(Also worthy of note today: the TED spread - the difference between the
LIBOR and the three month Treasury has widened to its largest point since
the 1987 stock market crash, and a money market fund "broke the buck" - it's
net asset value sliding below the sancrosanct dollar a share level - for the
first time since the Orange County bankruptcy nearly two decades ago.)

America will need a $1,000bn bail-out
By Kenneth Rogoff
Financial Times
September 17 2008

One of the most extraordinary features of the past month is the extent to
which the dollar has remained immune to a once-in-a-lifetime financial
crisis. If the US were an emerging market country, its exchange rate would
be plummeting and interest rates on government debt would be soaring.
Instead, the dollar has actually strengthened modestly, while interest rates
on three- month US Treasury Bills have now reached 64-year lows. It is
almost as if the more the US messes up, the more the world loves it.

But can this extraordinary vote of confidence in the dollar last? Perhaps,
but as investors step back and look at the deep wounds of America’s flagship
financial sector, the public and private sector’s massive borrowing needs,
and the looming uncertainty of the November presidential elections, it is
hard to believe that the dollar will continue to stand its ground as the
crisis continues to deepen and unfold.

It is true that the US government has very deep pockets. Privately held US
government debt was under $4,400bn at the end of 2007, representing less
than 32 per cent of gross domestic product. This is roughly half the debt
burden carried by most European countries, and an even smaller fraction of
Japan’s debt levels. It is also true that despite the increasingly tough
stance of US regulators, the financial crisis has probably already added at
most $200bn-$300bn to net debt, taking into account the likely losses on
nationalising the mortgage giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the costs of
the $29bn March bail-out of investment bank Bear Stearns, the potential
fallout from the various junk collateral the Federal Reserve has taken on to
its balance sheet in the last few months, and finally, yesterday’s $85bn
bail-out of the insurance giant AIG.

Were the financial crisis to end today, the costs would be painful but
manageable, roughly equivalent to the cost of another year in Iraq.
Unfortunately, however, the financial crisis is far from over, and it is
hard to imagine how the US government is going to succeed in creating a
firewall against further contagion without spending five to 10 times more
than it has already, that is, an amount closer to $1,000bn to $2,000bn.

True, the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve have done an admirable job
over the past week in forcing the private sector to bear a share of the
burden. By forcing the fourth largest investment bank, Lehman Brothers, into
bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch into a distressed sale to Bank of America, they
helped to facilitate a badly needed consolidation in the financial services
sector. However, at this juncture, there is every possibility that the
credit crisis will radiate out into corporate, consumer and municipal debt.
Regardless of the Fed and Treasury’s most determined efforts, the political
pressures for a much larger bail-out, and pressures from the continued
volatility in financial markets, are going to be irresistible.

It is hard to predict exactly how and when the mega-bail-out will evolve. At
some point, we are likely to see a broadening and deepening of deposit
insurance, much as the UK did in the case of Northern Rock. Probably, at
some point, the government will aim to have a better established algorithm
for making bridge loans and for triggering the effective liquidation of
troubled firms and assets, although the task is far more difficult than was
the case in the 1980s, when the Resolution Trust Corporation was formed to
help clean up the saving and loan mess.

Of course, there also needs to be better regulation. It is incredible that
the transparency-challenged credit default swap market was allowed to swell
to a notional value of $6,200bn during 2008 even as it became obvious that
any collapse of this market could lead to an even bigger mess than the
fallout from subprime mortgage debt.

It may prove to be possible to fix the system for far less than $1,000bn-
$2,000bn. The tough stance taken by regulators this past weekend with the
investment banks Lehman and Merrill Lynch certainly helps.

Yet I fear that the American political system will ultimately drive the cost
of saving the financial system well up into that higher territory.

A large expansion in debt will impose enormous fiscal costs on the US,
ultimately hitting growth through a combination of higher taxes and lower
spending. It will certainly make it harder for the US to maintain its
military dominance, which has been one of the linchpins of the dollar.

The shrinking financial system will also undermine another central
foundation of the strength of the US economy. And it is hard to see how the
central bank will be able to resist a period of allowing elevated levels of
inflation, as this offers a convenient way for the US to deflate the
mounting cost of its private and public debts.

It is a very good thing that the rest of the world retains such confidence
in America’s ability to manage its problems, otherwise the financial crisis
would be far worse.

Let us hope the US political and regulatory response continues to inspire
this optimism. Otherwise, sharply rising interest rates and a rapidly
declining dollar could put the US in a bind that many emerging markets are
all too familiar with.

The writer is professor of economics at Harvard University and former chief
economist of the International Monetary Fund

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