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| quote: | Originally posted by Krypton
Greenspan started it with the 1% interest rate in 2003. Money became too easy to get. So lenders started taking on enormous risk. The simple fact of the matter is the American economy is a psuedo free-market. While business has a relatively high degree of freedom (compared to say Venezuela), ultimately the economy is centrally planned. I guess you can call it a centralized capitalism.
Now, the action taken by the Fed with Bear Stearns merely highlights the fact that when the Fed messes up, as in making money too cheap as it did in 2003-2004, they have to clean up their own mess. Yes, government intervention is a paradox of capitalism, but then again, the American economy is far from a laissez free market system. |
I agree that Greenspan played a huge role in facilitating this mess. It's no secret he lowered rates to the floor and then encouraged people to take out adjustable rate mortgages, but he is not entirely to blame. I was reading an investment newsletter earlier tonight, and as much as I hate to "defend" Greenspan, the author did make a few salient points.
| quote: | In Defense of Alan Greenspan
Alan Greenspan is routinely blamed in many circles for creating the housing bubble. It was his keeping rates too low, we are assured, that was responsible for the run-up in home prices. Now, he probably did keep rates too low for too long, but I am not certain that we can lay the blame at his feet. He had a lot of help.
First, a point made by Peter Bernstein. Housing prices rose by almost 50% from 1998 to 2001, before Greenspan started on his rate-cutting binge. 50% in three years when the Fed funds rate was over 6% is not exactly encouragement from the Fed to buy homes. It seems people were ready to do it without low rates. So, a good part of the bubble was not due to lower rates.
And home prices continued to rise rather sharply, even as the Fed began to raise rates in 2005-6. We built 3.5 million more homes over the last ten years than the trend growth suggested we needed. They were not all built during the period of low interest rates.
While low rates did help, the bubble was aided and abetted by sloppy lending practices. It now looks like some two million people took out loans they are going to have difficulty repaying, and are likely headed for foreclosure. Rating agencies labeled these loans as AAA credits. Mortgage and investment bankers sold them to all manner of institutions.
All these culprits took advantage of the low rates, but that was not the cause of the bubble. If proper lending practices had been followed, there would have been far fewer buyers and less building, less speculation, and so on.
Greenspan, in hindsight, should have raised rates sooner, which I said at the time. And lower rates did make homes more affordable. No question about that. But to lay the blame for the housing bubble at his feet is not entirely fair. He had a lot of helpers who did the really heavy lifting. |
There were plenty of cooks in the kitchen brewing the toxic broth.
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