Save The Banks
Feb 1st, 2008 at 7:33 am by Susie
From the Christian Science Monitor:
In moving with unusual speed to cut interest rates, officials at the Federal Reserve are aiming to prevent a nationwide recession, but they’re also doing something more targeted: throwing a lifeline directly to the beleaguered banking industry.
The Fed says that it isn’t trying to bail out anyone. Rather, its move is grounded partly in concern that banking troubles could deepen, choking off credit to the whole economy at a precarious time.
The pace of consumer spending stalled in December, according to government data released Thursday. America’s businesses are also on edge, with slow job creation causing a rise in unemployment. In response, the central bank is moving to stimulate growth. But it is also trying to forestall a possible bank meltdown that would worsen the situation.
The interest-rate cuts could give financial firms some breathing room to absorb losses tied to home loans.
“This is more about Wall Street than Main Street,” says Ken Goldstein, an economist at the Conference Board, a business-sponsored research group in New York. “We’ve got the monetary strategy we’ve got because financial markets are nervous.”
The Fed pointed to this anxiety, and to the risk it poses, in announcing its latest moves. “Financial markets remain under considerable stress, and credit has tightened further for some businesses and households,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in the statement accompanying the rate cut on Wednesday.
Citing “downside risks” to the economy, the statement again pointed to Wall Street, saying it “will continue to assess the effects of financial and other developments on economic prospects” in deciding future policy actions. The key point: Financial developments have an impact that extends beyond the geography of Manhattan or the paychecks of investment bankers – many of whom are going without million-dollar bonuses this year.



