Bernanke himself remains reluctant to criticize Greenspan publicly. He continues to argue that the single most important factor in creating the credit bubble was something over which the Fed had no control: an inflow of foreigners’ savings to the United States that led banks and other financial institutions to compete aggressively for borrowers, which in turn led to increasingly lax lending standards.
“Regulators,” he said at Morehouse College in April 2009, “did not do enough to prevent poor lending, in part because many of the worst loans were made by firms subject to little or no federal regulation.” Yes, but by using the Fed’s existing authority to put new restrictions on subprime mortgages, Bernanke demonstrated that the Fed could have done more than it did and earlier. And the absence of full-throated warnings in the years just before the housing and credit bubbles burst undercuts the argument that the Fed did all that it could.
All that was largely history by the time Bernanke took over as Fed chairman in February 2006. While every one of Bernanke’s subsequent decisions can be second-guessed and criticized, and most have been, he cannot be fairly criticized for not anticipating every bizarre turn that the crisis took. Or the bad luck that led nearly everything that could go wrong to go wrong. Or the shortcomings of a U.S. financial regulatory regime woefully ill equipped for a crisis like the Great Panic. Or the unpopularity of a lame-duck president or the missteps of a new Treasury secretary or the
shortsightedness of some high-profile actors on Wall Street who badly misread the public mood.
All decisions aren’t created equal. The fair question is whether Bernanke got the big ones right.
By August 2007, Bernanke understood that the economy was at risk, yet from today’s perspective his initial efforts seemed timid. It wasn’t until December 2007 that the Fed began experimenting with new ways to lend to banks, and not until January 2008 did the Fed get serious about cutting interest rates aggressively. But once Bernanke and the other Musketeers realized the risks, they were creative and bold. To his credit, Bernanke managed to hold the FOMC together as he pushed the Fed to places it had never gone before, or at least to places it hadn’t visited since the Great Depression.
Bear Stearns was a shock to the Fed. Helping JPMorgan Chase buy the failing investment bank was prudent. But the Fed’s response immediately afterward was flawed. It was clear at the time that Bear Stearns was a big deal. “The past ten days will be remembered as the time the U.S. government discarded a half-century of rules to save American financial capitalism from collapse,” I wrote in the
Wall Street Journal
of March 28, 2008. “On the Richter scale of government activism, the government’s recent actions don’t (yet) register at FDR levels. They are shrouded in technicalities and buried in a pile of new acronyms. But something big just happened. It happened without an explicit vote by Congress. And though the Treasury hasn’t cut any checks for housing or Wall Street rescues, billions of dollars of taxpayer money were put at risk. A Republican administration, not eager to be viewed as the second coming of the Hoover administration, showed it no longer believes the market can sort out the mess.”
Yet neither Bernanke, nor Geithner, nor Paulson took the six months between Bear Stearns and Lehman to prepare adequately. They did not use Bear Stearns as a lever to try to get Congress to act quickly to provide emergency authority, even if temporary, to handle the collapse of a major financial institution. They did not hint that they anticipated that taxpayer money would be needed to shore up the banking system. They did not turn the bare-bones April 2008 “break the glass” plan into a contingency plan ready
to be implemented if needed. Bernanke and Paulson argue that Congress wouldn’t have acted in the spring and summer of 2008 because members didn’t perceive the Main Street economy to be at risk. Perhaps. But Bernanke and Paulson didn’t
try
. Had they done so, they might have had more credibility later when they needed it. If the two men had a game plan, they didn’t explain it.
When Lehman weekend arrived, the Fed had left itself only two options, or allowed the Treasury to narrow its options to two: either sell Lehman as Bear Stearns had been sold, or let it go into bankruptcy. Bernanke and Paulson convinced themselves the system could withstand the latter course because the warning signs had been so many and so visible. They were wrong about that. They didn’t realize the lesson that many people had drawn from Bear Stearns: the Fed would somehow find a way to keep Lehman going. They didn’t appreciate the tidal wave that a Lehman bankruptcy would cause. Had they realized how much damage Lehman’s bankruptcy would wreak, they might have had a third option ready, one that showed some of the same creativity they exercised at other points in the crisis as they stretched law to do
whatever it takes
to protect the system from clear and present danger. Whether AIG’s collapse was caused by Lehman’s or whether it was inevitable is a question that defies a simple answer. The reaction to Lehman’s collapse reasonably led Bernanke and Paulson to rush to keep AIG from following Lehman into bankruptcy. But the form it took was flawed, unsuccessful, and expensive in taxpayer dollars and in damage to the Fed’s reputation.
