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※ 번역할 언어 선택

Governor Frederic S. Mishkin
At the Risk USA 2007 Conference, New York, New York
November 5, 2007

Financial Instability and Monetary Policy

After operating for years under very favorable conditions and ample liquidity, financial markets came under stress last summer and have not yet fully recovered. This ongoing episode has reminded investors and policymakers alike that financial instability, if allowed to develop fully, could have severely negative consequences not only for the functioning of financial markets but also, importantly, for the macroeconomic prospects of our country as well as others. It is this connection with the real side of the economy that makes financial stability a central concern for me and my colleagues at the Federal Reserve and at other central banks around the world.

Policymakers, particularly those in a central bank, are faced with the questions of what they should do to prevent financial instability and what their responses should be when financial instability threatens to compromise economic performance. To start answering these questions, we must first understand the nature of financial instability and how it might affect the macroeconomy.1

The Nature of Financial Instability
The financial system performs the function of efficiently channeling funds to individuals or corporations with worthy investment opportunities. If shocks interfere with the information flows that are necessary for a smooth functioning of the financial system, the system can be disrupted and financial instability can arise. By disrupting the flow of credit, financial instability, in turn, becomes a threat to economic performance.2

The information that is necessary for the efficient functioning of the financial system is by its nature asymmetric: Often, one party to a financial contract (typically the lender) has much less accurate information about the outcome of an investment than does the other party (typically the borrower). As I have explained in more detail in a recent speech, such asymmetry leads to two prominent difficulties for the functioning of the financial system: adverse selection and moral hazard (Mishkin, 2007).

Adverse selection arises when investments that are most likely to produce an undesirable (adverse) outcome are the most likely to be financed (selected). For example, investors who intend to take on large amounts of risk are the most likely to be willing to seek out loans because they know that they are unlikely to pay them back. Moral hazard arises because a borrower has incentives to invest in high-risk projects, in which the borrower does well if the project succeeds but the lender bears most of the loss if the project fails.

Historically, banking institutions and other financial intermediaries have played a major role in reducing the asymmetry of information because they are well placed to collect information from borrowers and to engage in long-term relationships with clients. In more recent times, improved transparency and financial innovation--in the form of new financial products as well as new types of institutions that have become active in markets--have also contributed to the efficient flow of information across the system. The continuity of this flow helps keep adverse selection and moral hazard in check and is crucial to the process of price discovery--that is, the ability of markets to collect information and properly evaluate the worth of financial assets.

During periods of financial distress, information flows may be disrupted, and price discovery may be impaired. The high risk spreads and reluctance to purchase assets that are characteristic of such episodes are natural responses to the increased uncertainty resulting from the disruption of information Two types of risks are particularly important for understanding financial instability. The first is what I will refer to as valuation risk: The market, realizing the complexity of a security or the opaqueness of its underlying creditworthiness, finds it has trouble assessing the value of the security. For example, this sort of risk has been central to the repricing of many structured-credit products during the turmoil of the past few months, when investors have struggled to understand how potential losses in subprime mortgages might filter through the layers of complexity that such products entail.

The second type of risk that I consider central to the understanding of financial stability is what I call macroeconomic risk--that is, an increase in the probability that a financial disruption will cause significant deterioration in the real economy. Because economic downturns typically result in even greater uncertainty about asset values, such episodes may involve an adverse feedback loop whereby financial disruptions cause investment and consumer spending to decline, which, in turn, causes economic activity to contract. Such contraction then increases uncertainty about the value of assets, and, as a result, the financial disruption worsens. In turn, this development causes economic activity to contract further in a perverse cycle.

Deterioration of balance sheets during a recession can also intensify problems of adverse selection and moral hazard because it removes an important channel through which information asymmetries are mitigated--the use of collateral. If a borrower defaults on a loan backed by collateral, the effects of the adverse selection problem are less severe because the lender can take title to the collateral and thus make up for the loss. In addition, the threat of losing the collateral gives the borrower more incentives not to take unmanageable risks that might ultimately lead to a default, and it thus reduces the moral hazard problem. These mechanisms work only as long as the collateral is of sufficient quality; during macroeconomic downturns, the value of collateral may fall, problems of adverse selection and moral hazard again become central, and lenders become much less willing to lend. Again, these events can result in an adverse feedback loop.

