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The New Lombard Street: How the Fed Became the Dealer of Last Resort Hardcover – November 28, 2010
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How the U.S. Federal Reserve began actively intervening in markets
Walter Bagehot's Lombard Street, published in 1873 in the wake of a devastating London bank collapse, explained in clear and straightforward terms why central banks must serve as the lender of last resort to ensure liquidity in a faltering credit system. Bagehot's book set down the principles that helped define the role of modern central banks, particularly in times of crisis―but the recent global financial meltdown has posed unforeseen challenges. The New Lombard Street lays out the innovative principles needed to address the instability of today's markets and to rebuild our financial system.
Revealing how we arrived at the current crisis, Perry Mehrling traces the evolution of ideas and institutions in the American banking system since the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913. He explains how the Fed took classic central banking wisdom from Britain and Europe and adapted it to America's unique and considerably more volatile financial conditions. Mehrling demonstrates how the Fed increasingly found itself serving as the dealer of last resort to ensure the liquidity of securities markets―most dramatically amid the recent financial crisis. Now, as fallout from the crisis forces the Fed to adapt in unprecedented ways, new principles are needed to guide it. In The New Lombard Street, Mehrling persuasively argues for a return to the classic central bankers' "money view," which looks to the money market to assess risk and restore faith in our financial system.
- Print length192 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPrinceton University Press
- Publication dateNovember 28, 2010
- Dimensions5.75 x 1 x 8.75 inches
- ISBN-100691143986
- ISBN-13978-0691143989
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"With lucid precision, Mehrling traces the history of how Fed policy makers became biased toward 'excessive elasticity'. . . . Mehrling saves the best for the end, where he describes the Fed's battle to save the system with an alphabet soup of lending programs."---James Pressley, Bloomberg News
"An important book about the new Fed."---Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution
"In The New Lombard Street, Perry Mehrling . . . provides a lucid account of how the system worked when it was working―and of the growing role assumed by the Fed in an era of global economic volatility and 'credit-fueled bubbles.'"---Glenn C. Altschuler, Tulsa World
"[A] fantastic book."---Rortybomb, Mike Konczal blog
"Important. . . . Mehrling's new book tries to do just what Bagehot did: to give an account both of how and why the Fed acted when it reinvented the rules in the middle of a financial crisis, and of what the implications for future monetary policy will be."---Harold James, Central Banking Journal
"This is an excellent and accessible analysis for anyone wishing to understand the origins of the financial crisis and how the Fed came to respond as it did."---Larry Hatheway, Business Economist
"The book can be read as an important contribution in the ongoing debate on the future of central banks. In terms of monetary policy thinking, this book is another contribution to the increasing awareness that central banks, perhaps lured by seeming success of inflation targeting, in the years before 2008 did not manage to strike the right balance between monetary and financial stability."---Lars Fredrik Øksendal, Enterprise & Society
Review
"Informed by history, a model of clear thought and lucid prose, The New Lombard Street is by far our best guidebook to the changed structure of financial markets and the new role of the Federal Reserve. It also charts a new path for monetary policymakers and―given the scale of the crisis―not a minute too soon."―James K. Galbraith, author of The Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too
"In Lombard Street, Walter Bagehot laid out the financial market lore and central banking wisdom of his day―the 1870s. Today's markets are different, and so is what constitutes useful policy. In The New Lombard Street, Perry Mehrling blends his rich historical knowledge with an acute analysis of current-day markets to suggest what constitutes sound central banking and financial regulation for our time. The result merits close attention from policymakers, and the rest of us too."―Benjamin M. Friedman, author of The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth
"No one else has come close to the achievement of this book in relating the crisis to the prior history of monetary thought and central bank practice. A masterful, original, and beautifully constructed work."―Charles A. E. Goodhart, London School of Economics and Political Science
"The New Lombard Street makes a serious and successful effort to deepen our understanding not just of the last century or more of U.S. monetary history, but also of the way in which economic analysis has evolved alongside that history. I very much enjoyed reading this book. It is timely, provocative, and well written."―David Laidler, professor emeritus, University of Western Ontario
"This is a wonderful book that offers a fresh understanding of the role of the central bank in the world of modern finance."―Roger E. Backhouse, University of Birmingham
From the Inside Flap
"The global financial system is badly broken. Many institutions and individuals share responsibility for the development of pathologies in and around our largest banks, but the buck stops, literally and figuratively, with the Federal Reserve. If you would like to understand how this happened--and how we (and the Fed) might inch back from the precipice--read this book."--Simon Johnson, coauthor of13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown
