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Posts Tagged ‘Alan Greenspan’

Regulators and Industry Insiders KNEW We Were in a Housing Bubble

Greenspan and many other bankers, regulators and industry insiders say that “no one could have known” that we were in a housing bubble.For example, Greenspan:Stood by his conviction that little could be done to identify a bubble before it burst, much l…

“Never Even a Whisper” at Fed’s Open Market Committee Meetings

Ben Bernanke, William Dudley and Donald L Kohn are on the Fed’s Open Market Committee (FOMC).They are also on the board of directors of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) – often called the “central banks’ central bank”. And Kohn is an alter…

Fraud Finally Being Discussed in Polite Company … Now Where Are the Prosecutions?

As I have repeatedly pointed out, the economy cannot stabilize unless the fraud which led to the crisis (see this, this, this and this) is openly discussed. As Shahien Nasiripour notes today today, Alan Greenspan didn’t think regulators should even pay…

Banking Industry Insiders Call for Breaking Up Giant Banks

Virtually all independent financial experts are demanding that the too big to fail banks be broken up, including:Nobel prize-winning economist, Joseph StiglitzNobel prize-winning economist, Ed PrescottFormer Secretary of Labor, Robert Reich Chairman of…

Theme of the Day: Massive Deficits, Debt Overhang and Rising Bond Yields

The theme of the day is the horrible U.S. fiscal outlook, massive debt overhang, and rising bond yields.Alan Greenspan told Bloomberg:The recent rise in Treasury yields represents a “canary in the mine” that may signal further gains in interest rat…

Questions for Bernanke’s Senate Confirmation Hearing

The Senate Banking Committee will be chatting with Ben Bernanke this Thursday to vote on his reappointment.Demand that the Committee ask the following questions for our esteemed Esteemed Chairman (and contact your own Senators also and demand that they…

Galbraith: Administration’s Sole Goal is to Restore System of 5 or 10 Years Ago, But Confidence Won’t be Restored Unless Fraud is Prosecuted

As I have repeatedly written, the largest U.S. banks have repeatedly gone bankrupt due to wild speculation which was blessed by the Fed, and then the government covered up their bankruptcy.Indeed, the New York Times writes today about one of the too bi…

Greenspan: Break Up the Big Banks, It Will Be Good for the Economy, Minor Regulation Won’t Work

Alan Greenspan has joined the long and distinguished list of experts calling to break up the too big to fails.As Bloomberg writes today:U.S. regulators should consider breaking up large financial institutions considered “too big to fail,” former Fe…

Congressmen Grayson and Paul Ask Senate Banking to Delay Confirmation of Bernanke Until Fed Releases Information on Secret Bailouts

Below is letter text, and attached is the letter that was faxed to every member of the Senate Banking Committee. 10/07/09 Chairman Chris DoddU.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs534 Dirksen Senate Office BuildingWas…

Simon Johnson: “If Everyone Involved Is Using the Same Roadmap of Risks, We Will All Drive off the Cliff Again Together”

We have to change our risk models, and not just defer to the big banks’ inaccurate models which got us into this mess.Says who?Nassim Taleb:I have been fighting risk models both as a Wall Street trader and as a professor and my worst nightmares were th…

Did Greenspan Just Confirm Exeter’s Theory of Gold?

Professor Emeritus of Mathematics Antal Fekete has argued for years that gold is the ultimate – and only – safe haven when things really hit the fan.For example, in 2007 Fekete wrote:The grand old man of the New York Federal Reserve bank’s gold depa…

Double Dip Still in the Cards

In May, CNBC wrote that we are in danger of a double-dip recession.Hasn’t that risk passed?No. According to a lot of top economists and financial analysts, the risk is still very real:Alan Greenspan and Tim GeithnerNouriel RoubiniMartin Feldstein, pro…

Thom Hartmann: The Great Tax Con Job

High top marginal tax rates on rich people actually stabilize the economy, prevent economic bubbles from forming, prevent economic crashes, and lead to steady and sustained economic growth.

Fed under fire

Analysis
By Steve Schifferes
Economics reporter, BBC News

<img src=”http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45125000/jpg/_45125828_-73.jpg” align=”left” width=”226″ height=”170″ alt=”US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke ” border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>

Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the US central bank, the Federal Reserve, has played a central role in the global financial crisis.

The Fed, along with the US Treasury, organised the $700bn (£496bn) bank bail-out plan in October 2008, and has since spent an additional $3 trillion propping up the credit markets and trying to boost the economy.

"Its credibility has been tarnished by the easy credit policies it pursued and the lax regulatory oversight"

William Donaldson, former SEC chief

Mr Bernanke’s four-year term as Fed chairman comes up for renewal in January, and his reappointment is now the subject of an increasingly bitter debate between right and left.

