always been successful in preventing financial crises. Two examples of the use of
the Bank s lending weapon to avoid bank panics are the provisions of huge loans
to the Canadian Commercial Bank and the Northland Bank in 1985 (see the Inside
the Central Bank box, Emergency Lending Assistance to Troubled Banks).
Not only can the central bank be a lender of last resort to banks, but it can also play
the same role for the financial system as a whole. In fact, under the Bank of Canada
Act, under extreme conditions on a financial market or financial system, the Bank of
Canada has the authority to provide liquid funds to any (financial or nonfinancial)
Canadian or foreign entities, for the purpose of promoting the stability of the finan-
cial system. Such central bank intervention can help prevent financial panics that are
not triggered by bank failures, as was the case in the United States during the recent
financial crisis that started in August 2007 (see the Inside the Central Bank box,
Federal Reserve Lender-of-Last-Resort Facilities During the Subprime Financial Crisis).
Recently, central banks around the world have been facing significant chal-
lenges in implementing monetary policy because of the financial-market turmoil
and the subprime credit crisis in the United States. In response to these challenges,
central banks have been improving and refining their financial infrastructures to
address turmoil in the financial markets. Although there are differences across
countries in institutional arrangements for the conduct of monetary policy, most
central banks have responded to the recent financial turbulence in a similar fash-
ion, providing liquidity directly to the financial system, called aggregate system or
macro liquidity.
To address market failure and financial instability at times of crisis, central
banks rely on discretionary liquidity operations, the maturity of which depends on
their objective, independent of the maturity of the reference rate. The Bank of
Canada, for example, recently introduced new facilities to address aggregate sys-
tem liquidity at times of financial instability. In particular, the Bank introduced
term repos, known in Canada as term Purchase and Resale Agreements (PRAs),
and term securities lending.
9
Let s see how these new facilities are used in providing liquidity to specific
markets as opposed to lending directly to banks.
C H A P T E R 1 7
Tools of Monetary Policy
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