A comparison of federal financial remediation in the great depression and 2008–2009
Barrie A. Wigmore
A chapter in Research in Economic History, 2010, pp 255-303 from Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract:
Studies of Depression-era financial remediation have generally focused on federal deposit insurance and the provision of equity to banks by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC). This paper broadens the concept of financial remediation to include other programs – RFC lending, federal guarantees of farm and home mortgages, and the elimination of interest on demand deposits – and other intermediaries – savings and loans, mutual savings banks, and life insurance companies. The benefits of remediation or the amounts potentially at risk to the government in these programs are calculated annually and allocated to the various intermediaries. The slow remediation of real estate loans (two-thirds of these intermediaries' loans) needs further study with respect to the slow economic recovery. The paper compares Depression-era remediation with efforts during the 2008–2009 crisis. Today's remediation contrasts with the 1930s in its speed, magnitude relative to GDP or private sector nonfinancial debt, the share of remediation going to nonbanks, and emphasis on securities markets.
Date: 2010
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:rehizz:s0363-3268(2010)0000027008
DOI: 10.1108/S0363-3268(2010)0000027008
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