Shocks of various natures can interfere with the information flow in financial markets and thereby precipitate financial instability through valuation and macroeconomic risk. Historical examples of such shocks include higher interest rates, problems in the banking sector, increases in uncertainty, and asset market effects on balance sheets. Of those, the last two appear to have been especially prominent in the ongoing episode of financial instability.

Interpreting the Recent Episode of Financial Instability
One could argue that the valuation of financial products backed by mortgages and corporate loans has always been uncertain, as the ability of borrowers to repay their debt ultimately depends on the performance of the economy. Yet, especially in very recent years, investors appeared to be less concerned about macroeconomic uncertainty or about the attendant problems of adverse selection and moral hazard inherent in asset-backed products. Thus, abundant credit flowed cheaply to borrowers regardless of the risks involved.

However, beginning in the spring and continuing to the present time, a considerable amount of uncertainty has surrounded markets' valuations of many structured-finance products--part of the flurry of innovative financial instruments that have become popular among market participants in recent years. Generally, increased uncertainty in financial markets makes it harder for lenders to screen good credit risks from bad and ultimately makes information more asymmetric, thereby possibly exacerbating the adverse selection problem. Consequently, lenders may become less willing to lend, and that reluctance may lead to a decline in investment and aggregate activity. During the recent turmoil, the opaqueness of structured-credit products contributed to market uncertainty until investors in those products (who were ultimately lenders to households and corporations) withdrew from the market and left borrowers without an important source of credit.

In the housing market, where price appreciation has slowed or even turned to depreciation in many areas, delinquencies and defaults have risen of late, especially in the variable-rate subprime sector. In addition, the decline in house prices has induced a clear deterioration in the collateral behind home mortgages. As a consequence, lenders have responded by tightening standards and terms and, ultimately, by reducing credit.

Similarly, the collateral offered by many financial institutions to back the borrowing they needed to finance their operations also became questionable. As a result, these institutions found credit much more difficult to obtain, or much more costly, or both. Funding difficulties for financial institutions clearly have the potential to turn into tighter credit conditions for households and nonfinancial businesses alike.

The Role of the Federal Reserve
Against this backdrop, what role should the Federal Reserve perform to pursue its objectives? To answer this question, we must first understand exactly what those objectives are. The Federal Reserve was created by the Congress in 1913 to provide an effective backstop against the recurring episodes of financial panic that were relatively frequent at the time. Even so, the interest of the Congress was not financial stability per se. Rather, the Congress was concerned that financial panics were often followed by sharp contractions in economic activity, and it recognized that a stabilization of the financial system would lead to a stabilization of the whole U.S. economy.

Originally, the preamble to the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 stated that the Federal Reserve System was created "to furnish an elastic currency, to afford means of rediscounting commercial paper, to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States, and for other purposes." Later, in 1977, the Congress amended the act to introduce macroeconomic objectives explicitly. Accordingly, it stated that "the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Open Market Committee shall maintain long run growth of the monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with the economy's long run potential to increase production, so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates." Because long-term interest rates can remain low only in a stable macroeconomic environment, these goals are often referred to as the dual mandate--that is, the Federal Reserve seeks to promote the two coequal objectives of maximum employment and price stability. But although the main interests of the Federal Reserve are macroeconomic in nature, well-functioning financial markets are ancillary to good economic performance. Conversely, financial instability can compromise economic growth and price stability. Because of this intimate connection with economic performance, the Federal Reserve has a clear interest in promoting the stability of financial markets.

The Federal Reserve has various tools at its disposal to promote financial stability. In a speech two weeks ago, I discussed its role as a liquidity provider (Mishkin, 2007). Today, I will instead focus on how monetary policy can be used as an effective instrument to keep markets stable and to counter the macroeconomic effects of a system that has become unstable.

