As central banks intervene to calm markets, few see solution
WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank moved Thursday to try to calm financial markets and restore some degree of confidence. It didn’t quite work. The central banks are facing a crisis only partly responsive to the medicine they can provide.
The Fed sought to ensure that the U.S. Treasury bond market — the world’s largest — can operate smoothly as demand for bonds spikes with investors desperately seek safe assets amid the carnage in stocks. The ECB sought to stimulate the European economy, which the coronavirus outbreak appears on the verge of sending into recession.
Decidedly unimpressed, traders sent the stock market into its worst plunge Thursday in more than three decades.
The primary tools of central banks — lower interest rates and easier access to credit — aren’t well-suited to address a crisis caused by a pandemic that has frightened consumers away from travelling, shopping or gathering in group settings. Economists are increasingly calling for governments to take the lead, through targeted loans to businesses, greater help for cash-strapped workers — particularly Americans without access to sick leave — and support for virus testing and other health measures.