Reposted from Bruce Krasting’s blog with his permission.
Everyone makes mistakes. The best thing one can do is face up to the facts and acknowledge the error; fix the problem to the extent possible and do what is necessary to avoid repeating the mistake. Ben Bernanke’s inability to admit his (and his predecessor’s) mistakes condemns the Fed to repeat the sins of the past.
In this week’s lecture tour at George Washington U, Bernanke spoke to the students about the causes of the economic collapse of 2008. In his presentation, he identified most of the bad actors and the mistakes that those institutions made. He pointed his finger at:
-Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
-The big banks and Wall Street wire houses
-Mortgage brokers
-AIG
He blamed:
-Sub Prime mortgages
-Excessive leverage
-Banks’ failure to adequately monitor and manage risks
-Excessive reliance on short‐term funding
-Increased use of exotic financial instruments that concentrated risk
Bernanke never acknowledged that the Fed contributed to the mess of 2008. If Ben wasn’t flat out lying, his head is buried very deeply in the sand.
In response to the recession of 2001 the Fed allowed money supply to increase by 30% in 4 years:
The Fed also manipulated interest rates. It drove short-tem rates (Federal Funds) to 1% in 2004.
When Greenspan tried to normalize interest rates in 2005 he was forced to raise the Fed Funds rate 13 times. This sharp increase was a significant factor in blowing the top off of the real estate market. Greenspan’s Fed contributed to the housing bubble. The Fed’s tightening brought on the bust that it helped create.
So where are we today on the critical issues that brought about the collapse of 2008?
Money supply is zooming:
.
Inflation is chugging along:
.
.
Interest rates are pegged at zero:
The Fed’s balance sheet is bloated
The government is still making junk mortgages; FHFA is guaranteeing loans at 97.5% of value.
Consumers are borrowing more. Debt has grown 6% in the past year, three times the rate of growth in the economy.
Student loan balances have been exploding the. They passed the Trillion mark this week:
The savings rate is the lowest it’s been since the crisis. Who would want to save money when the return on savings is negative?
Junk bonds (and other forms of exotic debt) are back in style, and investors are lapping up the swill up.
Funny money credit is back. This outfit is lending money to all comers. I love it when the lady says, “Yes it is expensive”. (11 second video)
It’s not just expensive money, It’s crazy. Consider this chart of pricing:
If you want $10,000, the cost will be $52,343 in interest. If you only need a quick $500, these nice folks will give to you, but the cost will be $1800 or 340%%.
For the Chairman of the Fed to stand before all those GWU students and avoid accepting a share of the responsibility for what happened in 2008 is a gross re-write of history. That he does not see that he is making the same mistakes that the Fed made in every prior economic cycle is sad. The audience should have booed him. I am.
Join the conversation and have a little fun at Capitalstool.com. If you are a new visitor to the Stool, please register and join in! To post your observations and charts, and snide, but good-natured, comments, click here to register. Be sure to respond to the confirmation email which is sent instantly. If not in your inbox, check your spam filter.
Not to mention that the Fed actually triggered the 2008 crash when it sterilized TAF and the other alphabet soup programs by paying for them with funds liquidated from SOMA. That starved and paralyzed the Primary Dealers. At the same time the Treasury was forcing them to absorb $200 billion a month in new paper to fund the TARP. Double whammy. In September 2008, the dealers become unable to make and maintain orderly markets. This combined Fed/Administration blunder sent the stock market into a tailspin, giving life to the sense of panic engendered by all the sky is falling crap that Bernanke and Henry Paulson were spewing at the time. Economic activity collapsed AFTER that.
Had Bernanke, Geithner (as NY Fed head), and the Bush Administration not made those mistakes, the trajectory of decline would have been much shallower and more manageable.