Seen everywhere in last U.S. crisis, moral hazard is
nowhere in this one
Send a link to a friend
[April 13, 2020] By
Ann Saphir and Lindsay Dunsmuir
SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As the
U.S. Federal Reserve rolls out trillions of dollars to blunt the
economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic, there's a notable
difference to the last financial crisis: close to zero concern over
"moral hazard" - the sticky business of bailing out those whose dilemma
is of their own making.
That's freed up the U.S. central bank to do more, and faster, than it
dared to do a decade ago, when it was last called on to launch emergency
moves to help protect the economy.
Back in 2007-2009, policymakers voiced repeated concern that bailing out
banks and financial markets more generally would reward them for having
taken imprudent risks. The Fed also faced a political backlash from its
congressional overseers for what some saw as extending its reach into
the fiscal sphere and, in effect, picking and choosing winners and
losers.

How the Fed acted then stuck in the craw of many conservatives, in
particular, for years after the crisis ended. In 2011, the governor of
Texas, Rick Perry - who was also running for the Republican presidential
nomination - called the Fed's aggressive bond buying "almost ...
treasonous" and even suggested then-Chair Ben Bernanke might get roughed
up if he ever ventured to the Lone Star State.
This time around? Crickets.
In an appearance on Thursday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell made clear that he
faces no groundswell of criticism this time around, either among the
central bank's policymakers or the wider corridors of power. The
priority, he said, remains on helping people who through no fault of
their own have lost their livelihoods, at least temporarily, due to
"stay at home" orders across the country.
"People are undertaking sacrifices for the common good. We need to make
them whole. To the extent we have the ability to make them whole we
should be doing that as a society," Powell said. "They didn't cause
this. Their business isn't closed because of anything they did wrong.
They didn't lose their job because of anything they did wrong."
And while he emphasized the Fed's role is to lend, not spend, staging an
effective rescue means close coordination with Treasury and elected
politicians, he said. "Financial stability is really something where we
both have a stake and both have authorities ... we do work closely with
them on these facilities and I'll say that’s been a very productive
relationship," he said.
In the space of roughly a month the Fed has launched nine
crisis-fighting programs - some old and some brand new - designed to
keep credit flowing to businesses and households by shoring up liquidity
in financial markets.
The Fed’s programs may end up helping some businesses whose trouble is
at least partly of their own making - having loaded up on debt before
the crisis, for instance. But for the moment, neither Fed policymakers
nor politicians seem too concerned with separating the deserving from
the less so.
Economists at Citigroup Global Markets in a note last week said minutes
of the Fed's emergency meetings "predictably reflected a unified cohort
of policymakers willing to use all available tools to support the
economy, with little regard to second-order effects or moral hazard."
[to top of second column] |

People walk wearing masks outside The Federal Reserve Bank of New
York in New York City, U.S., March 18, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas
Jackson/File Photo

And even as the size of the Fed's balance sheet sets new records weekly, Powell
indicated there is little pushback should the Fed find other new, untested ways
to help the economy. "As we identify other areas, we won't hesitate to move into
those areas," he said.
BACK THEN, CONFUSED AND MUDDLED
Back in 2008, objections were frequent and forceful. As the financial crisis
gained steam, Fed officials were very concerned that their lending programs
could reward or could be perceived as rewarding bad behavior. Indeed that was
one reason Fed policymakers cited for allowing Lehman Brothers to fail rather
than ride to its rescue.
Raising the alarm weren't just inflation hawks like Kansas City Fed President
Thomas Hoenig and Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser, but centrist
Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart as well.
Even Bernanke, speaking to colleagues in September 2008 just after the Lehman
collapse, said he was "decidedly confused and very muddled" by the tension
between the fiscal and moral hazard costs of the rescue on the one hand and the
potential for "severe consequences for the financial system and, therefore, for
the economy of not taking action."
In Congress, criticism of the Fed's bailout of banks was front and center. "You
are the definition of moral hazard," Senate Banking Committee member Jim
Bunning, a Republican, told Bernanke at his confirmation hearing in late 2009.
That tension is all but gone in 2020.
"We don't make decisions about individual firms," Powell said on Thursday. "Any
borrower that meets the eligibility requirements for one of these facilities can
take part in the facility, we are not going to be picking this firm but not that
firm."

Fed policymakers are agreed on going full steam ahead, Powell said, in part
because they learned from the last crisis that worries an increase in the money
supply will cause runaway inflation are unfounded. With muted inflation in the
decade since, the central bank chief was curt on Thursday.
"I worry that in hindsight, you will see that we could have done things
differently, but one thing I don’t worry about is inflation right now," Powell
said.
(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir and Ann Saphir; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |