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When Will the "Chicken and Egg" Cycle Hampering Corporate Lending Break?

A "chicken and egg" conundrum is plaguing credit markets. While banks that get federal bailout money are faulted for not using the funds to make loans to kickstart the economy, hamstrung corporations are not seeking loans. A Federal Reserve study shows that 60 percent of loan officers at banks surveyed said that as of January, middle and large firms aren't seeking more credit.
The news is a counterbalance to another Fed survey that shows that 79 percent of loan officers surveyed for the same, three month period ending last month reported that they had tightened credit for companies.
So what to make of this? Critics of the federal bailout and populists campaigning against big banks like to toss out the factoid that banks aren't lending to show how greedy the banks are. But reality is a little more complicated. Here's why:

There's no remedy on the horizon even though the engineers manning the switches of the still-evolving bailout program badly want to get credit flowing on all sides. If banks get more capital on easier terms, they might switch on the lending lamp. If they start offering finance on more reasonable terms, firms might actually start borrowing again. But that's not likely to happen until they see good reason to do so, and so on.

When will the circle be broken?

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