NOTICE: FUTURECASTS BOOKS
Available at Amazon.com
"Understanding the Great Depression Explaining the Great Depression and failures of "New" Keynesian interest rate suppression policy without ideological clap trap, theory confirmation bias or political spin. |
A History of the Federal Reserve, Vol. I
(1913-1951)
by
Allan H. Meltzer
Part III: The Engine of Inflation (1933-1951)
Page Contents
FUTURECASTS online magazine
www.futurecasts.com
Vol. 10, No. 8, 8/1/08
The System's New Deal:
& |
The Federal Reserve System (the
"System") played little role in the New Deal policies that were designed to
grapple with the Great Depression, Alan H. Meltzer explains in his excellent
work, "A History
of the Federal Reserve, vol. 1 (1913-1951)." With the New Deal, those who
looked favorably on inflation as a remedy for the business cycle and as a source of government funds came to dominate
political and monetary policy. (See, Friedman & Schwartz,
"Monetary History of U.S.," Part III, "The Age of Chronic
Inflation.") & |
After the initial devaluation and abandonment of the gold standard, the U.S. actually followed gold standard rules for the money stock more closely than before. |
FDR, Congress and the Treasury
played the major roles in monetary policy, with the N.Y. Federal Reserve Bank
(the "N.Y. Fed") acting as fiscal agent to execute their policies. After the initial devaluation and abandonment of the
gold standard, the U.S. actually followed gold standard rules for the money
stock more closely than before. The 1935 Banking Act decisively centralized
System power in the Federal Reserve Board (the "Board") in Washington. After
the WW-II period, the Board became
increasingly free of Treasury needs and was able to set national monetary
policy. & |
Eccles wanted to transform the System into a central bank that was unconstrained by any disciplinary doctrine such as the gold standard or real bills doctrine. |
Mariner Eccles was influential in devising the System
reforms and became the first Board chairman in 1936. He was instrumental in
centralizing control of the System in Washington and in implementing New Deal
policies. He was influential in crafting the 1935 Banking Act. |
Emergency authorization provided in 1932 to use government securities as collateral for Federal Reserve notes was made permanent.
For the first time in the nation's history, the nation's creditors were stiffed for a substantial portion of the cost of the war. |
There were extensive regulatory changes made by
the New Deal. Some - like the various disclosure oriented Securities Acts -
proved highly successful. The Board gained authority over stock market margin
requirements. |
Reopening the banks:
& |
In the resolution of the banking
crisis, the System as an organization played no policy role. However,
various System officials and staff members worked with administration officials and
congressional leaders on the problem, and the System was an essential part of
the resulting federal licensing procedure. & |
5300 of the 5,938 national banks were able to reopen on March 9.
A "fiduciary" standard is completely dependent for the maintenance of the purchasing power of money on the trustworthiness of the cognizant political officials. |
The 1933 Emergency Banking Act was crafted by Harrison and Hoover administration Treasury Secretary Ogden Mills, who had
stayed with the new government to help out. 5300 of the 5,938 national banks
were able to reopen on March 9 - a considerable measure of success for the
System. Many more were reopened later. They could now borrow from the System based on any sound assets. |
The New Deal achieved a notable success with deposit insurance, but its other banking reforms included some dubious anticompetitive provisions.
|
|
Board regulations henceforth governed all open market
operations, shifting monetary authority to the Board and away from the N.Y.
Fed. The Federal Open Market Committee (the "FOMC") was established by
statute in July, replacing the OMPC. Eccles was its first chairman. All 12 reserve banks became members.
However, it acted through a five member executive committee composed of the OMPC
members - N.Y., Boston, Philadelphia, Cleveland and Chicago - with Harrison
still as chairman of the executive committee. Individual reserve banks could still refuse to participate in Board open market operations.
