Central Bank Swaps Then and Now: Swaps and Dollar Liquidity in the 1960s

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The Federal Reserve’s decision to offer ultimately open-ended swap lines to other central banks in the wake of disturbances to the global financial system in 2007 has attracted considerable academic attention and some political controversy. While empirical research has generally found that the post-2008 swaps were effective in providing dollar liquidity, some members of the US Congress have criticized the system for not serving the US national interest and for using American resources to bail out European banks. The limited number of countries able to benefit directly from the Fed swaps has also been criticized for unduly reducing the scope of this instrument.

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The working paper’s archival evidence undermines the sharp distinction drawn between swaps in the 20th and 21st centuries. Resurrecting the largely forgotten history of the 1960s swaps system exposes the precedents for international central bank cooperation, the scope for innovation and the way the Fed used swaps both at their origins and in 2007-08 to manage US monetary transmission.

Read the Working Paper