The Fed Listens to Wall Street and Believes What It Hears
Aug 25th, 2008 | By Dan Denning | Category: Politics & EconomicsIt seems we are not the only ones frustrated with the Fed. Former Bank of England economist Willen Buiter has criticized Bernanke & Co. for bowing to the demands of Wall Street. Dan Denning in The Daily Reckoning Australia says the Fed’s policy is just delaying the inevitable backlash from years of misallocated capital…
The central bankers are calling each other names now. At the annual confab in Jackson Hole, Wyoming former Bank of England policy maker Willem Buiter took his friends at the U.S. Fed to task for following their money masters on Wall Street.
“The Fed listens to Wall Street and believes what it hears,” Willem Buiter wrote in a paper. “This distortion into a partial and often highly distorted perception of reality is unhealthy and dangerous.”
Other economists piled on too, saying that the Fed’s various auction facilities that allow banks to warehouse poor collateral with the Fed and get liquid Treasuries in return doesn’t help solve the fundamental problem: asset quality.
In fact, it simply prolongs the reckoning the financial system badly needs, where assets are marked down to market value, bad loans are written off, losses are taken, and the misallocated capital from the credit boom is liquidated.
You can’t move on if you design a system that prevents mistakes from being realised, or punished. But as much as we all seek to avoid discipline, life (and markets) have a way of meting it out, whether we like it or not.
Source: Willem Buiter Attacks Fed Policy
Dan Denning is a contributing editor to Diggers & Drillers and a regular columnist for Money Weekly, a Taiwanese financial publication. From 2000 to 2006, Dan was the editor of Strategic Investment of Agora Publishing. His reporting and analysis for The Daily Reckoning is read by more than 500,000 people regularly.