"Informed by history, a model of clear thought and lucid prose, The New Lombard Street is by far our best guidebook to the changed structure of financial markets and the new role of the Federal Reserve. It also charts a new path for monetary policymakers and--given the scale of the crisis--not a minute too soon."--James K. Galbraith, author ofThe Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too
"In Lombard Street, Walter Bagehot laid out the financial market lore and central banking wisdom of his day--the 1870s. Today's markets are different, and so is what constitutes useful policy. InThe New Lombard Street, Perry Mehrling blends his rich historical knowledge with an acute analysis of current-day markets to suggest what constitutes sound central banking and financial regulation for our time. The result merits close attention from policymakers, and the rest of us too."--Benjamin M. Friedman, author of The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth
"No one else has come close to the achievement of this book in relating the crisis to the prior history of monetary thought and central bank practice. A masterful, original, and beautifully constructed work."--Charles A. E. Goodhart, London School of Economics and Political Science
"The New Lombard Street makes a serious and successful effort to deepen our understanding not just of the last century or more of U.S. monetary history, but also of the way in which economic analysis has evolved alongside that history. I very much enjoyed reading this book. It is timely, provocative, and well written."--David Laidler, professor emeritus, University of Western Ontario
"This is a wonderful book that offers a fresh understanding of the role of the central bank in the world of modern finance."--Roger E. Backhouse, University of Birmingham
From the Back Cover
"The global financial system is badly broken. Many institutions and individuals share responsibility for the development of pathologies in and around our largest banks, but the buck stops, literally and figuratively, with the Federal Reserve. If you would like to understand how this happened--and how we (and the Fed) might inch back from the precipice--read this book."--Simon Johnson, coauthor of13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown
"Informed by history, a model of clear thought and lucid prose, The New Lombard Street is by far our best guidebook to the changed structure of financial markets and the new role of the Federal Reserve. It also charts a new path for monetary policymakers and--given the scale of the crisis--not a minute too soon."--James K. Galbraith, author ofThe Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too
"In Lombard Street, Walter Bagehot laid out the financial market lore and central banking wisdom of his day--the 1870s. Today's markets are different, and so is what constitutes useful policy. InThe New Lombard Street, Perry Mehrling blends his rich historical knowledge with an acute analysis of current-day markets to suggest what constitutes sound central banking and financial regulation for our time. The result merits close attention from policymakers, and the rest of us too."--Benjamin M. Friedman, author of The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth
"No one else has come close to the achievement of this book in relating the crisis to the prior history of monetary thought and central bank practice. A masterful, original, and beautifully constructed work."--Charles A. E. Goodhart, London School of Economics and Political Science
"The New Lombard Street makes a serious and successful effort to deepen our understanding not just of the last century or more of U.S. monetary history, but also of the way in which economic analysis has evolved alongside that history. I very much enjoyed reading this book. It is timely, provocative, and well written."--David Laidler, professor emeritus, University of Western Ontario
"This is a wonderful book that offers a fresh understanding of the role of the central bank in the world of modern finance."--Roger E. Backhouse, University of Birmingham
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
THE NEW LOMBARD STREET
How the Fed Became the Dealer of Last ResortBy Perry MehrlingPRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS
Copyright © 2011 Princeton University PressAll right reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-691-14398-9
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS..................................................xiIntroduction.....................................................1A Money View Perspective.........................................2Lessons from the Crisis..........................................6One Lombard Street, Old and New.................................11The Inherent Instability of Credit...............................12The Old Lombard Street...........................................18The New Lombard Street...........................................23Two Origins of the Present System...............................30From National Banking to the Fed.................................30From War Finance to Catastrophe..................................37Noncommercial Credit in Depression and War.......................43Three The Age of Management.....................................48Monetary Policy and the Employment Act...........................52Listening to the Academics.......................................57Monetary Walrasianism............................................60A Dissenting View................................................65Four The Art of the Swap........................................71Currency Swaps and the UIP Norm..................................72Brave New World..................................................79From