Sunday, November 30, 2008

"… We think that’s counterproductive.”

Willem Buiter on the transparency of the Central Banks:

"Bloomberg News filed a federal lawsuit on November 7, 2008, to force disclosure by the Federal Reserve, under the US Freedom of Information Act, about the lending by the Federal Reserve system to private banks. Bloomberg wants to know the identities of the borrowing banks, how much each one borrowed, and the assets the Fed has accepted as collateral for these loans by the Fed.

The request is not prima facie unreasonable. Under the 11 facilities cited in the lawsuit (which don’t include the $700 bn of the TARP, which is a Treasury programme), the Fed has extended well over $2 trillion worth of credit. Initially, most of this was secured. With the growing volume of Fed purchases of commercial paper, and given the range of options for outright purchases of private securities provided by the $800 facility announced on November 26 ($200 bn for consumer credit and $600 bn for purchases by the Fed of mortgage-backed securities and of debt issued by mortgage lenders), the Fed is now also a major unsecured creditor.

The Fed’s exposure to credit risk is likely to escalate rapidly as the Fed engages in large-scale quantitative easing, taking onto its balance sheet, either as collateral or through outright purchases, ever larger amounts of every poorer quality private securities. A trillion here, a trillion there - even in Washington DC, you are talking real money for which accountability to the Congress, the US tax payer and the wider public is essential.

Our financial leaders certainly talk the accountability and transparency talk."

The also say that guarantees aren't guarantees. Read the rest of the post. Here's my comment:

“As regards the specific request of Bloomberg News, a short delay in making public the identities of the individual borrowers (sellers of securities to the Fed) may under certain conditions be justified. All other information (what collateral was offered, what securities were purchased, valuations, terms etc.) must be in the public domain immediately. Central banks have no immunity from accountability for the use of public resources. Congress, the Courts, the media, the tax payer and the public at large should reject Chairman Bernanke’s ‘nyet’ to a legitimate request for information.”

Frankly, it’s a shame it had to come to this. I feel particularly strongly that, going forward, we the people need to know what guarantees we’re on the hook for. I’m quite sure that I’m not going to like the answer. Maybe that’s why they’re delaying telling us the skinny. It turns out we’ve grown fat, and some dreadful years of drastic dieting are called for. It could also be that there’s no scale to weigh ourselves on this time, the figures are getting so large.

In any case, don’t p–s on my head and tell me it’s raining, as some philosopher said.

Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | November 29th, 2008 at 10:15 pm |

2 comments:

Kitty said...

Hi Don...

This is fabulous... good comment on Buiter's post... reasonable conditions.

You, Buiter and the "Transparency Pack"...

Keep howling at the Federal Reserve... this smells that they won't make public this information.

They act as if they alone have the authority over the nations treasure.

Donald Pretari said...

Thanks Cate,

I'm going to your blog now.

Don