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Federal Reserve uses power to print money

Central bank has easier time offering $800 billion than Congress does raising $700 billion for bailout

By Martin Crutsinger
Associated Press

WASHINGTON: The Bush administration had to strive mightily to win congressional approval of a $700 billion rescue package for the financial system. Now, with no muss and no fuss, the Federal Reserve has announced a program totaling $800 billion.

What gives Ben Bernanke and his colleagues such power — and what are the consequences of the Fed's actions?

Here is a look at the Fed's powers and how they are being used to deal with the most serious financial crisis in more than seven decades.

Q: What did the Fed do this week?

A: The central bank announced Tuesday that it would purchase up to $600 billion in mortgages and mortgage-backed securities — investments, in other words — that are either owned or guaranteed by financial giants Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, and the Federal Home Loan Banks.

The Fed said it would also create a program to make up to $200 billion in loans to institutions where the collateral is various types of consumer loans ranging from credit-card debt to auto loans and student loans.

Both moves were made in an effort to lower mortgage rates and other loan rates and make those loans more available.

Q: What's unusual about the Fed's actions?

A: The Fed normally is not in the business of buying mortgage-backed securities or making loans to boost the market for securities backed by such assets as credit-card debt and auto loans. In the current crisis, the central bank is using powers it last used extensively during the Great Depression.

Q: How did the Fed suddenly come up with $800 billion to fund these two programs, when the Bush administration had to engage in extensive negotiations with Congress to get legislation for a $700 billion program to help the nation's banks?

A: The short answer is that the Fed used the power it has to print money. It doesn't actually crank up printing presses, but it can create all the money it needs through a few computer key strokes.

Q: How did it get that kind of power?

A: Congress gave the Federal Reserve that power when it created the Fed in 1913 as the nation's central bank, responsible for controlling the nation's money supply. The Fed's goal is to create enough money to keep the economy growing at a steady rate while guarding against creating so much money that it triggers inflation.

Q: How much extra money has it created during the current crisis?

A: Right before the credit crisis first struck with force in August 2007, the Fed's balance sheet stood at $850 billion. As of last week, that figure totaled $2.2 trillion — nearly a threefold increase.

Q: What is the Fed doing with all of that money?

A: It is essentially pumping it into the financial system, mainly by making loans to banks, giving them added resources with the hope that they will turn around and make more loans to businesses and consumers.

Q: Isn't there a danger that creating all that extra money will fuel inflation?

A: Analysts say that the threat of inflation is not the biggest risk facing the country at the moment — and if it does occur, the Fed will respond down the road.

WASHINGTON: The Bush administration had to strive mightily to win congressional approval of a $700 billion rescue package for the financial system. Now, with no muss and no fuss, the Federal Reserve has announced a program totaling $800 billion.

Get the full article here.


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