As a general principle, a sound monetary policy is one that will foster the objectives of price stability and maximum sustainable employment. Such a policy can make financial instability less likely. In my view, the reason that this is so resides once again in the informational asymmetries that pervade our financial system. For example, in an economy that experiences severe swings in output growth, lenders will be more reluctant to lend and will demand higher interest rates because of the higher risks that borrowers will default. But this situation is likely to exacerbate the adverse selection problem, as only riskier borrowers will be willing to take out loans at higher interest rates. Similarly, in an environment of high inflation, lenders will not be willing to lend for long periods. Debt contracts will then tend to have short maturities, thereby increasing the system's exposure to cash flow and liquidity problems.

Financial instability, however, can arise even if macroeconomic fundamentals are good and monetary policy is sound, simply because of shocks that are unforeseen by policymakers or that cannot be prevented from occurring. In this case, monetary policy can also be useful because it can help forestall the negative macroeconomic consequences of financial instability. An easier monetary policy provides a direct stimulus to the economy, as it generally leads to lower interest rates across the term structure. Lower rates reduce the cost of capital for borrowers and therefore encourage investment. They also generally boost asset prices, thereby increasing wealth and encouraging consumer spending.

Researchers have also identified other channels through which monetary policy is effective. One important one is the credit channel. The credit-channel view holds that monetary policy has additional effects because interest rate decisions influence the cost and availability of credit by more than would be implied by the associated movement in risk-free interest rates (Bernanke and Gertler, 1995; Bernanke, 2007a). For example, an easier monetary policy strengthens the balance sheets of borrowers. This stronger financial position, in turn, enables the borrower to reduce its potential conflict of interest with the lender, either because the borrower is able to self-finance a greater share of its investment projects, or because it can offer more or better collateral to guarantee its liabilities. As a result, firms and households will find it easier to increase their spending.

In addition to having beneficial macroeconomic effects, monetary policy can also help directly restore stability in financial markets after a period of financial instability. As we have seen, financial instability can basically be viewed as a disruption of information; therefore, its resolution requires a restoration of information flows. Monetary policy can contribute to this process by minimizing market uncertainty.

I noted a moment ago that periods of financial instability are characterized by valuation risk and macroeconomic risk. Monetary policy cannot have much influence on the former, but it can certainly address the latter--macroeconomic risk. By cutting interest rates to offset the negative effects of financial turmoil on aggregate economic activity, monetary policy can reduce the likelihood that a financial disruption might set off an adverse feedback loop. The resulting reduction in uncertainty can then make it easier for the markets to collect the information that enables price discovery and to hasten the return to normal market functioning.

To achieve this result most effectively, monetary policy needs to be timely, decisive, and flexible. Quick action is important for a central bank once it realizes that an episode of financial instability has the potential to set off a perverse sequence of events that pose a threat to its core objectives. Waiting too long to ease policy in such a situation would only risk a further deterioration in macroeconomic conditions and thus would arguably only increase the amount of easing that would eventually be needed.

Decisive action is also important. In circumstances when the risk of particularly bad economic outcomes is very real, a central bank may want to buy some insurance and, so to speak, "get ahead of the curve"--that is, ease policy more than it otherwise would have simply on the basis of its modal economic outlook. However, because monetary policy makers can never be certain of the amount of policy easing that is needed to forestall the adverse effects of disruptions in financial markets, decisive policy actions may, from time to time, go too far and thus produce unwelcome inflationary pressures. That's why I said that flexibility is also an important characteristic of monetary policy during a time of financial turmoil. If, in their quest to reduce macroeconomic risk, policymakers overshoot and ease policy too much, they need to be willing to expeditiously remove at least part of that ease before inflationary pressures become a threat.

