Pages

Pages

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Joseph E. Gagnon — What Were They Thinking? The Fed on the Brink of Zero

How farsighted was the leadership at the Federal Reserve as the world economy was heading toward a steep decline more than five years ago? Outside the Fed’s marble halls, the answers to that question are only now becoming known, and the verdict is perhaps surprisingly positive.
In December 2008, a few months after the Lehman Brothers collapse threw the world economy into crisis, participants in the Fed’s steering group, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), met to discuss their policy options. It was widely agreed that the conventional policy instrument, the federal funds rate target, would have to be lowered to zero. The big question was “what should we do next?” A recently released transcript of the meeting shows that the FOMC was already considering most of the monetary policy options that are still being debated by economists and pundits today. The transcript frequently mentions a package of 21 memos on monetary policy at the zero bound that were prepared by Fed staff just before the meeting. The Peterson Institute for International Economics has obtained those memos through the Freedom of Information Act and is making them available to the public on its website [pdf] as of today. In the interest of full disclosure, I was a coauthor of three of those background memos.
Together, the transcript and background memos display that FOMC participants understood the severity of the economic outlook they faced and that they and their staff had a good grasp of the pros and cons of the options available. That is not to say that Fed policy over the past few years could not have been improved upon, but simply to recognize that the Fed was not flying blind and indeed was already cognizant of many of the issues that would come to dominate the public debate about monetary policy.....
Real Time Economic Issues Watch
What Were They Thinking? The Fed on the Brink of Zero
Joseph E. Gagnon
(h/t Mark Thoma at Economist's View)

1 comment:

  1. “It was widely agreed that . . . . the federal funds rate target, would have to be lowered to zero.” Well, stroke of genius: the economy almost collapses because of excessive and irresponsible borrowing. So the solution, boys and girls, is to cut interest rates so as to encourage more borrowing.

    Likewise, I suppose the best cure for alcoholics is to give them crates of whiskey.

    The above nonsense nicely illustrates the merit of the stimulatory measure favored (I think) by most MMTers, namely to create more fiat and spend it, and/or cut taxes.

    P.S. This is really weird: one of the words I had to type in to prove I'm not a robot was "Hickey". How about that?

    ReplyDelete