The System also received broadened authority for
qualitative controls on the speculative use of member bank credit, but these powers
are always ineffective and, in the event, have since been rarely used. |
Dollar devaluation:
& |
The remnants of the international gold standard
were doomed by the easing of U.S. monetary and banking discipline. An emergency
moratorium on gold obligations turned into a prohibition on the private possession
of gold. Everyone was to bear the burdens of the resulting inflation without
recourse to gold as a haven. & |
Those who favored inflation were ecstatic, but the stock market and the economy suffered significant relapses in the last half of 1933, and the Great Depression continued for the rest of the decade.
Political pressure for devaluation and inflation pushed FDR on July 3, 1933, to reject international exchange rate stabilization efforts and undermined a London conference on monetary and trade relations. |
All ties to gold ended - suddenly and unexpectedly - on
April 18, 1933. The Treasury refused to approve new export licenses and FDR
prohibited new gold exports. Gold clauses in contracts were abrogated.
Private gold holdings were called in on August 28, 1933.
Debtors benefited at the expense of creditors, with the government the biggest debtor. Another casualty was the ongoing cooperative efforts to reopen international markets. Political pressure for devaluation and inflation pushed FDR on July 3, 1933, to reject international exchange rate stabilization efforts and undermined a London conference on monetary and trade relations. At any rate, stabilization at that time faced many obstacles, as explained by Meltzer.
|
Excess reserves: |
Inflation as a remedy for the Great Depression was
a widely popular nostrum, especially in agricultural areas and with farm state
legislators. & |
Funds just kept piling up in the banking system as member banks increased the amount of reserves above legal requirements that they deemed prudent given the vast risks of the Great Depression period. |
The OMPC authorized $1 billion in open
market purchases in May, 1933. This was a major move, equaling 60% of the System portfolio at
that time. In the next two months, open market purchases amounted to $200
million, mostly of Treasury notes of up to five years maturity. A total of about
$700 million was purchased that year, but it was offset somewhat by sales of
shorter term securities.
|
Pressure for monetary inflation grew fierce. Market interest rates plummeted - to 1.25% for prime commercial paper and 0.25% for acceptances. These rates were far below System rates and perversely discouraged bank lending by making it unprofitable. Indeed, real rates were well into negative territory, as the price deflator rose 11% and wholesale prices rose 18%. The substantial economic bounce from the bank reopening nevertheless petered out in August, and the economy perversely declined in the second half of the year despite System and New Deal inflationary and other stimulatory efforts. After initially surging higher in the inflationary atmosphere, agricultural prices and gold prices fell back.
|
|
Meltzer puts much of the blame for the economic reversal in the last half of 1933 on System reluctance to continue the purchase program - although the program continued into November and the economic relapse began during the previous August. |
Opposition to the open market purchase program grew within the System. With little to show for it, the System's experiment with monetary inflation ended in November, 1933. Open market operations thereafter merely sustained the System portfolio at about $2.43 billion until April, 1937. Meltzer puts much of the blame for the economic reversal in the last half of 1933 on System reluctance to continue the purchase program. However, the program continued into November and the economic relapse began during the previous August.
|
Destruction of the international gold standard: |
The inflation effort thus shifted to the Treasury.
Inflows and purchases of
gold and silver increased the monetary base. A determined
purchase program pushed gold prices to $29.80 by October, 1933. & |
FDR used the RFC to push world gold prices higher. He
kept bidding above market rates until the U.S. was offering $34 an ounce.
However, all this achieved was a two-tier gold market, with the U.S. the only
buyer at the high price. Except for
agricultural interests, support for the program evaporated.
|
One noxious unintended consequence of these gold and silver purchase policies was the undermining of all international monetary arrangements based on gold or silver. |
The Silver purchase policy also went forward. (For
details, see, Friedman, "A
Monetary History of U.S., (1867-1960," Part III, "The Age of Chronic Inflation
(1933-1966)," at segment "C) History of Monetary Silver
(1792-1960).") As with gold, production of silver soared but the price
didn't remotely approach the desired $1.29 per ounce during the 1930s. Indeed,
it rapidly declined after 1935 until post-WW-II inflation drove silver out of
the coinage and silver certificates as such out of the currency. |
New Deal wage and hour legislation and union organizing greatly increased the costs of providing employment, so there was less employment provided by private employers than there might have been.
