Posted on 03/04/2009 11:02:23 PM PST by dennisw
The economist Ludwig von Mises is more succinct in his analysis: There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought on by credit expansion. The question is only whether the crisis should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved. The basic problem originated with the Federal Reserve when former Fed chief Alan Greenspan lowered interest rates below the rate of inflation for 31 months straight which pumped trillions of dollars of low interest credit into the financial system and ignited a speculative frenzy in real estate. Greenspan has spent a great deal of time lately trying to avoid any blame for the catastrophe he created. He is a first-rate "buck passer". In Wednesday's Wall Street Journal, Greenspan scribbled out a 1,500-word defense of his actions as head of the Federal Reserve, pointing the finger at everything from China's "low cost workforce" to "the fall of the Berlin Wall". The essay was typical Greenspan gibberish. In his trademark opaque language; Greenspan tiptoes through the well-documented facts of his tenure as Fed chief to absolve himself of any personal responsibility for the ensuing disaster. Greenspan's apologia is a masterpiece of circuitous logic, deliberate evasion and utter denial of reality. He says: I do not doubt that a low U.S. federal-funds rate in response to the dot-com crash, and especially the 1 per cent rate set in mid-2003 to counter potential deflation, lowered interest rates on adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) and may have contributed to the rise in U.S. home prices. In my judgment, however, the impact on demand for homes financed with ARMs was not major. "Not major"? 3.5 million potential foreclosures, 11-month inventory backlog, plummeting home prices, an entire industry in terminal distress pulling down the global economy is not major? But Greenspan is partially correct. The troubles in housing cannot be entirely attributed to the Fed's "cheap credit" monetary policies. They were also nursed along by a Doctrine of Deregulation which has permeated US capital markets since the Reagan era. Greenspan's views on how markets should function were -- to great extent -- shaped by this non-interventionist/non-supervisory ideology which has created enormous equity bubbles and imbalances. The former-Fed chief's support for adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) and subprime lending shows that Greenspan thought of himself as more as a cheerleader for the big market-players than an impartial referee whose job was to monitor reckless or unethical behavior. Greenspan also adds this revealing bit of information in his article: The value of equities traded on the world's major stock exchanges has risen to more than $50 trillion, double what it was in 2002. Sharply rising home prices erupted into major housing bubbles world-wide, Japan and Germany (for differing reasons) being the only principal exceptions." ("The Roots of the Mortgage Crisis", Alan Greenspan, Wall Street Journal) This admission proves Greenspan's culpability. If he knew that stock prices had doubled their value in just 3 years, then he also knew that equities had not risen due to increases in productivity or demand.(market forces) The only reasonable explanation for the asset inflation, therefore, was monetary policy. As his own mentor, Milton Friedman famously stated, "Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon". Any capable economist would have known that the explosion in housing and equities prices was a sign of uneven inflation. Now that the bubble has popped, inflation is spreading like mad through the entire economy. Greenspan is a very sharp man. It is crazy to think he didn't know what was going on. This is basic economic theory. Of course he knew why stocks and housing prices were skyrocketing. He was the one who put the dominoes in motion with the help of his printing press. But Greenspan's low interest credit is only part of the equation. The other part has to do with way that the markets have been transformed by "structured finance". (Derivatives) What's so destructive about structured finance is that it allows the banks to create credit "out of thin air", stripping the Fed of its role as controller of the money supply. David Roache explains how this works in an excerpt from his book "New Monetarism" which appeared in the Wall Street Journal: The reason for the exponential growth in credit, but not in broad money, was simply that banks didn't keep their loans on their books any more-and only loans on bank balance sheets get counted as money. Now, as soon as banks made a loan, they "securitized" it and moved it off their balance sheet. There were two ways of doing this. One was to sell the securitized loan as a bond. The other was "synthetic" securitization: for example, using derivatives to get rid of the default risk (with credit default swaps) and lock in the interest rate due on the loan (with interest-rate swaps). Both forms of securitization meant that the lending bank was free to make new loans without using up any of its lending capacity once its existing loans had been "securitized." So, to redefine liquidity under what I call New Monetarism, one must add, to the traditional definition of broad money, all the credit being created and moved off banks' balance sheets and onto the balance sheets of nonbank financial intermediaries. This new form of liquidity changed the very nature of the credit beast. What now determined credit growth was risk appetite: the readiness of companies and individuals to run their businesses with higher levels of debt. (Wall Street Journal) The banks have been creating trillions of dollars of credit (by originating mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations and asset-backed commercial paper) without maintaining the proportional capital reserves to back them up. That explains why the banks were so eager to provide mortgages to millions of loan applicants who had no documentation, no income, no collateral and a bad credit history. They believed there was no risk, because they were making enormous profits without tying up any of their capital. It was, quite literally, money for nothing.
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Yes.
http://is.gd/lUQZ
Thank you. I sure don’t get pleasure from it. I wish I could idolize him as so many others here do. If we were in this mess and Clinton had just completed his second term, what would we be saying right now?
Adding insult to injury, Bush will go on a lecture circuit and spew words of wisdom to those who will attend. And when he does I’m going to be thinking, sit down and shut the hell up. Have you no conscience?
Look where Reagan left the Conservative movement. Then look at where Bush has left it.
You take care.
Yeah, I agree. I wish I had a brilliant answer to our current “no-win” political mess, but I don’t. “Mr. Know It All” is just what my wife calls me, it’s not literally true. :)
Thanks RTT, sadly, I agree.
People really need to get past the “Fannie/Freddie” thing. When was the last time Fannie and Freddie needed a bailout? Months ago. How much did it cost? Not that much, relatively.
Who’s the dying pig that’s been back to the trough for THIRDS and has, so far gobbled up over $125 billion? AIG. Now, even if the “Community Reinvestment Act” forced all the banks to make bad loans (and in reality, it didn’t), no one put a gun to AIG’s head and made them insure those loans. No one forced the banks to play shell games and turn those loans into fungible assets. That was the banks and the failure of the banking system (including government oversight). These were the people we trusted to know the difference between a good loan and a bad loan. Of course idiots will take a loan they shouldn’t, but the important thing is that the people with the money not grant that loan.
If the banks had not been able to monetize those loans, and had AIG (and other insurers) been unable to insure them, we’d fine FINE. Yeah, a few failed banks, some taxpayer cleanup, but nothing worse that the S&L debacle that happened under Reagan.
Your link is no good.
The problem of course STARTED with Fannie and Freddie, but all of that could have been averted had our six years of Republican ownership of Capitol Hill and the White House resulted in positive Conservative accomplishments, such as Fair Tax, or Tort Reform, ... But I guess trying to outspend the RATs was far more important.
But Fannie and Freddie were the vehicles that got us here along with all of the other market toxicity that came along with it.
Now .. trying to continually bandage (with more and more taxpayers $$) the mortal wounds of corporations like AIG is just retarded! Let them do what every OTHER company has ever done in America and let them file for bankruptcy and we can all move along .. nothing more to see here.
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