- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Money, Banking, and Your World
- Chapter 2: The Financial System
- Chapter 3: Money
- Chapter 4: Interest Rates
- Chapter 5: The Economics of Interest-Rate Fluctuations
- Chapter 6: The Economics of Interest-Rate Spreads and Yield Curves
- Chapter 7: Rational Expectations, Efficient Markets, and the Valuation of Corporate Equities
- Chapter 8: Financial Structure, Transaction Costs, and Asymmetric Information
- Chapter 9: Bank Management
- Chapter 10: Innovation and Structure in Banking and Finance
- Chapter 11: The Economics of Financial Regulation
- Chapter 12: The Financial Crisis of 2007–2008
- Chapter 13: Central Bank Form and Function
- Chapter 14: The Money Supply Process
- Chapter 15: The Money Supply and the Money Multiplier
- Chapter 16: Monetary Policy Tools
- Chapter 17: Monetary Policy Targets and Goals
- Chapter 18: Foreign Exchange
- Chapter 19: International Monetary Regimes
- Chapter 20: Money Demand
- Chapter 21: IS-LM
- Chapter 22: IS-LM in Action
- Chapter 23: Aggregate Supply and Demand, the Growth Diamond, and Financial Shocks
- Chapter 24: Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanisms
- Chapter 25: Inflation and Money
- Chapter 26: Rational Expectations Redux: Monetary Policy Implications
There are no key terms for this page.
Lender of Last Resort
As noted above, financial panics and the de-leveraging that often occur after them can wreak havoc on the real economy by decreasing the volume of loans, insurance contracts, and other beneficial financial products. That, in turn, can cause firms to reduce output and employment. Lenders of last resort try to stop panics and de-leveraging by adding liquidity to the financial system and/or attempting to restore investor confidence. They add liquidity by increasing the money supply, reducing interest rates, and making loans to worthy borrowers who find themselves shut off from their normal sources of external finance. They try to restore investor confidence by making upbeat statements about the overall health of the economy and/or financial system and by implementing policies that investors are likely to find beneficial. During the darkest days of 1933, for example, the U.S. federal government restored confidence in the banking system through strong executive leadership and by creating the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Stop and Think Box
In a single day, October 19, 1987, the S&P fell by 20 percent. What caused such a rapid decline? Why did the panic not result in de-leveraging or recession?
According to a short history of the event by Mark Carlson (“A Brief History of the 1987 Stock Market Crash with a Discussion of the Federal Reserve Response”),[144] “During the years prior to the crash, equity markets had been posting strong gains. . . . There had been an influx of new investors. . . . Equities were also boosted by some favorable tax treatments given to the financing of corporate buyouts. . . . The macroeconomic outlook during the months leading up to the crash had become somewhat less certain. . . . Interest rates were rising globally. . . . A growing U.S. trade deficit and decline in the value of the dollar were leading to concerns about inflation and the need for higher interest rates in the U.S. as well.” On the day of the crash, investors learned that deficits were higher than expected and that the favorable tax rules might change. As prices dropped, “record margin calls” were made, fueling further selling. The panic did not proceed further because Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan restored confidence in the stock market by promising to make large loans to banks exposed to brokers hurt by the steep decline in stock prices. Specifically, the Fed made it known that “The Federal Reserve, consistent with its responsibilities as the Nation’s central bank, affirmed today its readiness to serve as a source of liquidity to support the economic and financial system.”
The most common form of lender of last resort today is the government central bank, like the European Central Bank (ECB) or the Federal Reserve. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) sometimes tries to act as a sort of international lender of last resort, but it has been largely unsuccessful in that role. In the past, wealthy individuals like J. P. Morgan and private entities like bank clearinghouses tried to act as lenders of last resort, with mixed success. Most individuals did not have enough wealth or influence to thwart a panic, and bank clearinghouses were at most regional in nature.
Key Takeaway
A lender of last resort is an individual, a private institution, or, more commonly, a government central bank that attempts to stop a financial panic and/or postpanic de-leveraging by increasing the money supply, decreasing interest rates, making loans, and/or restoring investor confidence.

Cite this Content
Citation Information
APA Format:Wright, Robert E.., and Quadrini, Vincenzo., Money and Banking. Retrieved Mar 12, 2010 from http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/29171 .
MLA Format:Wright, Robert E., , and Vincenzo Quadrini. Money and Banking. 1969 . Flat World Knowledge. 12 Mar, 2010. <http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/29171> .
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