Unemployment was still 14% in 1940 despite a massive increase in the government payroll. |
The devaluation and gold purchase program is nevertheless viewed as a success by Meltzer. The money stock finally increased and commodity prices rose. There was considerable economic expansion from the beginning of 1934 until the 1937 relapse. He emphasizes how steep the recovery was until the 1937 recession, with GNP rising to a level almost equal to the 1929 peak.
New Deal wage and hour legislation and union organizing
greatly increased the costs of providing employment, so there was less
employment provided by private employers than there might have been. The author points
out that capital was substituted for labor
wherever possible and the increased costs deterred expansion of labor-intensive
industries such as autos and rubber. Indeed, unemployment was still 14% in 1940
despite a massive increase in the government payroll.
|
The Banking Act:
& |
The conflicting proposals leading to
the 1935 Banking Act are covered in some detail by Meltzer. Most influential
were proposals to shift from the "commercial loan theory of banking" -
the "real bills" doctrine - to a straightforward emphasis on the
quantity of the money stock. The effort to regulate the qualitative uses of
credit was in any event an impossible task. & |
The accommodation of commerce and business was still an objective of monetary policy, but now the general credit situation of the country was more important. |
The monetary policy objective shifted from the
accommodation of business and commerce to the active maintenance of business
stability.
|
System "independence" would prove less robust in practice than in theory. |
The Board now had the statutory power to act as a central
bank, but it would not be until after the start of the Korean War that it would be free to
use these powers. It had seven members appointed by the president with Senate
approval. The FOMC executive committee remained at five members, three of
whom came from the Board and two of whom came from the reserve banks. Board
members served staggered 14 year terms that could not be renewed. The chairman
and vice chairman - formerly "governors" - were members chosen for
those positions for renewable four year terms. Reserve bank heads were now
"presidents" chosen by their directors with Board approval. |
The 1937 relapse:
& |
By the end of 1935, the New Deal was at an impasse. Several of its efforts at what
today is called industrial policy had been declared unconstitutional and had at
any rate proved to be abject failures. Inflation efforts had fallen short of the
mark. Monetary inflation just resulted in "excess reserves" as funds piled
up in the banking system. & |
There was in fact considerable economic revival, but unemployment remained well into double digits and most of the employment gain was due to the expansion of government employment. |
Monetary policy was controlled by the Treasury through
its Exchange Stabilization Fund and its control of various trust funds. It
expended these funds to monetize federal securities to keep interest rates down while it
financed New Deal deficits. In response, interest rates on high grade securities
dove to ridiculously low levels, but spreads with lesser grades widened. There
was in fact considerable economic revival, but unemployment remained well into
double digits and the vast majority of the employment gain was due to the expansion of government
employment. |
By the fourth quarter
of 1935, excess reserves of $3.6 billion in member banks substantially exceeded
the System's open market portfolio and so could not be controlled by open market
sales. Excess reserves could only be reduced by an increase in reserve
requirements. But nothing could be done while the Treasury was financing New
Deal deficits.
With the banking collapse still very much in mind,
perceived risks remained high, while private sector loan demand remained low due
to the continued depression of private sector activity. Because of the high
level of perceived risks, Meltzer views the "excess reserves" figure
as substantially overstating the real amount of reserves in excess of what
banks wanted to hold. "The result was a large overestimate of potential
monetary and credit expansion and prospective inflation and an underestimate of
the effect of higher reserve requirements." |
|
Reserve requirements were increased 50% on July
14, 1936. "The new ratios were 19.5, 15, and 10.5 percent for demand
deposits at central reserve city, reserve city, and country banks and 4.5
percent for all time deposits." As a result, excess reserves above these
new requirements were cut
nearly in half. At this point, government bond yields barely budged. Open market purchases
by the Treasury and the System soon reduced bond yields back to previous low
levels. |
Reserve requirements had been doubled by the three increases.