Some may see a monetary policy that actively addresses episodes of financial instability along the lines that I have just described as promoting excessive risk-taking and thus increasing the probability of future crises. In other words, such a policy might appear to create some moral hazard problems of its own. I question, however, the validity of this view. As I pointed out earlier, the Federal Reserve has a mandate from the Congress to promote maximum employment and stable prices, and it will choose its monetary policy actions so as to best meet that mandate. That said, as pointed out recently by Chairman Bernanke, it is not the responsibility of the Federal Reserve--nor would it be appropriate--to protect lenders and investors from the consequences of their financial decisions (Bernanke, 2007b). Indeed, the Federal Reserve can hardly insulate investors from risk, even if it wished to do so. And the fact that investors who misjudged the risks they were taking lost money over the past few months as well as during most other episodes of financial turmoil, independently of the monetary policy actions taken by the Federal Reserve, certainly corroborates this argument. The point is that, although the Federal Reserve can and should offset macroeconomic risk with monetary policy decisions, investors remain responsible for dealing with valuation risk. Indeed, monetary policy is and should be powerless in that respect. It is solely the responsibility of market participants to do the hard work of price discovery and to ascertain and manage the risks involved in their investments.

The Federal Reserve's Recent Monetary Policy Decisions
What I just said should serve as a framework for understanding the recent decisions of the Federal Reserve to ease policy, first by 50 basis points on September 18 and then by another 25 basis points last week. The first action was larger than markets expected at the time--indeed, quotes from the federal funds futures market as well as survey data indicated that most investors had anticipated a cut of only 25 basis points in the target federal funds rate ahead of that meeting. As reported in the minutes, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) judged that a policy easing of 50 basis points was appropriate to help offset the effects of tighter financial conditions on the economic outlook. Had the FOMC not eased policy, it would have faced a risk that the tightening of credit conditions and an intensifying housing correction would lead to significant broader weakness in output and employment. In addition, it would have faced the possibility that the impaired functioning of financial markets would persist for some time or worsen, which would create an adverse feedback loop not dissimilar to what I earlier called macroeconomic risk. The cut of 50 basis points at that meeting was the most prudent action from a macroeconomic standpoint, even given the Federal Reserve's objective of price stability. Indeed, with economic growth likely to run below its potential for a while and with incoming inflation data to the favorable side, the easing of policy, even if substantial, seemed unlikely to affect adversely the outlook for inflation.

It should be clear at this point that the FOMC's decision was made purely on macroeconomic grounds--that is, policy was eased solely to offset macroeconomic risk. The changed policy stance would not have interfered with the ongoing adjustments in the pricing of financial instruments--that is, the policy action, even if larger than investors had expected, would not have had any effects on valuation risk.

The response of the markets to the easing of monetary policy in September was encouraging. Financial market functioning improved after the decision was announced, an outcome that partially allayed the risks of a coming credit crunch and thus suggested that macroeconomic risk may have been reduced. Still, conditions in several markets remained strained. In part, those tensions certainly reflected the fact that valuation risk was still substantial and would not be reduced quickly. Indeed, the process of price discovery is ongoing, and it will likely be some time before it is completed.

At the FOMC meeting last week, the federal funds rate target was lowered by another 25 basis points. Our economy grew at a solid pace in the third quarter and was boosted importantly by personal consumption and business expenditures, an indication of considerable underlying strength in spending before the recent financial turbulence. However, the pace of economic expansion is expected to slow in the near term, largely because of the intensification of the housing correction. The combined 75 basis points of policy easing put in place at the past two meetings should help forestall some of the adverse effects on the broader economy that might otherwise arise from the disruptions in financial markets and should help promote moderate growth over time.

Going into the meeting, I was comforted by the lack of direct evidence to date of serious spillovers of the housing weakness and of tighter credit conditions on the broader economy. But with an unchanged policy interest rate, I saw downside risks to the outlook for growth. I was mindful, in particular, of the risk that still-fragile financial markets could be particularly exposed to potential adverse news on the housing situation, or on the macroeconomy more generally, and that renewed strains in financial markets could feed back adversely on economic performance. My vote to ease policy at the meeting was motivated by my wish to reduce those risks. The FOMC perhaps could have waited for more clarity and left policy unchanged last week, but I believe that the potential costs of inaction outweighed the benefits, especially because, should the easing eventually appear to have been unnecessary, it could be removed.

