An extraordinary statement. He basically washes the Fed's hands of the real estate bubble. Did the central bank ever have control? Could the central bank stop a meltdown like the Great Depression?
When the Fed began to raise rates in 2004, the central bank had expected to get — "as a bonus" — a rise in mortgage rates, Greenspan said. But that didn't occur, he said.
"We concluded that the monetary forces that were arising in the world globally had become so overwhelming, relative to the resources of central banks, that we had effectively lost control of long-term interest rates and the forces directing higher prices and homes," he said.
Asked if the Fed could have prevented, or eased, the U.S. housing bubble, he said, "There's only one thing we could have done — cutting off short-term credit. But that would have broken the back of the economy and brought the housing boom down."
Short of raising interest rates dramatically, "the evidence is very clear that there was nothing that any central bank could have done, or tried to do."
"We concluded that the monetary forces that were arising in the world globally had become so overwhelming, relative to the resources of central banks, that we had effectively lost control of long-term interest rates and the forces directing higher prices and homes," he said.
Asked if the Fed could have prevented, or eased, the U.S. housing bubble, he said, "There's only one thing we could have done — cutting off short-term credit. But that would have broken the back of the economy and brought the housing boom down."
Short of raising interest rates dramatically, "the evidence is very clear that there was nothing that any central bank could have done, or tried to do."
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