Excess reserves were excess only of legal requirements, not of the practical requirement thought prudent by member banks in the continuing Great Depression environment. |
The policy response at the end of 1936 was to sterilize gold inflows through Treasury open market debt sales. Growth of bank reserves slowed to a crawl. Two further reserve requirement increases were implemented by the System on March 6 and May 1, 1937, when neither FDR nor Treasury Secretary Morganthau objected. Reserve requirements had been doubled by the three increases. They had reached the statutory maximum.
The initial problem was that the second reserve increase
coincided with and perhaps was a cause of a decline below par in the Treasury's
2.5% bond. It hit 2.78% by early April, 1937. Meltzer provides details of the
rancorous disputes between the System and the Treasury and within the System as
massive purchases of bonds by both agencies failed to stabilize the bond back at the 2.5%
rate. |
"New Deal labor legislation increased unemployment rates by raising costs of employing labor." New Deal populist anti-business rhetoric raised perceived risks of a government assault on profits, further deterring new investment. |
The increase in reserve requirements that was coupled
beginning in December, 1936, with aggressive Treasury efforts to sterilize gold
inflows played a major role in the severe 1937-38 economic relapse, Meltzer
points out. First of all, the reserve requirement increase was ineffective.
Banks immediately began selling securities to restore their reserves to the
"excess" levels that they thought prudent above legal requirements. By
the end of 1938, excess reserves were higher than in August, 1936. The money
stock accordingly plunged. While interest rates on the highest rated debt barely
moved, spreads with lower rated securities widened to levels not seen since the
pound devaluation in 1931 as prices on lower rated securities plunged. |
Average hours worked by employed workers remained substantially below 1929 levels. |
Starting in June, 1937, GNP plummeted 18%,
industrial production 32%, and unemployment soared back to 20%. Meltzer supports
the view of most academic and professional economists that there were two
separate severe depressions in the 1930s with a "robust" recovery
between 1933 and 1937. He asserts that, if not for the monetary policy mistakes
of 1936 and 1937, the 1937 relapse might have been avoided and economic growth
might have gotten back close to its long term trend line by the end of the decade.
|
Impacts of New Deal monetary policy: |
Meltzer argues that monetary factors played the dominant role in the
economic ups and downs during the New Deal. Devaluation and the gold purchase program expanded
the money supply, leading to the "robust" recovery from 1933 to 1937. & |
The primary stimulus for this recovery came not from monetary policy but from the natural market stimulus of price deflation that "raised the real value of the money stock" during the relapse. |
However,
these funds were piling up as bank reserves in excess of legal reserve
requirements. The System viewed these excess reserves as an inflation threat, and prices were indeed
rising rapidly at the beginning of 1937 despite double digit unemployment. & The Board attacked this problem by doubling bank reserve requirements - unfortunately at the same time as the Treasury initiated a gold inflow sterilization program by selling government securities. The consequent decline in the money stock led to the sharp 1937-38 recession. Sterilization ended, gold was fleeing to the U.S. from Europe as war approached, the Board reduced reserve requirements a bit, the money stock grew and economic growth resumed. However, Meltzer acknowledges that the primary stimulus for this recovery came not from monetary policy but from the natural market stimulus of price deflation that "raised the real value of the money stock" during the relapse.
|
There was a discount rate reduction initiated by the
reserve banks in August, 1937. This was the only
discount rate reduction until after WW-II. Member banks were not borrowing in
any event. Seasonal demands were met that fall in cooperation with the Treasury.
|
|
Economic recovery was apparently hindered for those nations that chose exchange rate stability during the 1930s. |
It was Morganthau and the Treasury that acted.