Modern Finance to Modern Macroeconomics.....................85Five What Do Dealers Do?........................................92Inside the Money Market..........................................93Funding Liquidity and Market Liquidity...........................98Anatomy of a Crisis..............................................103Monetary Policy..................................................107Six Learning from the Crisis....................................113The Long Shadow of Jimmy Stewart.................................116A Stress Test of Moulton-Martin..................................123Dealer of Last Resort............................................132Conclusion.......................................................136NOTES............................................................141REFERENCES.......................................................149INDEX............................................................159Chapter One
Lombard Street, Old and NewWriting in 1967, before he had yet formulated his famous Financial Instability Hypothesis, the American monetary economist Hyman Minsky identified the starting point for his analysis. "Capitalism is essentially a financial system, and the peculiar behavioral attributes of a capitalist economy center around the impact of finance on system behavior." From this point of view, the key institutions of modern capitalism are its financial institutions, which make a business out of managing the daily inflow and outflow of cash on their balance sheets. And the quintessential financial institutions are banks, whose daily cash inflows and outflows are the mechanism of the modern payments system.
Everyone else-households, businesses, governments, even entire nations-is also a financial institution since, in addition to whatever else they do, they must attend to the consequences of their activities for their own daily cash flow. Indeed, this daily cash flow, in and out, is the crucial interface where each of us connects with the larger system. This interface provides the cash that makes it possible for us to pursue today dreams for the future that would otherwise be impossible; but it does so at the cost of committing us to make future payments that can, if our dreams do not work out, constrain our independence more or less severely. The seductive allure of present credit and the crushing burden of future debt are two faces of the same creature.
The Inherent Instability of Credit
The two faces of credit show themselves not only at the level of each individual, but also at the level of the system as a whole because one person's cash inflow is another person's cash outflow. If the allure of credit induces one person to increase spending, the immediate result is income somewhere else in the system, which income is then available for additional spending. Similarly, if the burden of debt induces one person to decrease spending, the immediate result is reduced income somewhere else in the system, and thus possibly also reduced spending. This interaction of balance sheets is the source of what the British monetary economist Ralph Hawtrey called the inherent instability of credit. In his view, the main job of the central bank is to prevent a credit-fueled bubble from ever getting started, in order to avoid the collapse that inevitably follows.
But, from another point of view, the inherent instability of credit is not entirely a bad thing. On the way up, real things get built, new technologies get implemented, and productive capacity expands. The Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter always insisted that credit is critical for the process of "creative destruction" that is the source of capitalism's dynamism, because it provides the crucial mechanism that allows the new to bid resources away from the old. Instability is, from this point of view, inseparable from growth, and a central bank that intervenes to control instability runs the risk of killing off growth by stifling the new on the way up and coddling the old on the way down.
In any concrete case, the question therefore arises: are we looking at a Hawtreyan speculative bubble that we want to rein in, or at Schumpeterian dynamic growth that we want to let run? One reason this question is hard to answer is that a credit-fueled boom typically involves a bit of both. That is why we seem always to be tempted to draw a distinction between speculative and productive credit, and to look for ways to channel credit preferentially to the latter. But in practice the distinction is often difficult to draw and, even more problematic, discrimination in credit allocation is often impossible to implement. In this latter regard, the institutional structure of finance, including the regulatory structure, is crucial. If potential borrowers and lenders can find one another and do business outside the reach of the authorities, then it will be impossible to allocate credit preferentially to socially desirable uses, even assuming they could be identified and agreed on. (In such a situation, even control of aggregate credit can be quite difficult.)
In the last analysis, the only dependable source of leverage over the system as a whole is the role of the central bank as a banker's bank. If banks are the quintessential financial institution because of their management of the retail payments system, then the central bank is the quintessential bank because of its management of the payments system that banks themselves use. When one bank makes a payment to another, the mechanism involves changing entries on the balance sheet of the central bank; there is a debit to the account of the bank paying and a credit to the account of the bank being paid. Here, in the requirement to settle net payments every day on the books of the central bank, we find the location of the ultimate discipline for the entire system.
