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Bernanke: undoing what another Jew started?

August 13, 2009 09:51

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

3 min read

As Wall Street bankers and legislators headed to their yachts and the beaches of America’s east coast this August, they had the words of Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve chairman, ringing in their ears. Two years after the official beginning of the credit crunch on August 9, 2007, Mr Bernanke — America’s most powerful economic policymaker — signalled for the first time that the US central bank may soon have to think about removing the “punch bowl” of near-zero interest rates and easy credit.

From the very start of the financial crisis, Mr Bernanke, a thoughtful former academic, was absolutely clear about what needed to be done if a 1930s-style collapse of global, trade and output was to be avoided. In his view, the big mistake the Fed had made during the Great Depression was “to allow the financial system to collapse”. That would not happen on his watch.

So as the crisis progressed through 2007 until the present time, Mr Bernanke’s inclination has been to keep the monetary system well oiled. Interest rates were rapidly lowered to a range just above “zero”; trillions of dollars were poured into the inter-bank market where banks lend to each other, and Mr Bernanke engaged in a series of spectacular rescue operations ranging from the bailout of mortgage lender Countrywide in the autumn of 2007 to Bear Stearns a year later.

On the weekend of September 15 2008, Mr Bernanke, together with the then US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, secured the fate of Merrill Lynch by merging it into Bank of America. And he effectively took into public ownership the giant insurer AIG, which had offered insurance cover for hundreds of billions of dollars of toxic debt.