Gold purchases and an end to gold sterilization in the first quarter of 1938 had
an immediate impact on the monetary base. Money stock growth responded in the
second quarter of 1938. Real GDP growth began in the third quarter.
|
Wartime finance:
& |
Exchange rate turmoil quickly
became a constant preoccupation of the New Deal Treasury. Meltzer provides
details of the extensive diplomatic maneuvering involved. There was constant
fear that competitive devaluations would create exchange rate chaos. & |
A Tripartite Agreement for a loose stabilization regime between the U.S., Great Britain and France was reached in October, 1936, but a socialist government in France and then rearmament in response to German belligerence soon dominated the exchange rate environment. Devaluations began again in France in 1937 and in Britain in 1938.
|
With surging exports and gold inflows, the Great Depression was over - months before actual U.S. entry into the war. |
War
fear and preparation soared with the Munich Agreement of September 8, 1938. Gold poured out of Europe into the safe haven of
the U.S. |
Costs imposed on business by the New Deal could now be more readily covered due to the rising rates of price inflation. |
The U.S. entered the war as financier for the Allies
in March, 1941, with the "Lend Lease" Act. With commendable foresight,
this statute included authorization for negotiations for the post-war financial arrangements
that became the Bretton Woods arrangements. As the wartime economy picked up
speed, banks found increasing uses for their excess reserves, which fell from a
peak of $6.5 billion in January, 1941, to $3.4 billion that December.
Anti-business rhetoric ended as attitudes changed to one of cooperation. Costs
imposed on business by the New Deal could now be more readily covered due to the rising
rates of price inflation. |
Inflation averaged about 7.5% beginning from a period with substantial underutilization of productive resources.
The System thus had become "an indirect source of government finance" - a monetizer of government debt - exactly what the System founders had wanted to avoid. |
WW-II was an experiment in administered alternatives
to market forces. Monetary policy was enlisted in the war effort. The war was
financed by taxation that rose from 7% of GNP to 21% of a much larger GNP, $200
billion of debt - amounting to about 25% of GNP - and a major increase in the money supply as
the System struggled to keep interest rates fixed at 0.375% for Treasury bills
and 2.5% for bonds. Prices were fixed, goods were rationed or simply became
unavailable, strategic resources were allocated, and controls on credit were -
ineffectively - imposed. A growing black market was soon undermining the rationing
effort.
For example, Treasury bills - short term
instruments yielding just 0.375% - were almost all sold back to the System in
favor of bonds - fixed at 2.5% - even as the bonds approached maturity and thus
became equivalent to bills. The System's portfolio soared - dominated by these
short term government securities. The System thus had become "an indirect source of
government finance" - a monetizer of government debt - exactly what the
System founders had wanted to avoid. |
Budgetary deficits with interest rates fixed at low rates by means of monetization of large amounts of debt engaged the System as an "engine of inflation." |
Eccles continued to willingly bow to
political pressure to keep interest rates low for the Treasury's post-war
financing needs. There remained doubts about the ability of monetary policy to
influence the economy. There were widespread fears of a return of the Great Depression. There was
the growing influence of Keynesian concepts that emphasized reliance on
budgetary deficits for combating economic downturns. |
Total wartime and immediate postwar inflation exceeded 50%.
The Korean War was financed primarily by tax revenues as President Truman determined to prevent budget deficits. |
Removal of price and wage controls in the fall of 1946
revealed the damage. Total wartime and immediate postwar inflation exceeded 50%. Not
until 1948 did the economy experience a short period of mild price deflation and
economic contraction. It was during WW-II that the System finally abandoned the
"real bills" doctrine. It was finally widely acknowledged that:
"The particular paper used to secure an advance has no relation at all to
the use that the bank will make of the funds it secures." |
Postwar international finance: |
The nation's huge gold reserves had begun to
shrink, however. Gold exports were being used to fix the dollar exchange rate. & |
This fixed dollar exchange rate became a powerful factor in maintaining price stability through the next two decades. As the money supply expanded during WW-II, the System's gold reserve ratio declined from a high of 91% just before Pearl Harbor. In June, 1944, legislation reduced the required reserve ratio to 25% and permitted the use of government securities as a substitute for gold. By the end of the war, gold reserves at several reserve banks were under the 25% level.
