Wednesday, October 22, 2008

"including enhancements to its existing liquidity facilities "

Mark Thoma sides with Salmon and me. We win:

"Then, we see the Lehman collapse, and this caused the Fed induced substitute lending to fall off from 9/17 to 9/24. Next, after the bailout plan is proposed lending takes off again (see the change between 9/24 and 10/1), but then it falls off again and turns negative after WaMu fails (see the change between 10/1 and 10/8). I don't see how you can look at this figure and come to the conclusion that there have been no disturbances in financial markets from the crisis generally, or from specific events."

In other words, the Fed stepped in with actions that kept lending at an even pace, or so I read their graph.

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