Paulson and Bernanke did seize that September 2008 moment to get Congress to come up with $700 billion, even though getting the legislation through Congress proved so tortuous that it undermined confidence in the ability of American democracy to cope with a major financial crisis. (At the Fed, there was more than one conversation about the advantages of parliamentary systems, where the prime minister can count on his party to do whatever he deems necessary at the darkest hour.) But in the weeks and months that followed, neither Paulson nor Bernanke nor Geithner laid out a coherent plan for using the $700 billion to restore the banking system to health. They made mistakes of substance and mistakes of communications. Their plan was seen as, and may have been in retrospect, too generous to Wall
Street and the banks, Citibank in particular. That perception contributed to an uncomfortable political reality in the spring of 2009: Congress appeared unwilling to approve more taxpayer money for the banks, even though Bernanke, Geithner, and White House economist Larry Summers all knew that it probably would take more than the $700 billion already approved to repair or, as they put it, “recapitalize” the banking system.
Professors make the what-if game respectable by calling it “counterfactual.” It is tempting. What if Bernanke had moved more swiftly to attack the Great Panic in August 2007? What if Bear Stearns had become the catalyst that generated legislation focused on coping with the collapse of a big financial institution? What if Congress had approved more money sooner to recapitalize the banks? What if the initial bank rescue plan had been more coherently structured, implemented, and explained? What if Geithner had stayed at the New York Fed, his tax returns sheltered by scrutiny and his stature undiminished, and someone with more gravitas had been installed at Treasury? What if someone in the Treasury or the Fed had persuaded AIG not to pay those retention bonuses before they became so public? Things might have been better, of course. It’s hard to know for sure.
But there is another side to the what-if game. What if Ben Bernanke had not been a student of the Great Depression? What if he had not resolved to do
whatever it takes
to prevent a second Great Depression? What if he had been timid or cowed by the resistance inside the Fed? Those questions are easier to answer: the economy would have been even worse than it is now, and this book would have been an account of how the Fed had dithered and delayed, as an earlier generation of central bankers had. It would have been a book about Ben Bernanke’s failure to keep his November 2002 vow to Milton Friedman: “Regarding the Great Depression. You’re right, we did it. We’re very sorry. But thanks to you, we won’t do it again.”
3
AIG shares:
Michael Grynbaum, “Wall St.’s Turmoil Sends Stocks Reeling,”
New York Times
, September 9, 2008.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/16/business/ worldbusiness/16markets.html?hp
3
“We came very, very close”
House Financial Services Committee, February 25, 2009.
4
“It is either our curse”
Bradford DeLong, “Republic of the Central Banker,”
The American Prospect
, October 27, 2008.
http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=republic_of_the_central_banker
5
“the dernier resort”
Glenn Stevens, “Liquidity and the Lender of Last Resort,” Reserve Bank of Australia, April 15, 2008.
http://www.rba.gov.au/Speeches/2008/sp_gov_150408.html
6
“the pawnbroker of last resort”
Yves Smith, “Covert Nationalization of the Banking System,”
naked capitalism
, August 3, 2008.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2008/03/covert-nationalization-of-banking.html
7
“I think highly of”
Federal News Service, “The Foreclosure Crisis and Older Americans,” from AARP Solutions Forum Web site, September 19, 2008.
http://assets.aarp.org/rgcenter/ppi/foreclosure _transcript.pdf
7
“No one in a democracy”
Brian Blackstone and Patrick Yoest, “Bailouts
Turn Up Heat on Fed Chief,”
Wall Street Journal
, September 19, 2008.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122176444088253287.html
8
“Perhaps it’s time”
Ben S. Bernanke, “Japanese Monetary Policy: A Case of Self-Induced Paralysis?” in Adam Posen and Ryoichi Mikitani, eds.,
Japan’s Financial Crisis and Its Parallels to US Experience
, Special Report 13, Institute for International Economics, Washington, D.C., 2000, 149-166.
9
“luxurious and lavish”
“MAKES NEW ATTACK ON RESERVE BANK;
Building Here, to Cost $25,000,000, a Waste of Public Funds, Says J.S. William’s.
