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Discount Rate Follow-Up: And Then There were Nine


On Monday, the Federal Reserve met to discuss the discount rate.   There has been a steady increase in the number of regional Federal Reserve presidents requesting an increase in the discount rate.  The minutes of the October 26 meeting were reported yesterday.

The meeting was held before the FOMC met on October 27-28.  At that meeting, nine of the 12 regional presidents expressed a preference to lift the discount rate.  It is a preference because it is ultimately up to the Board of Governors.  The Boston Fed joined eight of the regional reserve banks that wanted to hike the discount rate in September.   In July and August, only five favored an increase.  

The Minneapolis Fed continued to call for a cut in the discount rate.  When its enigmatic President, Kocherlakota steps down next year, the Minneapolis Fed is likely to move back to the consensus.   The Chicago Fed President Evans continued to favor a standpat policy.  Evans has argued against a rate hike this year.

Evans and Kocherlakota are the doves, and although many observers claim Yellen is a dove, we argue the chair defines the spectrum.  Given the current views, Yellen is a centrist, with doves on one side of her and hawks on the other.  Perhaps most telling is that the NY Fed President, who unlike the other regional Fed presidents, has a permanent vote on the FOMC.  Dudley did not support a discount rate hike in October.  The minutes of this week's meeting will not be released until after the December FOMC meeting.  

Before the crisis, there was 100 bp premium for discount window borrowings over the Fed funds target.  During worst of the crisis, and as part of the accommodative stance, the premium was reduced to 50 bp.  In February 2010, a 75 bp premium was re-established over the top of the Fed funds range. As part of the normalization of monetary policy, a 100 bp spread is likely to return. There is a reasonably good chance that when the Fed lifts the Fed funds target is will grant the request of three-quarters of the regional Fed presidents.  

Some observers argue that the key difference between the Fed and the ECB is the former's dual mandate.  The ECB has also expressed concern about the broader economy as it impacts the inflation outlook.  Others have argued that the significant difference is that the Fed targets core inflation and the ECB headline.  However, here too it is more complicated and more similar.  Indeed, some ECB members who are opposed to further monetary policy cite the core inflation measure that is a couple tenth of a percentage point below the US.  

Instead, what the discount rate discussion shows is an arguably more profound difference.  The Federal Reserve is designed to give the central body, the Board of Governors an upper hand over the regional presidents.  The ECB has a smaller central body, Executive Board, which gives the national central banks greater sway.   

Some observers dismiss the importance of the discount rate in the US, noting that the flows are small to inconsequential.  Our brains weigh only around 2% of our total weight, and yet no one doubts its significance.  Size is a poor metric of the importance of the discount rate.  In normal circumstances, the discount rate is the ceiling of short-term interest rates, and other lending rates are tied to it.  Moreover, large use of the discount facility at the Fed would be associated with increased financial stress. 



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Discount Rate Follow-Up: And Then There were Nine Discount Rate Follow-Up:  And Then There were Nine Reviewed by Marc Chandler on November 25, 2015 Rating: 5
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