You can find a pretty informative post on the housing bubble from the blog "The Big Picture" here: http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/10/goal-increase-m.html Everything in it makes sense except when he seems to perpetuate the familiar "progressive" line that there never would have been a bubble in the housing market if Alan Greenspan just hadn't left interest rates "so low, for so long":
10/14/2008 12:18:21 PM
Greenspan should have done more to deflate the bubble.
10/14/2008 12:20:24 PM
^ didn't read my post huh??? My argument is that Greenspan COULDN'T have done more to prevent the bubble because he doesn't control long-term interest rates. You should really read it. I provide links to articles from economists at the federal reserve going as far back as 1995 that essentially all say the same thing: the impact of monetary policy on long-term interest rates (like mortgage rates) is weak at best.[Edited on October 14, 2008 at 12:25 PM. Reason : ``]
10/14/2008 12:25:16 PM
Socks, the mortgages in question are not fixed rate mortgages, but one year ARMs which most definitely do respond to short term rates.
10/14/2008 12:30:44 PM
^^This is the point I try to make. Although there is some argument that the Fed got the party started there is simply no reason to believe that they could have stopped it. The simple fact is that they did enact policy to deflate the bubble and it didn't work. Thus far I have heard no evidence, or seen any argument that disputes what I see as the basic underlying reality. The credit bubble and subsequent collapse was at its heart was caused by faith in the CDO model which turned out to be misplaced.Not Greenspan. Not Fannie. Not Freddie. Not a culture of living beyond our means. And sure as hell not the Community Reinvestment Act.[Edited on October 14, 2008 at 12:33 PM. Reason : .]
10/14/2008 12:32:26 PM
^^^He did exert control, however, in his capacity as the Chairman of the Fed to influence short-term ("prime") rates. This is not iron-fisted control over long-term rates, but it does in general work as a leading indicator of the general money/credit supply.Greenspan did a lot of things right - like in general, keeping a tight lid on (monetary) inflation. However, the prime rate was being frequently abused, I think, after the dot-com boom and beyond, constantly being ratcheted lower and lower, which ultimately left us with too much credit. Worse than that, however, is the fact that it left the Fed with very, very little wiggle room should circumstances turn bad - like, say, now. Last I checked, the overnight funds rate was hovering somewhere around zero now - about the only place it can go from there is to pay banks to borrow funds. This is not exactly a good position to be in.[Edited on October 14, 2008 at 12:33 PM. Reason : ^^^]
10/14/2008 12:32:59 PM
10/14/2008 12:33:25 PM
10/14/2008 12:52:43 PM
not sure if y'all remember, but the economy was in pretty bad shape the first few years of this decade. pretty sure the feds attention was on more pressing issues than a potential housing bubble, such as helping spur economic growth while guarding inflation - which is the primary job of all central banks. and even if in 2004 (before rates started increasing again) we had predicted the current meltdown, the solution would NOT have been to increase rates faster - it would have been to inact some regulations around sub-prime mortgages.
10/14/2008 1:07:45 PM
do people really think that there is one sole party responsible for this mess?
10/14/2008 1:31:01 PM
10/14/2008 1:37:30 PM
Actually, most of the flak Greenspan seems to be catching these days isn't for the housing bubble but for his strong support for not just derivatives but the loose regulations surrounding them as well.
10/14/2008 1:40:55 PM
http://www.ncsu.edu/millenniumseminars/
10/14/2008 1:54:00 PM
I like how socks`` gets an attack in there on "progressives" even though progressives aren't blaming Greenspan.
10/14/2008 2:06:26 PM
10/14/2008 4:16:37 PM
nutsmaker, I would say that the "Big Picture" leans progressive, and that is the argument he is making. But there are others. I would certainly consider Paul Krugman a progressive and he has been railing against Greenspan for years, making the exact same argument.[Edited on October 14, 2008 at 4:51 PM. Reason : ``]
10/14/2008 4:50:52 PM