Hyman Minsky called this requirement the "survival constraint"-cash inflows must be sufficient to meet cash outflows-and we all face such a constraint. For banks, the survival constraint takes the concrete form of a "reserve constraint" because banks settle net payments using their reserve accounts at the central bank. The leverage that the central bank enjoys over the larger system arises ultimately from the fact that a bank that does not have sufficient funds to make a payment must borrow from the central bank. In such a circumstance, the central bank must lend or else risk a breakdown of the payments system, but the lending does not have to be cheap or easy. It is the central bank's control over the price and availability of funds at this moment of necessity that is the source of its control over the system more generally.
Opportunities for such control arise naturally from time to time, simply because of fluctuations in the pattern of payments, but the central bank can also create such opportunities as the need arises. Just so, when the central bank "tightens money" by selling Treasury bills, the consequence is that the banking system as a whole has to make payments to the central bank, which amounts to tightening the survival constraint that all bankers face. Alternatively, when the central bank "loosens money" by buying Treasury bills, the consequence is that the banking system as a whole receives payments from the central bank, thus relaxing the survival constraint. The effects of these central bank interventions show up in the short-term rate of interest that banks pay as the cost of putting off to the future a payment that is due today. Historically, the art of central banking was all about the choice of whether to raise or lower that cost.
The central bank's ability to influence the degree of discipline or elasticity faced by banks at the daily clearing provides some control over the credit system as a whole, but that control is by no means absolute. Private credit elasticity is always a substitute for public credit elasticity. In its attempt to impose discipline, sometimes the most the central bank can do is to force banks to find and use alternative private credit channels. Similarly, in its attempt to impose elasticity, sometimes the most a central bank can do is to offer its own public credit as an alternative to collapsing private credit.
That's why Hawtrey referred to the "art" of central banking, rather than the "science" or the "engineering." The central bank can use its balance sheet to impose a bit more discipline when the private market is too undisciplined, and it can use its balance sheet to offer a bit more elasticity when the private market is imposing excessive discipline. But it is only one bank and ultimately small relative to the system it engages, especially so in the modern globalized financial system in which private credit markets are all connected into an integrated whole. Because the central bank is not all-powerful, it is especially important that it choose its policy intervention carefully, with a full appreciation of the origins of the instability that it is trying to counter.
According to Hawtrey, the inherent instability of credit has its origin in the way that credit-financed spending by some creates income for others, not only directly but also indirectly by pushing up the price of the good being purchased, thus producing an upward revaluation of existing inventories of the good. The capital gain for holders of inventories tends to stimulate additional spending, in part to buy ahead of rising demand in order to earn additional profit from rising prices in the future. Because revaluation of existing inventories tends to improve creditworthiness, this additional spending is easy to finance, even easier than the initial spending. The feedback loop of rising asset prices and credit expansion is the source of the inherent instability of credit emphasized by Hawtrey.
The price-credit feedback mechanism is also the reason that credit-fueled bubbles are so difficult to control, because it means that central bank interest rate policy can sometimes have very little traction. The question for the speculator is only whether the rate of appreciation of the underlying asset is greater than the rate of interest, and that is a condition often quite easily satisfied. If house prices are appreciating at 15 percent a year, it takes an interest rate of greater than 15 percent to stifle the bubble. Even supposing that the central bank is able to impose such a high interest rate, 15 percent would stifle a lot of other things as well. Conclusion: if you don't catch the bubble early, it may be impossible to do anything using interest rate policy.
Meanwhile, the larger the bubble grows, the greater the distortion in the allocation of credit and in the allocation of real resources commanded by that credit. Not only does a bubble prospect of 15 percent attract new credit disproportionately, but also it bids up the price of credit across the board. Borrowers and lenders find one another at a rising market rate of interest, and the central bank must raise its policy rate merely to keep up. Eventually, and long before interest rates reach 15 percent, the effects of higher market interest rates are felt on nonbubble balance sheets throughout the economy, and it is these effects that bring the bubble to an end.
