Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dealing With Financial Turmoil: The Fed’s Response David C. Wheelock* Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis November 6, 2008 *Views expressed are not necessarily.
Advertisements

The Goals of Monetary Policy
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues – Pt. II Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues – Pt. II ECO Dr. Dennis Foster W.A. Franke College of Business.
Prepared for Dr. Ramon Castillo Econ 462 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, LOS ANGELES Spring 2011 U.S Financial Crisis Present by Huan.
The U.S. economy is currently in a recession. 1.True 2.False.
Renee D. Laychur, CFA Senior Vice President & Senior Portfolio Mgr First National Bank.
THE GREAT CONTRACTION : WHO CAUSED IT & HOW DID IT HAPPEN? By : Charlie Haumesser Discussants : Ashley Hucksoll & Mikael Leveille.
Global Economic Crisis What happened?  Last half of 1990s: unprecedented growth and prosperity  2000: dot com bubble burst  2001: 9/11 terrorist attacks;
Chapter 14.  Discuss Milton Friedman’s contribution to modern economic thought.  Evaluate appropriately timed monetary policy and its impacts on interest.
Rethinking the Great Depression The New Deal The Depression of Anemic Recovery of The Effects of WWII on the Economy ECO 473 – Money.
The Fed and the Financial Crisis Jonathan Cotten Roger Kone Davorin Kuljasevic.
Measuring the Economy Goals 9.01 & Why does the government need to know what the economy is doing?  The government makes decisions that affect.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Financial Crises and the Subprime Meltdown.
Macroeconomic Issues The Great Recession: GDP begins to drop Shaded area = recession.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 4 Financial Crises and the Subprime Meltdown.
Rethinking the Great Depression ECO 473 – Money & Banking Dr. D. Foster.
The Financial Crisis and the Great Recession 14. Start with the 2001 recession and weak recovery Fed responds by cutting interest rates (FFR = 1%) Since.
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues ECO Dr. Dennis Foster W.A. Franke College of Business.
Rethinking the Great Depression ECO 473 – Money & Banking Dr. D. Foster.
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues ECO Dr. Dennis Foster W.A. Franke College of Business.
Lecture 16 Subprime Crisis.
Chapter 14 Financial Crises and the Subprime Meltdown.
The Fed and Monetary Policy. I. The two main goals of the US Federal Reserve are to: 1. Fight recession – GDP shrinking rather than growing, or unemployment.
FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT  ECO 316 Week 1 DQ 1 Should You Invest Short Term ECO 316 Week 1 DQ 2 Treasury Inflation Protection Bonds.
DOMESTIC CRISES: POLICY RESPONSE TO THE GREAT RECESSION Professor Lawrence Summers October 13, 2015.
Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy Chapter 18. Role of Fed Fed looks at inflation and unemployment and inflation is the key. – High inflation can destroy.
The Great Depression … of 1921 & the Gold Standard ECO 473 – Money & Banking Dr. D. Foster.
Tools to adjust the Money Supply
Behavioral Finance Economics 437.
The Great Depression … of 1921 & the Gold Standard
Financial Crises and the Subprime Meltdown
Figure 8.1: Subprime Lending Fiasco – Stages
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues
The Financial Crisis of and the Great Recession
Financial Crises and the Subprime Meltdown
SESSION 2 Financial & Monetary Policies
Measuring Economic Activity
The Financial Crisis of 2008
Bell Work Who would you be more likely to vote for – a politician who promised to raise taxes, or a politician who promised to reduce taxes? Why?
The Great Depression … of 1921 & the Gold Standard
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues - II
Unit 6: Macroeconomic Systems & the U. S
The Federal Reserve II. Fed Policy: tools & critique
Monetary Theory: The AD/AS Model – Pt. II
Aiperi Ismailova, Johnathan Ives, Miles Kinnamont, Layla Lee
Commercial Bank Balance Sheet
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues
Class 2- The Origins of the Crisis October 9, 2010
Monetary Theory: The AD/AS Model – Pt. II
Financial Crises and the Subprime Meltdown
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues - I
Class 3- The Crash October 16, 2010
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues - II
2-2 Economic Conditions Change
Monetary Theory: The AD/AS Model – Pt. II
Monetary Theory: The AD/AS Model – Pt. II
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues - II
Monetary Policy.
The Government’s Response
Monetary Theory: The AD/AS Model – Pt. II
The Federal Reserve System
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues
Monetary Theory: The AD/AS Model – Pt. II
The Financial Crisis of and the Great Recession
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues - II
Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues
The Great Recession: GDP begins to drop
Presentation transcript:

Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues ECO 285 - Dr. Dennis Foster W.A. Franke College of Business

Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues Heading into crisis II The bank failures III Fed inaction & action IV What has the Fed accomplished? V The problem with policy VI The Austrians & rethinking policy

What does the Fed Want? A healthy & strong economy with low unemployment and low inflation. I. Heading into crisis Policy? Stimulate spending by reducing interest rates. Why? They are Keynesians. Effect? Creates housing boom.

