The
Worst Recession in 25 Years?
by
Bob Murphy
by Bob Murphy
DIGG THIS
On
September 18, the Fed cut its target for the fed funds rate by 50
basis points (0.5 percentage points), from 5.25% to 4.75%. The move
surprised many analysts who had been expecting a more modest cut
of 25 basis points.
For those versed
in the Austrian theory of the business cycle, as developed by Ludwig
von Mises and elaborated by Friedrich Hayek, the aggressive Fed
"stimulus" is ominous indeed. Not only will it pave the
way for much higher price inflation than Americans have seen in
decades, but it will also exacerbate what could be the worst recession
in twenty-five years.
How the
Fed "Sets" Interest Rates
Before discussing
the history of interest rate manipulation by the Fed, a primer will
be useful. When people say the Fed did such-and-such to "interest
rates," they are specifically referring to the Fed's target
for the federal funds rate. The Federal Reserve itself is neither
a borrower nor a lender in this market; the fed funds rate is the
interest rate that banks charge each other for overnight loans of
reserves. Recall that in our fractional reserve banking system,
the Fed mandates that banks keep a certain amount of reserves (either
cash in the vault or deposits with the Fed itself) in order to "back
up" their total outstanding deposits. At any given time, some
banks have more reserves than they need, while others have less.
The banks with excess reserves can thus loan them to those with
deficient reserves, and the (annualized) interest rate is the fed
funds rate.
Read
the rest of the article
October 2, 2007
Bob
Murphy [send him mail]
has a Ph.D. in economics from New York University, and is the author
of The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Capitalism.
He has a personal website at ConsultingByRPM.com
Bob
Murphy Archives
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