COMPARES IT TO TWEED DAYS
Cites Architects’ and Engineers’ Fees of $1,106,000 — Suggests Gov. Strong’s Resignation”
New York Times
, December 17, 1921, 25.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9C02E2DA113EEE3ABC4F52DFB467838A639EDE
10
“Everyone out there knew”
Interview, Henry Paulson.
13
Between 1986 and 1995:
Timothy Curry and Lynn Shibut, “The Cost of the Savings and Loan Crisis: Truth and Consequences,”
FDIC Banking Review
, December 2000.
http://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/banking/2000dec/ brv13n2_2.pdf
and
http://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/ banking/2000dec/brv13n2_2.pdf
15
“U.S. Helps Lehman”
David Cho, Heather Landy, and Neil Irwin, “U.S. Helps Lehman Go Up for Sale; Regulators Are Seeking a Weekend Deal Not Involving Public Money,”
Washington Post
, September 12, 2008, A1.
15
“For market discipline”
Henry Paulson, “Remarks on the U.S., the World Economy and Markets before the Chatham House,” London, July 2, 2008.
http://treas.gov/press/releases/hp1064.htm
18
“If we’re going to do”
Susanne Craig, Jeffrey McCracken, Aaron Lucchetti, and Kate Kelly, “The Weekend That Wall Street Died — Ties That Long United Strongest Firms Unraveled as Lehman Sank Toward Failure,”
Wall Street Journal
, December 29, 2008, A1.
18
Thain tried:
Bank of America Corp, Form DEFM14A, November 3, 2008.
19
“We are not going”
Interviews, Treasury staff.
20
Barclays later bought:
http://www.barcap.com/ static/BarCap/Press%20office/Attached%20Document/ Lehman_Press_Release_170908.pdf _acquisition.pdf
22
“I never once considered”
Transcript at
http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/ news/releases/2008/09/20080915-8.html
23
Paulson said months later:
Interview, Henry Paulson.
23
“In the case of Lehman Brothers”
House Financial Services Committee, hearing, September 24, 2008.
23
“Everything fell apart”
Alan Blinder, “Six Errors on the Path to the Financial Crisis,”
New York Times
, January 25, 2009.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/25/business/ economy/25view.html?ref=business
24
“You don’t want to say”
Interview, Henry Paulson.
25
“We could have saved it”
Interview, October 2008.
26
“A disorderly failure of AIG”
House Committee on Financial Services, hearing, September 24, 2008.
www.house.gov/financialservices/hearing110/hr092408.shtml
26
“The national commitment”
Damian Paletta, “Barney Frank Celebrates Free Market Day,”
Real Time Economics
, September 17, 2008.
http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2008/09/17/barney-frank-celebrates-free-market-day
28
The opening years:
John Steele Gordon,
An Empire of Wealth: The
Epic History of American Economic Power
(New York: HarperCollins, 2004), 277.
28
Campaigning to end:
Robert F. Bruner and Sean D. Carr,
The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the Market’s Perfect Storm
(Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, 2007), 9.
28
“God made the world”
Gordon, 262.
28
“War was fresh in mind”
Bruner and Carr,
The Panic of 1907
, 13.
29
“the idle holders”
William Jennings Bryan, “Bryan’s ‘Cross of Gold’ Speech: Mesmerizing the Masses,” July 9, 1896, from History Matters Web site
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5354
30
“agrarian antipathy for city”
Bray Hammond,
Banks and Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civl War
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1957), 33.
30
“I sincerely believe”
Thomas Jefferson, “Money & Banking,” 1816, from Thomas Jefferson on Politics & Government Web site
http://etext.virginia.edu/jefferson/quotations/jeff1325.htm
30
more than one a decade:
Charles W. Calomiris and Gary Gorton, “The Origins of Banking Panics: Models, Facts, and Bank Regulation,” in R. Glenn Hubbard, ed.,
Financial Markets and Financial Crises
, 1991, Table 4.1, 114.
http://www.nber.org/chapters/c11484.pdf
30
an elaborate allegory:
Ranjit S. Dighne,
The Historian’s Wizard of Oz: Reading L. Frank Baum’s Classic as a Political and Monetary Allegory
(New York: Praeger, 2002).
31
Never mind that:
Bruner and Carr, 84.
32
JP Morgan Chase’s decision:
Carrick Mollenkamp et al., “The Two Faces of Lehman’s Fall — Private Talks of Raising Capital Belied Firm’s Public Optimism,”
Wall Street Journal
, October 6, 2008, A1.
