- The
Federal Reserve widened the scope of itsMain Street Lending Program twice since its April announcement, yet two formercentral bank economists said more can be done to encourage participation. - The
Fed should allow loans with maturities of more than five years and make interest rates hinge on participating businesses' credit health, William English and Nellie Liang urged in a Brookings Institution report released Thursday. - The central bank can boost participation among smaller lenders if they lower the minimum loan size from $250,000, they added.
- "The risk of permanent harm to labor
markets " outweighs the heightened risk related to such overhauls, the economists said.
The Federal Reserve's
Two former central bank economists think there's still plenty of room for improvement.
The facility is on the verge of starting its lending to businesses, with the Fed beginning lender registration on Monday. Once open, the program will spend up to $600 billion buying 95% of each eligible loan in a bid to aid firms through the coronavirus pandemic and a widespread freeze in consumer demand. Yet economists William English and Nellie Liang said they think the Fed can do more to boost take-up of the program's emergency funds.
"We believe the current program would be more attractive and, thus, more effective if loan terms were more tailored to the characteristics of borrowers, the rigidity of fixed debt repayments was reduced, and lenders received more compensation for taking additional risks," the economists wrote in a Brookings Institution report published Thursday.
The two former Fed staffers suggested the central bank should open its Main Street facility to loans with maturities of more than five years and create incentives for earlier payoffs. Participating businesses with higher credit quality should enjoy cheaper rates than more leveraged borrowers, they wrote. Currently, all loans made through the facility include an interest rate of 3 percentage points above a common short-term rate.
The program will allow businesses with up to 15,000 employees or less than $5 billion in 2019 revenue to tap its credit pool. The Fed has lowered its minimum loan amount twice to $250,000 from $1 million, yet Liang and English urged an even smaller minimum, saying such borrowing would encourage smaller banks to participate.
Banks should also be able to extend loans to riskier businesses if they take on a greater share of the debt "to demonstrate confidence in their credit," the economists wrote.
Liang and English called on the Fed to lift its compensation of participating lenders in another bid to encourage participation. Since new loans made through the program "will be correlated with risks of existing loans," raising fees for banks can also make up for the heightened risk of default, they wrote.
Making such significant changes would endanger the $75 billion contributed by the Treasury Department to the Main Street program to compensate for losses. Yet the increased risks pale in comparison to the coronavirus-induced recession and economic fallout damaging businesses throughout the US, they said.
"The downturn is very deep, and the risk of permanent harm to labor markets because of protracted high unemployment is large," Liang and English wrote. "Thus, the Fed and the Treasury should move quickly to adjust the terms of the program if take-up is low."