The Courage to Act in 2008

Ben Bernanke’s memoir is now out and is unapologetically pro-Fed. It is titled The Courage to Act. Here is the cover quote: The main point of Bernanke’s book is that absent the Fed’s interventions over the past seven years the U.S. economy would have undergone another Great Depression. Thanks to him and his colleagues at the Fed the world is a much better place. There has already been some push back on this Bernanke triumphalism. George Selgin, for example, notes that the recovery under Bernanke’s watch was anemic. Inflation consistently undershot the Fed’s target and the real recovery was weak. We may not have experienced another Great Depression, but we sure did get a long slump. Ryan Avent makes a similar point by observing that Bernanke had a chance in late 2011 to do something bold by endorsing a NGDP target, an action that could have jolted the economy from its doldrums. But alas, Bernanke failed to muster up the courage to have what Christina Romer called his “Volker Moment”. Expect more push back along these lines from a book with such a bold title. One strand of criticism that many observers miss, but I hope will be considered in future reviews of Bernanke’s book is the role the Fed played in allowing the crisis to emerge in the first place. Could the Fed have done more to prevent the recession from becoming as severe as it did? Maybe a recession was inevitable, but was a Great Recession inevitable? These are the questions first raised by Scott Sumne...
Source: Cato-at-liberty - Category: American Health Authors: Source Type: blogs