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WORD COUNT
581
MAY 6, 2008
BRINGING
THE FED OUT OF THE CLOSET – by Ryan Alexander
With the
recent U.S. Navy actions off the Somali coast, the public has been
understandably interested in pirates. But they missed a sighting in the
financial sector. While much of the recent focus has been on Treasury
and the congressionally approved bailout package, the Federal Reserve
has quietly shipped out a pirate’s chest worth of booty. With the
insular and arcane world of the Fed, the public knows little about how
decisions are made or even what the potential costs are.
To put it
in perspective, the balance sheet of the nation’s bank has ballooned
from $825 billion before the financial crisis began to more than $2
trillion today. And that doesn’t capture many of the other activities
that could risk trillions more. As recently noted by Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Fed has “been creative deploying [its]
balance sheet” by establishing a multiplicity of new programs and
acronyms. You would almost think the Fed has a staffer dedicated to name
creation. There are the Commercial Paper Funding Facility, Asset-Backed
Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility, Money
Market Investor Funding Facility, and Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan
Facility, just to name a few. The Fed is now involved in far-flung
activities like backing car, credit card, and mortgage lending—having
recently purchased more than $1 trillion in mortgage-backed securities.
But all of
that debt-backing carries a risk. With so much money on the street and
interest rates near zero, a major concern is that when the economy
starts to recover, inflation will run rampant and be difficult to
control without an over-correction that double dips the economy into
another recession.
The most
anxiety-producing actions, both to the Fed and taxpayers as a whole,
have been the direct Federal Reserve interventions in the market. These
include easing the acquisition of investment bank Bear Stearns by J.P.
Morgan Chase in early 2008, multiple investments into American Insurance
Group to ensure its survival, and investments in two of the world's
largest banks, Citigroup and Bank of America. These actions bear the
greatest risk – AIG is now 80 percent owned by the U.S. government – and
the furthest extension ever of the Fed’s “emergency” powers.
But in
each of these cases, the public – and more importantly Congress – was
briefed on the actions after the decision was made. And in many cases,
the “briefing” was pretty brief.
To be
fair, the Fed has lately seen some limits to its powers and seems to be
pursuing more openness. It balked at stepping in to save the Big Three
automakers, stating that was a Treasury and congressional decision.
Public appearances and discussions about Fed strategy have increased.
Moreover, the Federal Reserve has put more information about its
programs on its Web site.
Most
notably, it described the factors included in its recently announced
“stress test” initiative, undertaken to determine the financial health
of banks. It remains to be seen how much we will learn, and many
analysts see the initiative as laying the groundwork to justify hundreds
of billions of additional dollars for bailouts. But at the least, this
is a small step in the direction of transparency.
Considering that taxpayers are going to have to walk the fiscal plank if
these efforts fail, it is all the more critical for the Fed to be
transparent about its decisions and their associated risks. To date, the
Fed has largely operated behind closed doors, making the opaque bailout
decision-making at Treasury look like a paragon of transparency.
--
Ms. Ryan Alexander is president, Taxpayers for Common Sense --a
non-partisan federal budget watchdog.
www.taxpayer.net
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