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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
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April 29,
2008
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Will the Fed Broaden Its Focus?
The Federal Reserve will almost
certainly cut the target federal funds
rate a quarter point to two percent on
Wednesday. Fed watchers will be looking
at the policy statement for clues as to
whether the Fed will pause after cutting
rates 3.25 percentage points since June.
The Fed may like to stop cutting
rates. So far, rate cuts have aided
homeowners with adjustable-rate
mortgages and other borrowers with loans
indexed to domestic interest rates;
however, those cuts have not
substantially increased bank lending.
Simply, no matter the prevailing
interest rate environment, banks are
frozen out of the bond market, where
they have increasingly raised funds,
over the last two decades, by bundling
loans into securities. Having been sold
loan-backed securities that were more
risky and worth less than the banks
represented during the subprime boom,
the insurance companies, pension funds
and other fixed income investors don’t
trust the banks.
Despite changes in the leadership at
some major financial houses, banks have
done little to win back trust.
Similarly, the bond rating agencies seem
wedded to cozy relationships with banks,
accepting payments from banks to rate
securities the banks create.
The trade deficit—in particular, the
rising oil import bill and stubborn
deficit with China on consumer goods—is
a drag on domestic demand equal to 5
percent of GDP. The falling dollar
against the euro and other
market-determined currencies has helped;
however, oil is priced in dollars, and
the dollar continues 40 percent, or
more, overvalued against the yuan and
several other Asian currencies.
Until Bernanke addresses structural
problems in bank participation in
securities markets—something Treasury
and G7 proposals for financial market
reform little address-- adequate bank
credit to power an economic recovery
will not be forthcoming, and
unemployment will rise.
Until Bernanke challenges Treasury on
trade and exchange rate policies, the
trade deficit will pose a similar
constraint on the economy. In this
decade, as the trade deficit grew,
consumers cut savings and borrowed more
through the banks to shore up domestic
demand. Essentially, Americans spent 105
percent of what they earned to keep the
economy growing but that house of cards
has now collapsed.
Bernanke must take on genuine banking
reform and currency and trade policies,
or his job is impossible. The latter are
outside his portfolio, but past Federal
Reserve Chairman have voiced concerns
about federal budgets, entitlements and
other policies that made their
stewardship more difficult.
For now, Bernanke seems more
comfortable courting Congressional
Democrats by focusing on consumer
lending practices—abuses by mortgage
brokers, appraisers and credit card
companies. This enhances the likelihood
of reappointment by a Democratic
President. However, if he continues this
tack, he will ultimately find his name
inscribed in history, not along side
Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan who
conquered inflation and facilitated
great prosperity, but rather along side
the likes of Arthur Burns and G. William
Miller, who, though politically adroit,
gave us The Great Inflation and economic
malaise.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
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