‘Too little, and too late’ is one of the saddest phrases in the lexicon not
only of central banking but of all activity. But how much is enough?
When is the right time?
Bagehot’s rule is to lend freely at a penalty rate. ‘Freely’ means only
to solvent borrowers and with good collateral, subject to the inevitable
exceptions. It means rejecting the expedients that various central banks
are tempted to indulge in crises. Early in 1772 the Bank of England tried
to apply the brakes to overtrading by selective limitation of discounts
and was criticized.71 In 1797 the Bank began to prorate discounts, and
Foxwell thought that might have been undertaken again in 1809.72 An-
other technique when a central bank feels it is getting overcommitted
is to tighten up on eligibility requirements for collateral, changing the
maturity of eligible bills from 95 or 90 to 65 or 60 days, or adding to
the number of names required. In May 1783 the Bank of England had
discounted so heavily for its own clients that it departed from its regular
practice and refused to make advances on subscriptions to government
bonds issued that year. Clapham commented that fortunately no public
or private catastrophe of the sort that starts a panic occurred that sum-
mer since the Bank had limited its capacity to meet one.73 In this case
the Bank was behaving like a private bank worried about its own safety
rather than a public institution with the responsibility to provide for the
safety and stability of the system.
The lender of last resort might supply funds to the system through
open market purchases rather than through the discount mechanism.
How much should the central bank expand the money supply? Were the
$160 million in October 1929 and the additional $210 million through
November 1929 adequate? In the view of the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York they were not. The New York Fed was operating under a di-
rective from the Board of Governors in Washington that permitted it
to buy $25 million of government bonds a week. It violated this rule in
October by buying $160 million, and on November 12 recommended
to the Board that the limit of $25 million a week be removed and that
the Open Market Investment Committee be authorized to buy $200 mil-
lion of bonds for the system. After considerable negotiation, the Board
reluctantly approved this request on November 27, and $155 million
was purchased between November 27 and January 1, 1930. By this time,
discounts were running off rapidly, interest rates had fallen sharply, and
the need for a lender of last resort—to accommodate the liquidation of
call loans in the market—was over.74
Some monetarists seem ambivalent on the role of the lender of last
resort. Friedman and Schwartz quoted Bagehot approvingly on not starv-
ing a panic.75 They asserted that the action taken by the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York in buying $160 million in October 1929 was ‘timely
and effective’ although they were gently skeptical about Harrison’s claim
that the open market purchases kept the stock exchange open.76 Fried-
man was opposed to all discounting and believed the stock market crash
was not a major factor in producing or deepening the depression.77 An
ultra-monetarist view maintains that the open market operations of the
period constituted a renewal of the credit inflation of the 1920s.78 But
most monetarists believe that there is no need to have a lender of last
resort so long as the money supply increases at a constant rate. In retro-
spect the open market operations were woefully inadequate in the weeks
from mid-October to the end of November 1929. They enabled the New
York banking system to take over the call loans of out-of-town banks but
at the cost of reducing the amount of credit available for purchases of
stocks, commodities, and real estate, which led to declines in their prices
and unleashed the depression.79
The timing of the Federal Reserve Board under the chairmanship of
Alan Greenspan in the Black Monday crash of October 1987 was impec-
cable, as also was the help for the U.S. capital market when the collapse
of Long-Term Capital Management was avoided in September 1998.
Timing presents a special problem. As the boom mounts to a
crescendo, it must be slowed without precipitating a panic. After a crash
has occurred, it is important to wait long enough for the insolvent firms
to fail, but not so long as to let the crisis spread to the solvent firms
that need liquidity—‘delaying the death of the strong swimmers,’ as
Clapham put it.80 In a speech during the debate on the indemnity bill
on December 4, 1857, Disraeli quoted the leader of an unnamed ‘great-
est discount house in Lombard Street’ who said that ‘had it not been
for some private information which reached him, to the effect that in
case of extreme pressure there would be an interference on the part of
the Government, he should at that moment have given up the idea of
struggling any further, and [that] it was only on that tacit understanding
that he went on with his business.’81 Questions could be raised about
the equity of private information and of tacit understandings for insiders
but not outsiders. Still, the remark underlines the importance of timing.
Whether too soon and too much is worse than too little and too late is
difficult to specify.
In 1857 the U.S. Treasury came to the rescue of the market too early
and helped it inflate still further. In 1873 the response was too slow, no
steps were taken during the first part of the year.82 Sprague refers to ‘the
unfortunate delay of the Clearing House,’ that is, the slowness of any
authority to respond to the 1907 crisis, in which as in no other crisis
since the Civil War, things were allowed to drag on too long.83
If the need for a lender of last resort is accepted after a speculative
boom and it is believed that restrictive measures are not likely to slow the
boom at the optimal rate without precipitating a collapse, the lender of
last resort faces dilemmas of amount and timing. The dilemmas are more
serious with open market operations than with a system of discounts. In
the latter case, Bagehot specified the right amount: all the market will
take—through solvent houses offering sound collateral—at a penalty
rate. With open market operations the decision for the authorities is
more difficult, but Bagehot was right not to starve the market. Given a
seizure of credit in the system, more is safer than less since the excess
can be mopped up later.
Timing is an art. That says nothing—and everything.