Fed Members See ‘Deep Recession’
Posted on: Apr 9th, 2008 | By Contrarian Profits | Filed under Featured, Financial News, Politics & Economics
According to AP, fears of a deep recession “drove Federal Reserve policymakers to slash a key interest rate last month, meeting minutes show.”
Even as the Fed battled in almost unprecedented fashion to stem a widening credit and housing slump, some members fretted over the possibility of a “prolonged and severe” economic downturn. It was in that environment that they voted — with two dissents — to cut its most important interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point to 2.25 percent. That action capped the most aggressive Fed intervention in a quarter-century.
Meanwhile, former Fed chief Alan Greenspan has been busy defending his part in the housing bubble.
“I find it interesting that Big Al is getting testy about all the fingers being pointed at him for this mess,” says Dan Denning in The Daily Reckoning Australia.
“I believe I may have been one of the first to point a finger at him when the housing bubble was getting bigger and bigger, and no one would admit we had a bubble.
“But just for the record… Here’s the blame I believe he should bear… First, I believe the Fed was too lax during the stock market bubble. Raising Fed requirements on margin, in my opinion would have gone a long way toward slowing that bubble, and maybe preventing trillions of dollars in losses.
“Second, I believe he fueled the housing bubble and then all the awful stuff that happened as a result of the housing bubble, by cutting rates too low back in 2001 and then keeping them too low for too long (through 2003).”