|
The Bretton Woods agreements established a system of fixed exchange rates with the International Monetary Fund (the "IMF") providing loans to cover temporary imbalances and with exchange rate adjustments for "permanent" imbalances. Deficit nations would not be forced to contract their economies.
Bretton Woods negotiations and policy disputes are
covered in some detail by Meltzer. Keynes and Treasury economist Harry Dexter White were initially the principle
architects of the Bretton Woods system. (Both men were heavily influenced by
Marxist concepts. See, for Keynes, "The General Theory,"
Part I.) |
|
The Keynesian-White plan was "a stabilization plan with all the stabilization measures left out," |
Responsibility for international monetary affairs
shifted to the Treasury after WW-II. The System had had this responsibility
from WW-I through the Hoover administration. While some System staff and officials played an active
role, the System as an entity remained passive in this as in so much else. It
was the Treasury that became responsible for the nation's international exchange
rate policy - and became the driving force in the chronic loss of gold and
subsequent devaluation of the dollar.
|
Williams offered a simple alternative. The dollar and the pound would be "key currencies" that other nations could use to fix their exchange rates and bolster their reserves. |
The Keynes-White plan was simply too complicated and
failed to impose any discipline on debtor nations. Keynes died in 1946. Williams offered a simple
alternative. The dollar and the pound would be "key currencies" that other nations could use to
fix their exchange rates and bolster their reserves. |
The U.S. settled the approximately $17 billion British lend lease obligation for 4˘ on the dollar. |
The U.S. acted unilaterally outside these institutions
through loans and the Marshall Plan. The U.S. simply behaved as if Bretton Woods
had created a dollar exchange standard - as Sproul and Williams had advocated.
However, the IMF and World Bank came into their own in subsequent years -
unfortunately not always with beneficial results. |
Keynesian policy concepts: |
Planning for
the postwar period emphasized vigorous affirmative efforts for economic
stabilization and - once again - a primary concern for domestic over
international considerations. & |
Meltzer again notes the fundamental incompatibility between fixed exchange rates and a world were domestic policy considerations were dominant in many nations. |
By the 1950s, full employment and economic stability were the primary objectives. Keynesian beliefs had become prominent among System authorities and staff, and the System viewed itself as a part of a government dedicated to a policy of actively promoting full employment.
Meltzer again notes the fundamental incompatibility between fixed exchange rates and a world where domestic policy considerations were dominant in many nations.
Keynesian economists (thinking along Marxist lines)
expected a return of depression conditions if government spending didn't take up
the slack. The failure of this forecast began the undermining of their
influence. (This was just the first of many times when reality would perversely
refuse to conform to Keynesian expectations.) |
The struggle for System independence: |
Treasury needs remained dominant in the immediate
postwar years, as they had after WW-I. Meltzer explains in some detail
Treasury monetary policy efforts. & |
The recession during the industrial
transformation to peacetime production was short - approximately 8 months.
Military spending declined quickly by about 70%. The nation's budget shifted
quickly into surplus, and wartime taxes were modestly reduced. Bond yields
remained low - well below 2.5% for top grade bonds - indicating that the public
did not anticipate sustained inflation.
|
An independent System monetary policy and market interest rates that could rise to stymie inflation were constantly pushed by Sproul and Williams at the N.Y. Fed. Eccles and the Board remained fearful of political reaction to any substantial rise in interest rates, however, and thus chose to remain subservient to the Treasury and political influences.
|
|
The System was, after all, just a creature of Congress. |
The System needed political cover - some political
support - for independent action. It was, after all, just a creature of
Congress. It took almost two years from the end of WW-II for the System to
finally allow interest rates on short term Treasury bills to rise above 0.375%.