The way it works is this. Higher interest rates mean greater cash outflows for debtors, and eventually the most vulnerable among them find their cash outflows exceeding their cash inflows. If you are one of those vulnerable debtors, Minsky's survival constraint begins to bind for you. Logically there are only three ways out. First, you can spend down any cash balances you may have, but these balances are finite and quickly exhausted. Second, you can borrow to cover the shortfall, but credit lines are also finite, and even possibly contracting in the face of declining creditworthiness. Third, you can sell some of your earning assets, for whatever price they will fetch on the market. Typically these three ways out are used sequentially, as debtors hold on for as long as they can, hoping that some other balance sheet in the system will prove to be the weakest link. The important point is that sooner or later asset prices come under pressure, not just the prices that were rising at 15 percent but all asset prices, and especially the price of the assets held by the most vulnerable debtors, who are forced to liquidate first.
When that happens, liquidity problems (the survival constraint) become solvency problems, and especially so for highly leveraged financial institutions. Even if they are not forced to sell assets in order to make promised payments, they may be forced to write down the valuation of those assets to reflect current market prices. For highly leveraged institutions, with financial liabilities many times larger than their capital base, it doesn't take much of a write-down to produce technical insolvency. And even before insolvency, asset write-downs can quickly generate serious liquidity problems as credit lines shrink to fit reduced collateral valuations. Liquidity and solvency problems thus reinforce one another on the way down, just as credit expansion and asset valuation do on the way up. This is the downside of the inherent instability of credit.
On the way up, as has been emphasized, the central bank tends not to have much traction, since borrowers and lenders share an interest in avoiding central bank discipline. On the way down a similar mutual interest, now in avoiding market discipline, brings both borrowers and lenders back to the central bank as the last available source of credit elasticity. "Lender of last resort" intervention involves the central bank extending credit when no one else will (or can); in effect, the central bank relaxes the survival constraint by providing current cash inflow to allow borrowers to delay the day of reckoning. Used wisely, such intervention can control the downturn and prevent it from turning into a rout. Used unwisely, such intervention can foster further continuation of unhealthy bubble conditions. In a crisis, as in normal times, the art of central banking is all about walking the fine line between providing too much discipline versus too much elasticity.
The Old Lombard Street
The impact and effectiveness of central bank control both depend crucially on the institutional organization of the banking system, and on its articulation with the financial system more generally. Walter Bagehot's Lombard Street explored these questions in the context of the London money market of his day, a set of institutional arrangements different in important respects from modern arrangements, but nonetheless a good starting point because the conclusions that Bagehot drew continue to shape the way we think today. The Bagehot principle that guided central bankers in the current crisis has its origin in that nineteenth-century book.
Today we summarize the Bagehot principle as "lend freely but at a high rate." Here are Bagehot's own words (1906 [1873], 197): "The end is to stay the panic. And for this purpose there are two rules:-First. That these loans should only be made at a very high rate of interest.... Secondly. That at this rate these advances should be made on all good banking securities, and as largely as the public ask for them." Why did Bagehot think this was wise policy for his world, and is it still wise policy for our own very different modern world?
Bagehot's world was based on a short-term commercial credit instrument known as the bill of exchange. Firms issued bills in order to buy inputs for their own production processes, and they accepted bills as payment for their own outputs. The bill of exchange was a promise to pay at a specific future date, perhaps in ninety days. For a fee, banks would "accept" bills, which meant guaranteeing payment. For another fee, banks would "discount" bills, which meant buying them for less than face value, the difference amounting to a rate of interest to be earned over the term to maturity. As payment for the bills, banks would offer either currency or a deposit account credit. Either way, the proceeds of the discount were most typically not held as idle balances but rather spent in payment of other maturing bills. In this way, the discount mechanism was crucial for British firms' management of their daily cash flow, in and out.
