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Monday, August 27, 2007
Bill Steigerwald :: Townhall.com Columnist
Q&A with Allan Meltzer
by Bill Steigerwald
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Are Barack Obama's friends -- like Bill Ayers -- legitimate political issues?

When the Federal Reserve Board is in the news, there’s no better source of expertise than political economy professor Allan Meltzer of Carnegie Mellon University. Meltzer has not only served as a consultant on economic policy for Congress, the U.S. Treasury and the World Bank, he has written the definitive history of the Federal Reserve from its founding in 1913 to 1951, when it became the independent financial power it is today.

Meltzer, who is writing Part 2 of the Fed’s history, was working at home in Shadyside when I talked to him Wednesday by phone about the liquidity crisis, the overall economy and how the Federal Reserve Board is dealing with both.

Q: What is this liquidity crisis we’re in -- and is it over?

A: I think it’s too soon to say it’s over. It’s the result of errors on the part of both the regulators but especially the banks and financial institutions. The banks and financial institutions were making loans that they had every reason to know could not possibly survive. There were no down payments. They had no information about many of the borrowers. They knew that the interest rates that they gave were going to rise after a year or two. So they had every reason to believe there would be large defaults -- and that’s a problem…. Of course, the primary responsibility falls upon the people who made those loans.

Q: Upon those who made the loans or took them out?

A: Who made them. That is, who offered them. The people who took them out are, of course, at fault also. Many of these people would like to blame Alan Greenspan and what they say was a surfeit of credit. But no one held a gun to their heads and told them to make those loans. They could have invested in safe assets. They chose not to. That’s their error.

Q: Is this liquidity crisis a sign of more trouble to come or of a larger structural problem with the economy?

A: That will depend a lot on how it’s handled. The Federal Reserve has been doing mainly the correct thing -- not trying to lower interest rates, making sure that the market has enough cash to be able to make the settlements between the various lenders who have good collateral. There will be failures out of this. But failures are not a disaster; failures are a way of disciplining the system.

Q: What is your assessment of the economy’s condition overall?

A: The world economy in 2007 is probably in as good a place as it has been. There is expansion all over the world, at very good rates of growth. That part is very good and that’s very different from the two previous crises in 1998 and 1987. In those two occasions, there was much greater weakness in the economic system and quite a risk of recession. So the Federal Reserve’s actions in that period should not lead them to do what they did then -- when they did lower interest rates substantially. This time the problem is a very old one: People have borrowed short and lent long and ….

Q: Which means?

A: That people sold paper that would be renewed in 30, 60, 90 days or six months and they lent to people on 15- or 30-year mortgages. So when interest rates changed they found themselves in a difficult position. Many people today, because of fear, don’t want to buy any of those longer-term securities, so there is a problem in the market to clear the market -- and the Federal Reserve has done some sensible things to try to alleviate that problem.

Q: And that is when the Fed added liquidity or money into the system last week?

A: They urged -- literally -- banks to lend on some of these securities which are having difficulty finding prices.

Q: Is the Federal Reserve doing what it should be doing?

A: Mostly. What it hasn’t done -- never has done in its 90-odd-year history -- is announced what it will do in the case of a problem like this. Sometimes it does a bailout, sometimes it doesn’t. So there is unnecessary uncertainty about what they are going to do. They need to announce that they don’t do bailouts -- under any circumstances; that people who make mistakes and take losses have to bear them.

Q: But by pumping money into the system didn’t they sort of bail those people out?

A: There’s a difference between bailing out the people who made mistakes and making sure that the problem doesn’t spread to people who haven’t made mistakes. Providing the cash to make those settlements means that people who have collateral that they can borrow against are able to work their way through the problem and it doesn’t spread to them. A real crisis would occur if the Fed and other central banks failed to do that and then forced liquidation by solvent, safe institutions.

Q: What grade would you give Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke so far?

A: I’d say he deserves an “A,” not an “A+.” For an “A+,” he needs to announce a strategy. He is trying to do that, but he hasn’t been very direct about saying, “We do not bail out failing firms.”

Q: About 35 of 37 economists polled by USA Today predict that a rate cut would come not immediately but in September. Were you part of that poll?

A: No -- and I don’t agree with it. That is, it may happen. But much will depend on what happens between now and then. I believe they’re watching the market carefully, hour to hour, minute to minute, and if things are better in a month, there won’t be a rate cut. Continued...

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About The Author
Bill Steigerwald, born and raised in Pittsburgh, is a former L.A. Times copy editor and free-lancer who also worked as a docudrama researcher for CBS-TV in Hollywood before becoming an associate editor and columnist for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
 
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Subject: John Mauldin
had a good Outside the Box this week. He had an article on who is to blame. Actually, quite a lot of people were to blame. But he also said this is a creditbility problem and not a liquidity problem. He said there is a lot of cash on the side that people are afraid of investing right now.

Mulling Over Meltzer
Let’s add a little clarification to a very informative article. First of all, in many cases, lenders actually were compelled to make these risky loans to sub-prime borrowers. In many states, it is illegal for a lender to refuse to accept an application from a borrower, even if it is very clear to the lender that the borrower is likely to default. Once the application is in place, it is also illegal to refuse credit to a borrower who qualifies for the teaser rate, even if the borrower is extremely unlikely to be able to pay the mortgage once the teaser rate has expired. In many cases, lenders really did have no choice but to include bad borrowers among their clients in order to make profitable loans to borrowers.

It is not reasonable to hold lenders accountable for decisions forced on them by regulators and legislators. Regulators and legislators are generally loath to accept their culpability in situations such as this. Academics all too often give regulators a pass because their intentions were pure. Unfortunately, the media generally fall in line with academia on such issues, leaving the real culprits free to blame others for situations they caused. We see a great deal of that in the present situation.

Why is this? I would suggest that it’s because the lenders are the easiest (and most lucrative) to pursue in court. There’s no money in suing fraudulent borrowers (who are far more numerous than exploitative lenders). There’s no hope of successfully suing regulators or the legislators who wrote the laws they enforce. Personal responsibility is out of fashion among the media and academics. Get the evil banker, eat the rich, kill the capitalist – it’s an inexorable progression. In the process, let’s make a few more billionaire lawyers, shall we?
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