Posted on 09/08/2010 8:39:10 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Amid signs that another financial bubble might be in the making this time involving U.S. Treasury bonds priced at about 100 times their yield it would be helpful to review what one might call bubble dynamics.
Thats the subject of a new book, Crisis Economics, by Nouriel Roubini, the New York University economics professor who famously warned about the housing bubble that began to break in 2007. He discusses how and why markets fail. He blames the financial meltdown on the mantra of free markets and decades of free market fundamentalism. He declares that in the future, central banks must proactively use monetary policy and credit policy to rein in and tame speculative bubbles.
One problem with this view is that the government officials who were supposedly watching out for us failed to see the housing bubble develop, and they didnt do anything about it. For example:
On April 17, 2002, Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan downplayed the idea of a housing bubble.
On March 4, 2003, Greenspan stated that any analogy to stock-market pricing behavior and bubbles is a rather large stretch.
In spring 2004, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation declared: There is no U.S. housing bubble . . . it is unlikely that home prices are poised to plunge nationwide.
On Oct. 19, 2004, Greenspan expressed the sunny view that the run‑up of housing prices and housing debt wasnt overly worrisome.
In December 2004, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported: The most widely cited evidence of a bubble is not persuasive . . . a bubble does not exist.
On Jan. 28, 2007, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke testified before the Senate Budget Committee about financial trends. He didnt say a word about a possible bubble. He expected that the budget deficit may stabilize or moderate further over the next few years.
In April 2007, the International Monetary Fund issued a report that said the overall U.S. economy is holding up well. The IMF suggested the continuation of strong global growth as the most likely scenario. Greenspan, Bernanke, and others look like dummies for not seeing a bubble thats obvious to us now. But since theyre smart guys, it would be reasonable to suppose that recognizing a bubble might be hard, and that government officials could have difficulty protecting us.
Government officials are imperfect human beings, so they make mistakes. After all, nobody can foresee the future. Government officials scan a constant, voluminous flow of often contradictory economic data. They arent sure that were in a bubble or a recession until its far along. Nor are they sure what to do after they find out. Because officials have considerable power, their mistakes are likely to harm not just a city or state or region but the entire U.S. economy and beyond. Political power magnifies the harm done by human error.
Even if there somehow are perfect officials who always know the right thing to do, theyre unlikely to be given the necessary power by the president and Congress. Incumbent politicians are more concerned about getting reelected than anything else. Theres pressure for Federal Reserve officials to play ball by promoting easy money before an election, because if they create political problems, politicians can retaliate by restricting the Feds power. Reining in a bubble which means no more easy money, and consequently trouble and possible bankruptcy for firms that have become dependent on it, and therefore higher unemployment is absolutely the last thing incumbent politicians want.
Roubinis idea of rational government intervention is a fantasy. Intervention is subject to political pressures that work overwhelmingly in favor of promoting bubbles and against reining them in. Such pressures are about as difficult to control as runaway government spending. Anyone who doubts this ought to consider how Congress passed a so-called financial-reform bill without addressing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac the government-sponsored enterprises that promoted the housing bubble by spending trillions on subprime mortgages. We shouldnt be surprised if it turns out were in another bubble now.
Far from being our salvation, as Roubini suggests, politicians and government officials are the biggest bubble-makers. We need less government intervention, because its a principal source of instability. When making financial decisions, ordinary people should assume that were on our own, because we almost certainly are.
Jim Powell, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, is the author of FDRs Folly, Wilsons War, Bully Boy, and other books. His next book is Whats Likely To Happen When Government Goes Broke.
People who live beyond their means!
That makes far too much sense to ever be adopted.
Another part of the problem is identifying actual bubbles as opposed to regular supply/demand issues, and whether government can objectively do that. There are also concerns about whether the goverment has the authority to do anything about what it might suspect is a bubble.
I think the question about what to do about the “housing bubble” is rather counterintuitive simply because of the source of the perverse incentives that allowed it to occur. It wasn’t the markets. It was the Basel Recourse Rule among other regualtory irregularities that unhinged housing/finance market equilibrium.
With that in mind, less government involvement in the financial system is likely the better solution as it seems to have been behind most other bubbles in recent memory as well.
The largest bubble of all is the cost of higher education. Makes housing and even health care look like goose bumps in comparison.
Bubbles. i know bubbles and you should see her make bubbles in the tub too.
I saw it coming in 2003, and I have very little background in economics. My prediction then was that the “burst” was going to make the S&L bailout of the 1980s look like a walk in the park.
That would have been my first guess.
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