However, they remained at 0.79% - well below market rates. |
Inflation fears were well grounded. By July, 1948, consumer prices were rising at an annual rate of 15%. They were up 9.3% for the whole year despite a rapid reversal at the end of the year. A modest round of discount rate increases was approved by the Treasury. The spread between short and long term rates accordingly narrowed.
It was not until March, 1949, that the Board made some
tentative moves in response to the recession. Some consumer credit controls were
loosened, and stock market margins were lowered from 75% to 50%. There was no
observable impact. Modest reductions in member bank reserve requirements
followed in May. Authority over consumer credit lapsed on June 30, 1949. |
|
"For the first time, there was general recognition that the System could not control the size of excess reserves while maintaining a fixed level of interest rates. It gave up using excess reserves as a target. Instead, it set a target for Treasury bill rates." |
The System began to - tentatively - break free of
the Treasury in the summer of 1949 under the pressure of the recession - the
extent of which was as yet unknown. The System instituted a series of small
reductions in member bank reserve requirements that by the end of the summer
were fairly significant.. The stock market and the economy were already turning
around that summer, so it is uncertain how important this policy move was, but
it couldn't have hurt. Interest rates edged lower from their already low nominal
rates - but because prices were declining, they did not decline in real terms,
Meltzer yet again emphasizes.
|
With the return of budget deficits in 1950, the
Treasury permitted some modest increases in short term rates. By May, inflation
rates were at a 5% annual rate, and Sproul pushed for higher interest rates.
However, the System could not let new Treasury issues fail and wound up buying
up - monetizing - increasing amounts of government debt during the first months
of the Korean War. |
|
Sproul perceptively foresaw the main problem of the 1960s and 1970s - that the need to slow the economy to combat inflation would not be acceptable to the public - or to their elected officials.
The System was a mere agent. It could not be so independent as to defeat congressional deficit spending policies.
Inflation was eating far more into the "buying power" of government securities - was costing bondholders far more - than would a decline below par in the market price for their bonds. |
System capacity to impact prices, output and employment were by now generally recognized. The ability to control the "quality" of credit - the "speculative" uses of credit - was much less relied upon but still far from dead. Sproul, in testimony at a congressional hearing, perceptively foresaw the main problem of the 1960s and 1970s - that even when the System was freed from Treasury dominance, the need to slow the economy to combat inflation would not be acceptable to the public - or to their elected officials. Large increases in interest rates would be resented. "People would not submit to that sort of discipline because it required reduced production and employment." (But inflation, too, can impose unacceptable economic pain - sufficient to force an austerity approach even in the face of a developing depression - as it did in 1980.)
Eccles, in his testimony, emphasized another political reality. The System was a mere agent. It could not be so independent as to defeat congressional deficit spending policies. It would be obliged to facilitate implementation of congressional budgetary decisions.
It was W. Randolph Burgess, a banker and member of the
System's Federal Advisory Council, who most forcefully and perceptively
advocated a high degree of System independence, explained the power of the
existing tools of the System - the open market operations and discount rate
changes - and recognized the difference between real and nominal interest rates.
Inflation was eating far more into the "buying power" of government
securities - was costing bondholders far more - than would a decline below par
in the market price for their bonds. |
Based on such testimony, System independence and a
flexible monetary policy were supported in a 1950 report issued by a Joint
Subcommittee on Monetary, Credit, and Fiscal Policies. |
|
The Treasury was concerned with stable interest rates,
while the System was concerned with stable markets. As a result, the increase in
short term rates was kept modest and overall monetary policy achieved only
minimal constraint on inflation. The primary inflationary impact was absorbed by
the gold outflow - a pattern that would become familiar until the devaluation
crises of 1972 and 1973. The gold outflow constrained the growth of the money
stock. |
Confidence in the government's securities would be destroyed "by a flood of newly created dollars [that] will overwhelm whatever price, wage, and similar controls, including selective credit controls, that might be contrived."
