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A clear guide explaining federal liquidity facilities and their role in crisis management.
Federal liquidity facilities are mechanisms established by a central bank within a federal system to provide short-term funding and liquidity to financial institutions during periods of market stress.
Definition
Federal Liquidity Facilities refer to lending programs and emergency funding tools operated by a federal central bank to stabilise financial markets, support credit flow, and prevent systemic crises.
Federal liquidity facilities are typically used when normal funding markets become strained or dysfunctional. Through these facilities, the central bank lends to banks or other eligible institutions against collateral, ensuring that temporary liquidity shortages do not escalate into broader financial crises.
Examples include discount window lending, emergency credit programs, and crisis-specific facilities created during systemic events. While these tools expand the central bank’s balance sheet, they are usually designed to be temporary and targeted.
Proper design and oversight are essential to limit moral hazard while maintaining financial stability.
No. Liquidity facilities provide temporary funding, not capital injections.
Primarily during periods of market disruption or financial crisis.
Do liquidity facilities increase inflation?
They can expand the money supply temporarily, but are usually designed to be withdrawn once stability returns.