21st century monetary policy The Federal Reserve from the great inflation to COVID-19

Ben Bernanke

Book - 2022

"Former Federal Reserve Chair Ben S. Bernanke helps readers understand how the Federal Reserve, the steward of U.S. monetary policy, got to where it is today, what it has learned from the diverse challenges it has faced, and how it may evolve in the future"--

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : W. W. Norton & Company [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Ben Bernanke (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxvi, 480 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 443-460) and index.
ISBN
9781324020462
  • Introduction
  • Part I. 20th Century Monetary Policy
  • The Rise and Fall of Inflation
  • 1. The Great Inflation
  • 2. Burns and Volcker
  • 3. Greenspan and the Nineties Boom
  • Part II. 21st Century Monetary Policy
  • The Global Financial Crisis and the Great Recession
  • 4. New Century, New Challenges
  • 5. The Global Financial Crisis
  • 6. A New Monetary Regime: From QE1 to QE2
  • 7. Monetary Evolution: QE3 and the Taper Tantrum
  • Part III. 21st Century Monetary Policy
  • From Liftoff to the COVID-19 Pandemic
  • 8. Liftoff
  • 9. Powell and Trump
  • 10. Pandemic
  • Part IV. 21st Century Monetary Policy
  • What Lies Ahead
  • 11. The Fed's Post-2008 Toolkit: Quantitative Easing and Forward Guidance
  • 12. Is the Fed's Toolkit Enough?
  • 13. Making Policy More Powerful: New Tools and Frameworks
  • 14. Monetary Policy and Financial Stability
  • 15. The Fed's Independence and Role in Society
  • An Invitation to Comment
  • Acknowledgments
  • A Note on Sources
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Bernanke, former chair of the Federal Reserve of the U.S., sets out to help readers understand how that institution has arrived at where it is today and what the future may look like. He presents a historical view of monetary policy starting in the twentieth century, when the Federal Reserve was created in 1913. The intention was that it would oversee and stabilize America's lightly regulated and often-dysfunctional banking system and would be responsible for tasks such as setting short- and long-term interest rates. This time period was wrought with inflation fluctuations and also the impact of President Franklin Roosevelt breaking the link between the dollar and gold and mandating that banks be solvent. As Bernanke moves into the twenty-first century, he tackles topics like the global financial crisis, the great recession, the most current presidential influences, COVID, unemployment rates, and how the future of monetary policy could evolve. In a world where $2.15 trillion is floating in the U.S. economy, readers will be intrigued by the history and predictions Bernanke shares. This impressive and accessible book will appeal to historians and educators as well as those who want to understand America's finances from a historical perspective. HIGH DEMAND BACKSTORY: With the economy perpetually in the news, expect the media to call on Bernanke's expert analysis.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Federal Reserve leaders cope with soaring prices and collapsing economies in this penetrating history of America's central bank since the mid-1960s. Bernanke (The Courage to Act), Federal Reserve chairman from 2006 to 2014, recaps chairman Paul Volcker's quashing of the 1970s' inflationary spiral with tight monetary policies that caused a deep recession; his own innovations during the 2008--2009 Great Recession, when he pioneered "quantitative easing" measures that bought up financial assets on a colossal scale; and current chairman Jay Powell's heroics in resisting President Donald Trump's political demands and implementing radical programs of lending and asset purchases during the 2020 Covid-19 crisis. Along the way, Bernanke shows how central banking doctrine shifted in debates over why interest rates declined and whether low inflation and low unemployment are compatible, and mulls monetary novelties like Bitcoin (don't bank on it, he concludes). Bernanke delivers some tart commentary--he calls Republican attacks on his programs "scorched-earth right-wing partisanship"--but mainly sticks to the policy making, writing in marvelously lucid prose that explains complex economic issues in plain English. Suffused with high-stakes drama and clear thinking, this is one of the best accounts yet of the Fed's tumultuous recent past. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Everything has changed in times of COVID-19, including the tools now being used by the U.S. Federal Reserve to maintain the economy, which might have raised eyebrows not so long ago. Chair of the Federal Reserve from 2006 to 2014 and currently distinguished senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, Bernanke not only explains how these new tools work but looks back at the FED over a half-century to present evidence that it has always changed with the times to address immediate needs.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The former chair of the Federal Reserve examines how and why that organization works to control financial crises. There is a large distinction between monetary policy, which concerns how targeted money can be used to strengthen an economy generally, and fiscal policy, which concerns where funds are spent--for example, the CARES Act promulgated during the pandemic to fund public health measures but also to support workers and businesses most harmed by the crisis. "Unlike monetary policy," writes Bernanke, "which can be adjusted quickly as needed, government spending and tax policies are not as easy to change." The Fed has considerably more leverage in applying money as a tool for economic stimulus and relief--though, the author points out, there is a large political dimension to that enterprise. For example, the Trump administration was markedly hostile to the use of the strategy called quantitative easing, or flooding sectors of the economy with money in order to keep lines of credit open to businesses and local governments. "The most basic requirement for economic efficiency is that the economy's resources, including the labor force, be fully employed," writes Bernanke, noting the challenges that occurred when the 2008 fiscal crisis sent unemployment skyrocketing--among them the challenge of inflation, about which the Fed must strike a delicate balance between too much and too little. "Monetary policies that promote economic recovery have broad benefits," writes the author, and can also help curtail inequality. One strategy involves raising tax rates on capital gains, always unpopular among the millionaires in Congress. While the Fed can't control the course of a pandemic, it can certainly respond nimbly to "economic trauma." One doesn't need a strong background in economics to follow Bernanke's arguments, but such a background certainly helps. A clear explication of how money flows from the nation's central banking system into the larger economy. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.