In voting to ease policy, I carefully considered the effect of that decision on our other objective--price stability. I reasoned that the anticipated softening of economic growth and perhaps the emergence of some slack in the labor market might reduce those pressures, and I judged that a cut of 25 basis points in the target federal funds rate would not materially alter that modal outlook. However, I recognized the risk that, even if readings on core inflation have improved modestly this year, recent increases in energy and commodity prices, among other factors, may put renewed upward pressure on inflation. Consequently, in considering appropriate future adjustments to policy, I will monitor inflation developments carefully.

Overall, I think that the cumulative policy easing the FOMC put in place at its past two meetings reduced significantly the downside risks to growth so that those risks are now balanced by the upside risks to inflation. In these circumstances, I will want to carefully assess incoming data and gauge the effects of financial and other developments on economic prospects before considering further policy action. As always, my colleagues on the FOMC and I will act to foster our dual objectives of price stability and sustainable economic growth.

Conclusions
As I have argued here, under the mandate it has been given by the Congress, the Federal Reserve has a responsibility to take monetary policy actions to minimize the damage that financial instability can do to the economy. I hope I was clear in communicating to you that policies to achieve this goal are designed to help Main Street and not to bail out Wall Street. Pursuing such policies does help financial markets recover from episodes of financial instability, and so it can help lift asset prices. But this does not mean that market participants who have been overly optimistic about their assessment of risk don't pay a high price for their mistakes. They have, and that is exactly what should happen in a well-functioning economy--which, after all, is what the Federal Reserve is seeking to promote.
References
Bernanke, Ben S. (2007a). "The Financial Accelerator and the Credit Channel," speech delivered at the Credit Channel of Monetary Policy in the Twenty-first Century Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Atlanta, Georgia, June 15.

_________ (2007b). "The Recent Financial Turmoil and Its Economic and Policy Consequences," speech delivered at the Economic Club of New York, New York, October 15.

Bernanke, Ben S., and Mark Gertler (1995). "Inside the Black Box: The Credit Channel of Monetary Policy Transmission," Leaving the Board Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 9 (Autumn), pp. 27-48.

Mishkin, Frederic S. (1997). "The Causes and Propagation of Financial Instability: Lessons for Policymakers (145 KB PDF)," in Maintaining Financial Stability in a Global Economy, proceedings of a symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Jackson Hole, Wyo., August 28-30, pp. 55-96.

_________ (2007). "Financial Instability and the Federal Reserve as a Liquidity Provider," speech delivered at the Museum of American Finance Commemoration of the Panic of 1907, New York, October 26.

Footnotes

1. Note that my remarks here reflect my own views and not necessarily those of others on the Board of Governors or the Federal Open Market Committee. I thank Roberto Perli for his excellent comments and assistance on this speech.

2. A more detailed discussion of my views on what causes financial instability and of the effect of such instability on economic activity is in Mishkin (1997).