32
On Monday, October 21:
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, “Panic of 1907,” 12.
http://www.bos.frb.org/about/pubs/panicof1.pdf
32
“he had added several”
Bruner and Carr, 109, citing
New York Times
, October 24, 1907.
33
“I remember Mr. Morgan”
Bruner and Carr, 87-88, from Strong 1924 letter to Thomas W. Lamont (see reference on p. 222 of Bruner and Carr).
33
“what was probably the most extensive”
Quoted in Gary Gorton, “The Panic of 2007,” 2. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Jackson Hole Conference, August 2008.
http://www.kc.frb.org/PUBLICAT/SYMPOS/2008/ gorton.08.04.08.pdf
34
Commodity prices fell:
Bruner and Carr, 142.
34
Some 240 banks failed:
Allan H. Meltzer,
A History of the Federal Reserve, Volume 1:1913 — 1951
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), 65.
34
“Crowds cheered when”
Howard Means,
Money & Power: The History of Business
(Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons, 2001), 142.
34
“Something has got to be done”
Andrew Sinclair,
Corsair: The Life of J. Pierpont Morgan
, 1981, 226, cited in Ron Chernow,
House of Morgan
(New York: Grove Press, 2001), 128.
35
“What is wanted”
Walter Bagehot,
Lombard Street
(Homewood, Ill.: Richard D. Irwin, 1962), 31-32.
37
“The Panic of 1907”
William Greider,
Secrets of the Temple
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1987), 274.
37
“While most bankers”
Roger T. Johnson,
Historical Beginnings … The Federal Reserve
, Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 18.
http://www.bos.frb.org/about/pubs/begin.pdf
38
“The whole world is united”
Bruner and Carr, 145.
38
“in complete control of everything”
Johnson, 19.
38
“a great and growing concentration”
Bruner and Carr, 148.
38
“impossible another panic”
Howard M. Hackley,
Lending Functions of the Federal Reserve Banks: A History
, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 1973, 10.
39
“Americans still maintain”
Hammond, 122
40
“He regarded the twelve”
Meltzer, 76.
41
“an incredibly dramatic”
Ben S. Bernanke,
Essays on the Great Depression
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2004), viii, 8.
41
“That went on for three”
“Fed Chairman’s Q&A on Financial Crisis,”
Wall Street Journal
, October 16, 2008.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122409761899937343.html
41
“To understand the Great Depression”
Bernanke,
Essays
, 5.
41
“Not only have we”
Quoted in Greider, 298.
42
He prevailed:
Ben Bernanke, “On Milton Friedman’s Ninetieth Birthday,” Federal Reserve Board, November 8, 2002.
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/ 2002/20021108/default.htm
42
“The monetary policy”
“Fed Chairman’s Q&A.”
42
“important not primarily”
Milton Friedman and Anna Jacobson Schwartz,
A Monetary History of the United States
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1963), 352.
43
“expensive and difficult to obtain”
Bernanke,
Essays
, 42.
43
Nearly half the banks:
Ibid., 44.
43
“Thus, expectation of failure”
Ibid., 45.
44
“The widespread banking panics”
Ben S. Bernanke, “The Financial Accelerator and the Credit Channel,” from Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Web site, June 5, 2007.
http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/ Bernanke20070615a.htm
45
That was more than double:
Bernanke,
Essays
, 54.
45
Exactly the same:
Comparison of Ten-Year Treasury to Moody’s Seasoned Baa Corporate Bond Yield, from
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2
46
$185 billion of which:
Douglas W. Elmendorf, Congressional Budget
Office, March 2, 2009.
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/100xx/doc10008/03-02-Macro_Effects_of_ARRA.pdf
46
“In one camp”
Lawrence H. White, “Did Hayek and Robbins Deepen the Great Depression?”
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking
40(4), 751 — 768.
http://economics.sbs.ohio-state.edu/jmcb/ jmcb/07056/07056.pdf
47
“with the operation”
Jeremy Atack and Peter Passel,
A New Economic View of American History from Colonial Times to 1940
(New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1994), 614.
47
Only a minority of Fed:
David M. Kennedy,
Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929 — 1945
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1999), 70 — 104.
47
“believed with me”
Herbert Hoover,
The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Great Depression, 1929 — 1941
(New York: Macmillan, 1952), 31 — 32.
48
“After Strong’s death”
Bernanke, “On Milton Friedman’s Ninetieth Birthday.”