Under fire

Bear Stearns office

His role in the bail-out has come under fire from conservative Republicans and left wing Democrats, who believe that he betrayed his Republican roots by providing so much state support for the banks while ordinary citizens have suffered from the economic downturn.

Other economic conservatives fear that the huge Fed lending – along with a Federal government deficit that is expected to reach $1.7 trillion this year, is likely to prove highly inflationary, and are urging the Fed to unwind its big lending programme as soon as possible.

And some influential voices argue that, since the Fed performed poorly regulating the banks before the crisis, it should not be given the lead role now.

"Its credibility has been tarnished by the easy credit policies it pursued and the lax regulatory oversight..and the heavy influence that the banks have on the Fed’s governance," say two former heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission, William Donaldson and Arthur Levitt.

‘No interference’

Barack Obama

But Mr Bernanke has also attracted wide support among mainstream economists and investors for his handling of the crisis.

A petition from more than 250 prominent economists, including Yale’s Robert Schiller and three Nobel Prize winners (Robert Merton, Eric Maskin, and Daniel McFadden) argues that the criticisms are putting the independence of the Fed at risk.

"When the Fed judges it’s time to begin tightening monetary conditions, it must be allowed to do so without interference," they said.

And Mr Bernanke so far has one very important backer – President Barack Obama, the man who will decide later this year whether to reappoint him.

"He is doing a fine job in difficult circumstances," Mr Obama said at a press conference in June.

Popular anger

Shoppers in Manhattan

It is highly unusual in US politics for the job of Fed chairman to be so politicised – and the previous, long-serving chairman, Alan Greenspan, always attracted bi-partisan support.

The debate over Mr Bernanke’s future, however, is also a debate about the future course of US economic policy after a year of unprecedented government intervention amid the deepest economic downturn since World War II.

Mr Bernanke, and his ally US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner (who played a key role in the financial bail-out in October when he was head of the New York branch of the Fed) have been trying to steer a middle course, providing emergency relief to the banking sector but making it clear that these are only temporary measures.

At the same time, they are planning to toughen up regulation to prevent future crises – and much of that regulatory power will be accrued by the Fed.

Critics fear that Mr Bernanke will become too powerful, and the banks would like to weaken the close regulatory oversight being proposed by the government.

At the same time, there is huge popular anger at the scale of the bank bail-out, and a belief that this constitutes "socialism for the rich", with ordinary citizens suffering from the economic fall-out from the banking crisis.

These feelings have become stronger as it has become clear that, despite President Obama’s $787bn stimulus package, the US recession is likely to be long and deep, with unemployment rising sharply and forecast to top 10%.

Recession lingering

Job seekers at a jobs fair in New York

The Fed’s own assessment of the US economy is still distinctly downbeat, and in its most recent pronouncement said that "downside risks as predominating in the near term," although it is hopeful of a mild recovery by the end of 2009.

So the Fed is likely to continue with its program of credit easing.

Despite the worries of conservative economists, it argues that there is little immediate danger of inflation at the moment with economy still weak.

The Fed’s loose monetary policy also take some pressure off the Obama administration, which is facing calls from the left for a second stimulus package to provide a further fiscal boost the the economy.

This would be politically problematic, and also make it more difficult for the President to pass his other, expensive policy iniatives, such as health care reform.

Bernanke’s Rivals

Larry Summers

But if the economy did worsen significantly, it is still possible that Mr Obama might want to replace the man who symbolises the bank bail-out in the public imagination.

The leading candidate to replace him is the charismatic figure of Larry Summers, the former US Treasury Secretary who is now a key economic advisor to the President.

Mr Summers, a former President of Harvard, is a forceful advocate of further government intervention in the economy, but has run into trouble because of his outspoken views.

Another possibility would be Janet Yellin, a former Fed governor and advisor to President Clinton, who has dovish views about inflation.

However, many investors believe that it would be a mistake to replace Mr Bernanke, and are hoping that, in the interest of policy stability, that he is reappointed.

In the opinion of David Wyss of Standard & Poor’s: "Don’t change horses in mid-stream." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

James Warren: This Week in Magazines: Vanity Fair Tries to Figure Out Symbols of the New Sophistication

If people turn to Kindles and iPods, rather than showing off what books they’re reading or what albums they’ve collected, what will be the emblems of the high-brow?

Explaining the Financial Crisis: Continuously Updated News Aggregation in Action

Scott framed his previous challenge to news sites in general terms: like Drudge, any site could use continuously updated aggregation to become a “destination for links to news of what’s going in the world.” But this kind of aggregation can be just as powerful when applied to specific stories or topics.
For example, you might have [...]