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김건희 특검, 이창수에 소환조사 통보 [서울=뉴스핌] 김영은 기자 = 민중기 특별검사팀(특검팀)이 김건희 여사에 대한 검찰의 수사무마 의혹에 대한 수사에 속도를 내고 있다. 박노수 특별검사보(특검보)는 18일 오후 서울 종로구 KT광화문웨스트빌딩에서 열린 정례브리핑에서 "이창수 전 서울중앙지검장, (도이치모터스 주가조작 의혹) 처분 당시 수사 실무를 담당했던 검사 한 명을 상대로 오는 22일 오전 10시 특검 사무실에 출석하여 조사를 받을 것을 통지했다"고 밝혔다. 이창수 전 서울중앙지검장이 지난 3월 13일 오후 서울 서초구 서울중앙지검 청사로 들어서는 모습. [사진=뉴스핌DB] 박 특검보는 이어 "김 여사의 디올백 명품 수수, 도이치모터스 주가조작 사건 등의 수사 무마 의혹과 관련해 지난 12월 초에 있었던 압수수색을 통해 확보한 자료의 내용을 확인하기 위해 (이들에 대한) 조사가 반드시 필요한 상황"이라고 설명했다. 이 전 지검장은 직권남용 혐의 피의자 신분인 것으로 알려졌다. 그는 중앙지검이 두 사건을 수사하고 무혐의 처분을 내렸을 당시 중앙지검장을 지낸 최종 책임자였다. 아울러 박 특검보는 이날 "특검은 수사 무마 의혹과 관련해 법원으로부터 압수수색 영장을 발부받았다"며 "각 사건의 처분이 있던 당시에 법무부 장관, 대통령실, 민정수석, 검찰총장, 서울중앙지검장, 중앙지검 제4차장 및 디올백 명품 수수 사건의 수사 라인에 있던 검사들의 사무실과 차량, 휴대폰, 업무용 PC 등에 대한 압수수색을 오늘 오전부터 진행하고 있다"고 덧붙였다. 김주현 전 민정수석 사진. [사진=뉴스핌DB] 압수수색 대상은 박성재 전 법무부 장관, 김주현 전 대통령실 민정수석, 심우정 전 검찰총장, 박승환 전 중앙지검1차장검사, 김승호 전 형사1부장검사 등 총 8명이다. 디올백 수수 사건은 윤석열 전 대통령이 당선인 신분일 때 김 여사가 최재영 목사로부터 고가 디올백을 수수했다는 내용으로, 지난해 중앙지검 형사1부가 불기소 처분한 사건이다. 인터넷 매체 서울의소리는 2023년 12월 김 여사를 청탁금지법 위반 혐의로 고발했으나 지난해 10월 검찰은 김 여사를 '혐의 없음'으로 불기소 처분했다. 직무 관련성과 대가성을 인정할 수 없고 청탁금지법상 공무원 배우자를 처벌하는 규정이 없다는 이유에서다. 특검팀은 지난 2일 수사 무마 의혹과 관련해 대검, 중앙지검, 내란 특검팀 사무실 등을 압수수색한 데 이어 추가 자료를 확보할 필요성이 있다고 보고 이날도 관련 압수수색을 진행하고 있다. 특검팀은 또 김 여사가 지난해 5월 박성재 당시 법무부 장관에게 자신에 대한 검찰 수사를 무마해달라고 외압을 행사했다는 의혹과 관련한 자료도 확보할 예정이다. 앞서 김 여사는 당시 박 전 장관에게 '내 수사는 어떻게 되고 있나' '김혜경, 김정숙 수사는 왜 잘 진행이 안 되고 있나' 등의 텔레그램 메시지를 보낸 것으로 알려졌다. 해당 메시지는 이원석 당시 검찰총장이 같은 달 2일 김 여사 관련 전담 수사팀 구성을 지시한 직후 오간 것으로 전해진다. 한편 특검팀은 수사 기간이 오는 28일 종료되는 만큼, 남은 기간 수사가 마무리되지 못할 경우 다른 수사기관에 사건을 이첩하는 방안도 검토하고 있다. yek105@newspim.com 2025-12-18 15:59