By February, 1951, the System was insisting "on ending the monetization of long-term debt." |
Substantial
political support for System independence finally began to grow in Congress and
the administration as well as in the financial press. By December, 1950,
consumer price inflation was rising at a 14% annual rate. Fears that inflation
would push up
defense costs now balanced against the Treasury's fears of rising financing
costs. In one letter to the president, the System explained that confidence in
the government's securities would be destroyed "by a flood of newly created
dollars [that] will overwhelm whatever price, wage, and similar controls,
including selective credit controls, that might be contrived."
|
McCabe resigned and was replaced by William McChesney Martin, Jr., as chairman. Martin would serve for 19 years. |
M) Conclusion
Another failure for administered alternatives: |
The System had become the central bank its founders did
not want it to be. Some, but certainly not all, of the rough spots
had been ironed out. The discipline of the gold standard had been discarded and
gold was limited to a tool for the international monetary relations of the
world's dominant financial power. & |
The gold standard did not fail (modern economic beliefs
to the contrary notwithstanding). What failed was government willingness to
accept gold standard disciplines. When nations - especially the U.S. starting in
the 1920s - restricted the domestic monetary impacts of gold flows, and other
major nations strove to maintain misaligned monetary exchange rates, the gold
standard system was deprived of its essential flexibility and its functions were
heedlessly abandoned. & |
System monetary policy played a major role in the
"sterilization" of gold flows and the undermining of the gold
standard. The System followed this up with a series of tactical monetary policy errors
that were part of the mix of factors leading to the 1929 collapse and the
severity of the Great Depression that followed. Ultimately, System errors also
contributed to the collapse of the nation's banking system, the health of which
was its primary responsibility. |
|
The System had still not learned how to effectively manage a fiduciary - a "fiat" - monetary system. It had the independence and discretion - it was free of gold standard discipline - but it had no such knowledge or capacity. |
Collective human judgment about money, interest rates and prices was expected to produce results superior to the periods of distress inherent in the business cycle functions of the gold standard. Results to 1951, however, included the financial turmoil in Europe in the 1920s and the worldwide disaster of the Great Depression. Subsequent results would include disastrous experiments abroad with socialism, the Great Inflation of the 1970s and the beginnings of another period of inflation driven boom and bust during the first decade of the 21st century.
The System had still not learned how to effectively
manage a fiduciary - a "fiat" - monetary system. It had the
independence and discretion - it was free of gold standard discipline - but it
had no such knowledge or capacity. This level of ignorance would continue
through the Great Inflation decade of the 1970s (See,,Meltzer, History of
the Federal Reserve, v. 2, Part VII, "The Great Inflation 1973-1980),"
at segment on "Monetary policy confusion.) To a large
extent, it still continues to this day. |
Central banking successes:
& |
The System did provide many improvements over the
banking system of the prior century when the U.S. had no central banking system
at all. Seasonal interest rate swings were smoothed out, and wartime financing
was facilitated. Economic data collection was much improved and knowledge about
the operation of monetary policy was and is slowly - fitfully - being
accumulated. Quantitative control through open market operations was added to
the System tool kit. The System has slowly increased the transparency of its
operations. & |
The development of national money
markets and collection and payments systems were facilitated by the System. Markets for federal securities and
for "federal funds" facilitated the short term employment of bank
reserves and ended dependence on the Wall Street money market. The System staff
developed considerable expertise. It has produced important studies and has
contributed to important legislation. & (See Meltzer, "History of Federal Reserve," vol. 1, (1913-1951)," Part I, "The Search for Stability (1913-1923)," and Part II, "The Engine of Deflation (1923-1933)." |
Please return to our Homepage and e-mail your name and comments.
Copyright © 2008 Dan Blatt