The Fed smothers capitalism in an attempt to save it
Its latest financial intervention is a new twist on an old story
Much about the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank has been profoundly modern. The bank’s name. A client base of tech-focused venture capitalists. A panic whipped up by tweets. Cash withdrawals via smartphones. At its crux, though, the lender’s fall was the latest iteration of a classic bank run. And the solution, a central bank stepping in to backstop the financial system, was time-honoured, too. So well-trodden is the topic in economics that the lyrical phrase describing the central bank’s actions, “lender of last resort”, is often abridged to its ungainly acronym, lolr.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “After the rescue”
Finance & economics March 18th 2023
- How deep is the rot in America’s banking industry?
- For markets Silicon Valley Bank’s demise signals a painful new phase
- The search for Silicon Valley Bank-style portfolios
- What the loss of Silicon Valley Bank means for Silicon Valley
- Credit Suisse faces share-price turbulence, as fear sweeps the market
- Is the global investment boom turning to bust?
- The Fed smothers capitalism in an attempt to save it
More from Finance & economics
Europe could be torn apart by new divisions
The continent is at its most vulnerable in decades
How corporate bonds fell out of fashion
The market is at its hottest in years—and a shadow of its former self
An American purchase of Greenland could be the deal of the century
The economics of buying new territory
China’s markets take a fresh beating
Authorities have responded by bossing around investors
Can America’s economy cope with mass deportations?
Production slowdowns, more imports and pricier housing could follow
Would an artificial-intelligence bubble be so bad?
A new book by Byrne Hobart and Tobias Huber argues there are advantages to financial mania