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'민주 돈봉투' 윤관석·임종성 등 2심 무죄 [서울=뉴스핌] 백승은 기자 = 2021년 더불어민주당 전당대회에서 '돈 봉투 사건'의 핵심 인물인 윤관석·임종성 전 민주당 의원과 허종식 민주당 의원이 1심에서 유죄를 받았지만 항소심에서 모두 무죄를 선고받았다. 항소심 재판부는 일명 '이정근 녹취록'이 위법수집증거라며 유죄의 증거로 사용할 수 없다고 봤다. 서울고법 형사2부(재판장 설범식)는 18일 정당법 위반으로 기소된 윤 전 의원과 임 전 의원, 허 의원에 대한 선고 기일을 열고 이같이 판결했다. 앞서 1심 재판부는 윤 전 의원에게 징역 9개월에 집행유예 2년을 임 전 의원과 허 의원에게 징역 3개월에 집행유예 1년을 선고했다. 공직선거법상 금고 이상 형 확정시 의원직을 상실하는데, 이는 의원직 상실에 해당한다. 윤관석 전 민주당 의원. [사진=뉴스핌 DB] 반면 항소심 재판부는 이 사건 공소 제기의 핵심 증거인 이정근 전 민주당 사무부총장의 휴대전화에서 추출한 '이정근 녹취록'이 적법한 절차를 거쳐 임의제출됐는지 확인되지 않는다며 무죄를 선고했다. 형사소송법 제308조의2에 따르면 적법하지 않은 절차에 따라 수집한 증거는 증거로 채택되지 않는다. 이정근 녹취록에는 윤 전 의원은 이 전 총장과의 통화에서 "인천 둘 하고, 종성이는 (돈봉투를) 안 주려고 했는데, 얘들이 버젓이 '형님, 우리도 주세요'라고 해서 3개 뺏겼어"라고 언급했다. 검찰은 윤 전 의원이 언급하는 '3개'가 돈봉투였다고 봤다. 재판부는 이 전 총장의 휴대전화 내 자동 녹음 파일이 3만여 개에 달해 정확한 개수나 내용을 파악하고 있기 어려운 사정, 이 전 총장이 원심 증인신문 과정에서도 휴대전화 내 이 사건 관련 내용이 있다는 것을 인지하지 못했다는 점을 꼬집었다. 이를 바탕으로 이 전 총장의 휴대전화 내 전자정보는 적법한 절차를 거쳐 수집한 것이 아니기 때문에 유죄 증거로 보기 힘들다는 판단이다. 또 이 전 총장의 휴대전화는 그의 알선수재 사건 관련 수사 중 제출한 것인데, 이 사건과는 무관하므로 검찰이 별도의 영장을 발부받아야 했음에도 그렇게 하지 않은 점도 꼬집었다. 재판부는 "전자정보 탐색 과정에서 별도 범죄혐의에 대해서 의견 갈리는 경우엔 추가 증거 수집 중단하고 영장을 발부받아야 한다"라며 "압수에 관한 절차를 침해하는 내용"이라고 봤다. 송영길 전 더불어민주당 대표. [사진=뉴스핌 DB] 한편 민주당 돈봉투 의혹은 지난 2021년 민주당 전당대회로 거슬러 올라간다. 당시 당대표 후보였던 송영길 전 민주당 대표(현 소나무당 대표)를 당선시키기 위해 박용수 전 보좌관이 사업가 김 모 씨에게 6750만원 상당의 돈을 받고 여러 의원을 통해 민주당 의원들에게 돈봉투를 전달했다는 게 골자다. 윤 전 의원은 박 전 보좌관으로부터 2021년 4월 27일과 28일 양일에 걸쳐 6000만원을 전달받고, 28일 국회 본관 외교통일위원회 소회의실에서 송 전 대표를 당대표로 지지하는 국회의원 모임에 좌장 자격으로 참석해 돈봉투를 살포했다는 의혹을 받는다. 임 전 의원과 허 의원은 이날 윤 전 의원에게 돈봉투를 받았다고 알려진 현역 의원 중 일부다. 즉 돈봉투는 사업가 김 씨→박용수·강래구 전 한국수자원공사 상임감사위원·이정근 전 민주당 사무부총장→윤관식 전 의원→현역 의원 20명으로 전달됐다. 관련 인물들은 1심에서는 대부분 유죄를 선고받았으나, '이정근 녹취록'이 위법수집증거로 판명돼 2심에서 뒤집혔다.  사건의 핵심 인물인 송 전 대표는 1심에서 먹고사는문제연구소(먹사연)를 통한 불법 정치자금 수수 등으로 징역 2년을 선고받았으나, 돈봉투 살포 의혹인 정당법 위반에 대해서는 무죄를 인정받았다. 역시 이정근 녹취록이 위법수집증거로 판명되면서다.    100wins@newspim.com 2025-12-18 11:02
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