Federal Funds rate of interest, 1995 to 2004

Median home prices, 1999 to 2006

Home sales, 1999 to 2006 Sept. 2005

Was Bear TBTF? What about Lehman? The Bear Stearns Story $133.20 - 52 week high prior to collapse. 2007 - Lost billions in subprime market. March 2008 - Assets/equity = 35 3/13/08 – Cash  from $10 b. to $2 b. 3/14/08 – Fed lends $13 b. for 3 days. JP Morgan deal - $2 per share! Fed creates Maiden Lane LLC Fed loans ML $30 b. JPM “sells” bad assets to ML. II. The bank failures $400 b. Assets $10!! Was Bear TBTF? What about Lehman?

The Three Failures: IndyMac WaMu Lehman Spun off from Countrywide. Not a “mac” Overleveraged on “Alt A” loans. WaMu Shut down 100’s of offices 2007-08. Sub-prime victim. Final 10 days lost $17 b. in cash w/d Lehman Brothers Losses = $7 b. in Q2 & Q3 Final day: $1 b. in cash $32 b. Assets $300 b. Assets $640 b. Assets

Did the Fed see this coming? "At this juncture, however, the impact on the broader economy and financial markets of the problems in the subprime market seems likely to be contained." -March 2007 "It is not the responsibility of the Federal Reserve – nor would it be appropriate – to protect lenders and investors from the consequences of their financial decisions." -October 2007 "House prices have risen by nearly 25 percent over the past two years… [T]hese price increases largely reflect strong economic fundamentals." -October 2005 "We’ve never had a decline in house prices on a nationwide basis. So, what I think what is more likely is that house prices will slow, maybe stabilize…” -July 2005 "The risk that the economy has entered a substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so." -June 2008 "The Federal Reserve is not currently forecasting a recession." -January 2008 III. Fed inaction & action

What did the Fed do? Quantitative Easing. Raise the money supply Buy Treasuries. Buy MBS. Boost short term lending. Raise the money supply Lower interest rates. "One myth that’s out there is that what we’re doing is printing money. We’re not printing money." -December 2010

5.25% 2.2% Federal Funds rate of interest, 2006 to 2018 11/2018 2.2% IV. What has the Fed accomplished?

The Fed Charts New Territory – 2008 to 11/2018 $4.1 tr Assets $2.25 tr $1.65 tr

The Fed Charts New Territory – 2008 to 11/2018 $4.1 tr Liabilities $1.78 tr $1.66 tr

Housing Revisited Home sales, 1999 to 2015 October 2018 5.22 mill.

Housing Revisited $255,400 Median home prices, 1999 to 2015 October 2018 $255,400

The Case of the Missing Inflation

V. The problem with policy What has the Fed done? Has it maintained the value of the dollar? Has it stabilized the economy? Has it reduced moral hazard? Has it lessened distributional problems? Is the risk of inflation gone? V. The problem with policy

What is the exit strategy? The FED will have two choices: Continue policy  hyperinflation Halt policy  recession Or . . . Wage/Price controls?

VI. The Austrians & rethinking policy The Austrian School of Thought Recessions are the solution, not the problem! Keynesian policy -  interest to spending. Leads to misallocation of resources. Leads to an unsustainable boom. Leads to eventual conflict (C vs. I). What should we do? Wait!! VI. The Austrians & rethinking policy

A Tale of Four Recoveries

What if … ? GDP (2015) = $23.5 tr. vs. $16.4 tr. 3.8% GDP (2015) = $23.5 tr. vs. $16.4 tr. 1990 - 2015 net gain = $59 tr.

Let bad firms/banks go bankrupt. Abolish Fannie & Freddie. We don’t lose real resources!!!!! Abolish Fannie & Freddie. End the Fed. End the government monopoly on money.

The Trouble With Economic Statistics Poorly defined … poverty, inequality, price level Imprecise … discrepancy statistic for trade Flawed … include G in GDP? GDE better? Misleading … trade deficits bad? WWII prosperity? Why? Data used to justify government policies. Why? Market can’t fix problems; government can. Who tells us this? Bureaucracy, politicians, elected officials. “We must carefully distinguish between what we think we know and what we really do and can know.” -O.M. What is the legitimate role of government?

Get on the mailing list for Spring 2019 – dennis.foster@nau.edu

ECO 481: Public Choice Theory The W.A. Franke College of Business Northern Arizona University Spring 2019 ECO 481: Public Choice Theory Why Government Fails Dr. Dennis Foster FCB #308

Monetary Policy: Contemporary Issues ECO 285 - Dr. Dennis Foster W.A. Franke College of Business