Monday, March 16, 2009

Shouldn't we have a public debate about the potential costs of Bernanke's unlimited guarantee?

From Clusterstock:

"
Ben Bernanke's Guarantee Revolution

benbernankeon60minutes.jpgAbout two or three times we've heard Ben Bernanke announce what amounts to a revolution in US financial policy--the guarantee that no matter how unhealthy a major financial firm might be, it will not be allowed to fail. Importantly, this decision has never been approved by legislation, executive order or a judicial decision. Instead, it seems to have been made outside the constitutional structure.

Last night on 60 Minutes Ben Bernanke made one of the clearest statements yet about this policy.

(PELLEY) Are you committing in this interview, that you are not going
to let any of these banks fail? That no matter what their balance
sheet actually looks like, they are not going to fail?

(BERNANKE) They are not going to fail. But what we can do, should it
be necessary, is– is try to wind it down in a safe way.

One of the striking things about this new policy is the utter lack of public deliberation about it. We don't know exactly how the policy was formulated or who might have approved it. We also don't know exactly what this means. Should we assume that all loans or any counter-party risk has been transferred to the government of the US? Is only equity at risk with financial firms? Have we fully considered what this will mean for asset allocation and capital structure?

It's a marked reversal of our former policy, which explicitly allowed for financial failures. Shouldn't there have been some discussion period for such a policy revolution?

Keep in mind that this new policy's closest precedent was the implicit guarantee of the obligations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. As we've shown, that was a policy that was useless at best and probably unduly costly. In the end, it just shifted forward the costs of the program onto future taxpayers. There's no such thing as a free guarantee. Eventually, it winds up being paid for. Shouldn't we have a public debate about the potential costs of Bernanke's unlimited guarantee?"

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat (URL) said:
We should have a debate about what to guarantee going forward, and what to do. I favor Narrow banking. However, actions matter as well as words. We have had a system in place in which banks and investors believed that they were implicitly guaranteed in case of a financial crisis. All of the moves since the S & L Crisis have led them to believe this, as well as the fact that they considered lobbying as buying insurance, at a cheap rate, in case of a financial crisis. These are the assumptions and presuppositions that they have been investing and doing business under. This is why I believe that Lehman was a disaster: There was no Plan B.

In the case of the large banks, that's clear. There was no plan for the FDIC to seize them, or any plan to deal with a large insolvent bank, other than merge it with another large bank, with a government subsidy large enough to cover the cost. We don't let banks just fail in the US. So that was another guarantee.

There are two other areas I disagree with you:

1) If you have a Lender Of Last Resort, then you have an explicit guarantee that, if the crisis is bad enough, it will intervene. This thought goes back to Bagehot. If the Fed exists, it is a guarantor. The only question is what rules or procedures you put in place to try and avoid it ever have to save the financial system.

2) The fear in this crisis, for some of us, was Fisher's Debt-Deflation. If you're not worried about that, then I can understand your shock at the guarantees. They must seem crazy. But, if you are a follower of Fisher, as I've read that Bernanke is, then you will need to offer a complete guarantee in order to stop Debt-Deflation. The reason is that Debt-Deflation has no natural or predictable stopping point. It can wipe out an unimaginable amount of wealth before it stops. One anecdote which was on Felix Salmon's blog: People redeemed money from John Paulson's fund. In other words, even the winners were affected by withdrawals because of the fear and aversion to risk. Once you are in Debt-Deflation, only the government has the resources to guarantee and backstop the financial system. As I pointed out in the Lehman debate, the point of the guarantee is to end the panic, Debt-Deflation, and allow a more orderly process of recording losses. It is not an amount of money that you expect to spend. On the contrary, the guarantee is meant to stop the downward spiral and save money in the long run by ending the frantic canceling of investments in order to get cash.

I believe that the actions taken have helped, although I do not agree with the specifics. For instance, I posted about the Swedish Plan in September. Now, the whole point of the Swedish Plan, from my perspective, was to put in place a modus operandi to deal with the large banks, thereby guaranteeing the system, as was done in Sweden. I also favor QE without borrowing, as in Buiter's paper on Helicopter Money, and a Sales Tax decrease and targeted tax cuts for investment and a robust social safety net and some infrastructure, to battle the fear and aversion to risk. All these actions, I believe, fit into Fisher's model.

I think that Bernanke agrees with much of this. I simply wonder why he hasn't been more forceful. You obviously disagree.

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