Ideally, over the ninety days between issue and maturity, the firm that issued the bill would use the inputs so acquired to produce output for sale, and then use the sale proceeds to pay the bill as it came due. Timely repayment thus depended on timely sale of the production financed by the bill. Assuming timely repayment, the banking business was all about managing one's portfolio of bills in order to match up the timing of cash inflows (from maturing bills) with the timing of cash outflows (for new discounts). If ever a firm failed to pay, however, then the accepting bank would experience a cash shortfall.
In this system, banks managed their own daily cash flow by managing the discount rate they quoted to their customers. If requests for discount were depleting one's cash reserve, one had merely to raise one's discount rate and the business would go elsewhere; if maturing bills were swelling one's cash reserve, one simply lowered the discount rate to attract additional interest-paying business. In this way, the market rate of interest fluctuated according to supply and demand. The rate of interest was high when requests for new discount were running ahead of repayments, and low when the balance went the other way.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from THE NEW LOMBARD STREETby Perry Mehrling Copyright © 2011 by Princeton University Press. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Product details
- Publisher : Princeton University Press (November 28, 2010)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 192 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0691143986
- ISBN-13 : 978-0691143989
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.75 x 1 x 8.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #951,321 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #495 in Government Management
- #717 in Banks & Banking (Books)
- #4,080 in Finance (Books)
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About the author

My entire scholarly life has been about trying to understand money. That’s why I pursued advanced study of economics (MSc at LSE, PhD at Harvard), and that is the motivation for all of the books I have written since then.
My first book, The Money Interest and the Public Interest, American Monetary Thought 1920-1970 (Harvard 1997), identified an alternative tradition of monetary thought that emerged from American institutionalism. My second book, Fischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance (Wiley 2005), tells the story of the rise of modern finance, both as a set of ideas and as a set of institutions, that transformed the monetary landscape starting in about 1970. My third book, The New Lombard Street, How the Fed became the Dealer of Last Resort (Princeton 2011), retraces the chronology of the first two books but now as a story about the origin and development of the U.S. central bank.
My fourth book, Money and Empire, Charles P. Kindleberger and the Dollar System (Cambridge 2022), now builds on all the previous ones. In the first place, it completes my money trilogy: history of money (Mehrling 1997), history of finance (Mehrling 2005), now history of international money. In the second place, it complements my “biography of the Fed” (Mehrling 2011), which focused on the domestic dollar, now with a biography of the international dollar, which grew up in parallel.
Everything I have learned about money I put into my courses, one of which was filmed in Fall 2012 and made into a top-rated MOOC on Coursera: https://www.coursera.org/learn/money-banking. My intellectual progress since then is recorded in various talks and papers posted on my website: https://sites.bu.edu/perry/. My current work is all concerned with extending this “money view” to the Global South, mostly visible as of yet only to the students in my courses at the Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University, where I have been teaching since January 2018. You can follow me on twitter @PMehrling.
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It is a thin book and very readable if you have some background in economics, and I think the intended audience is economists and financial practitioners/theorists. Without some very basic background in economic theories (general equilibrium, term structure of interest rates, interest rate parity, and a bit of basic balance sheet accounting) the significance of some of his ideas may not always be recognised though. Also, to bear in mind is that it describes the US system specifically, which, even if not true of all national central banks now, does suggest the shape of things to come.
Overall, it is a book worth reading if your interest or your job involves understanding the financial system. Those who find it difficult at places may want to look up his interesting lectures on Coursera that go into more detail or his Money View blog.
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The issues of liquidity and "shiftability" of banks' assets are put centre stage. A prominent place is given to the theories of the interaction between asset prices and credit in the formation of bubbles and their bursts. Hawtrey and Minksy are often referred to in relation to the inherent instability of credit. The need for a central bank intervention in the form of a counter cyclical policy is highlighted. The need for a lender of last resort function of a central bank is emphasised. The ideas are conceptualised and put into their historic perspective. The book suggest also a new way of looking at the Fed's backstop function as a dealer of last resort.
The book is succinct and written in a very clear and lucid way covering an array of issues. A background in economics or finance is necessary for understanding most of the ideas. Professor Mehrling is giving an excellent free on-line course on Money and Banking on a regular basis at coursera.org. Taking the course first can help better appreciate the book.







