^ immigration is what's fueling our current population growth. Without it, we'd be stagnant. It's the same story across other first-world nations too.So population growth maybe won't continue exponentially (unless maybe we can start colonizing other planets). I still think though that our economy, even at a linear population growth, still can't sustain us all at the current rate.
2/10/2009 12:31:34 AM
2/10/2009 12:35:46 AM
2/10/2009 7:02:31 AM
^^Well a couple of thingsOne the Chinese government is not omnipotent. By some estimates it costs up to 15% of GDP to subsidize the Yuan, given the huge capital account surplus generated by the US. Without that it would have just be beyond the realm of possibility.Two, at least in terms of statistical accounting building homes not only adds to GDP but is investment. Now, you might argue that its useless investment but this is a different story. In the beginning of the decade there was a lot of talk about dark fiber. Fiber optic cables that had been laid for a digital revolution that never lived up to its hype. That fiber was still investment whether or not it was being used.Lastly, I don't know if Fannie Mae had any significant impact on the extent of overall housing investment. Fannie and Freddie do lower the rate at which mortgage funds can be borrowed but the difference between conforming loans and Fannie Freddie loans outside of this crisis was typically around 0.5%In addition, where we saw the real boom was outside of the type loans that Fannie and Freddie will package. Moreover, there are some economists who suggest that Fannie and Freddie actually raise the cost of non-conforming loans by diverting investors to conforming loans. To the extent that is true, Fannie and Freddie actually were a mitigating force in the boom.
2/10/2009 11:18:26 AM
TKE-Tegs head just exploded.
2/10/2009 11:27:52 AM
2/10/2009 12:37:02 PM
2/10/2009 1:07:45 PM
^ From what I understand, that sounds correct. Fannie and Freddie tried to stay away from the exotic loan vehicles, and the subprime securities they bought were supposedly the "least risky" ones out there. But a subprime loan is a subprime loan, and extending credit to those who aren't credit-worthy is inherently risky. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac created the subprime bubble by investing heavily in these securities, as required by the goals set by HUD. Just look at subprime loans as a percentage of all loans prior to the mid-90's. MBS's have been around for a while, but there was hardly any subprime market to speak of. People with bad credit paid higher interest rates, and those who didn't qualify for loans simply couldn't get them. Once Fannie and Freddie jumped into the fray and started buying subprime securities, the subprime market, flush with capital, exploded and inertia took over.[Edited on February 10, 2009 at 1:21 PM. Reason : 2]
2/10/2009 1:14:54 PM
I am pretty sure I have seen plenty of analysis regarding the GSEs that doesn't pin them like you (and the right leaning Post) is attempting to do. Yes they had a part, but it was a smaller one in a perfect storm than is implied by the reading and charts above. Anecdotally, myself, 5 of my closest friends, my parents, and a whole host of people that I've seen post in the lounge got "sub prime" loans. None of us have defaulted.Sub prime covers a lot of ground, and to just take those numbers above in total without really knowing what the underlying make up of the terms and borrower profile looks like doesn't get us too far down the road to knowing just how much was caused by FM/FM. And anyway, others have done this work. I'd post links but I'd get attacked for the writers being partisan hacks.
2/10/2009 1:33:31 PM
The extent to which Fannie and Freddie contributed to the subprime mess can certainly be debated. Saying that they were a "mitigating factor" in the mess, as kwsmith2 did at the top of the page and in other threads, is absolutely wrong. It really makes me wonder how he can miss the boat so thoroughly on the role they played.
2/10/2009 1:52:13 PM
random anonymous internet guy >>>>>>>>> university economics professorFTMFW[Edited on February 10, 2009 at 3:55 PM. Reason : ]
2/10/2009 3:53:48 PM
2/10/2009 3:56:20 PM
^^^ perhaps he just made a simple semantic error? Maybe he meant "contributing" or "aggravating" factor. "Mitigating" is just the completely wrong word.If Freddie and Fannie had never existed, this issue could have still played out exactly as it did though.I think the abuse of naked short selling, and general instability with the way CDOs/MBSes are innately structured play a bigger role than the mere bad practices of Freddie and Fannie.[Edited on February 10, 2009 at 4:02 PM. Reason : ]
2/10/2009 3:56:50 PM
2/11/2009 7:17:00 AM
2/11/2009 8:50:28 AM
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_type=&search_query=ascent+of+money+safe+as+houses
2/11/2009 2:43:10 PM
also, this series:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmLNV8WYAO0&feature=PlayList&p=AB1E505CF53E7A4F&index=0&playnext=1
2/11/2009 2:51:47 PM
2/14/2009 1:45:46 AM
2/14/2009 12:00:25 PM
Well a couple of things -One they were taken into convsevatorship. So, they never really went bust in the traditional sense that they could make their payments. The government effectively revoked their charter as private companies.The reason is that there was some questions as to whether or not they were going to have trouble meeting their service requirements on the loans they package. Fannie and Freddie, had a total of somewhere around $5 Trillion in loans which they had securitzed into Prime MBS.However, the way Fannie / Freddie MBS (agency debt) works is that they insure the buyers against default. So, if a borrower ever misses a payment Fannie / Freddie make that payment for them and then try and collect it later.Well the capital base they were using to insure these mortgage was tiny in comparison to the $5 Trillion were effectively underwriting. They did have some investments in subprime which went bad and reduced that capital base even more.On top of that prime mortgages were also starting to go bad at higher and higher rates.So this put a lot of risk that Fannie / Freddie might not be able to cover all the payments of late borrowers.Under no conditions could agency debt be allowed to default. This would simply send the world into a tailspin. So the government took in and officially backed Fannie and FreddieOne of the issues that was in finance before all of this is whether Agency debt was "officially" backed by the US government. Guys like Greg Mankiw warned that it was not and that investors were mistakenly accepting too low interest rates on Agencies because of this belief.My argument is that they were. It short because no matter what the law says the US government is not now, nor in any foreseeable future would be in a position to allow a default on Agency debt. Therefore, you might as well treat it as if there is an explicit government guarantee. Indeed, I think the way this played out showed that to be true.
2/14/2009 12:42:57 PM
NOTHING TO SEE HERE PEOPLE - THIS IS JUST A NORMAL BUSINESS CYCLE RECESSION. MOVE ALONG PLEASE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUO0j3BiAMQhttp://www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_11703023
2/17/2009 1:17:22 PM
Thread should now be called "The Impressive Cliff Diving U.S."
2/17/2009 1:48:01 PM
http://tinyurl.com/chg3ry
2/19/2009 10:48:08 AM
don't hold your breath on that.
2/19/2009 10:54:25 PM
lots of good quotes here:http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/02/paul-volcker/
2/22/2009 9:58:41 PM
So the answer is to be more like Canada? Fuck.
2/22/2009 10:17:06 PM
^^ Sounds like some good fear mongering. Or maybe he hasn't thought through everything he's saying:
2/22/2009 10:47:33 PM
Are you kidding? Your reading comprehension is terrible. The "every two years" comment is regarding the asset bubbles. The "nothing like this comment" is regarding the mother of all asset bubbles.That you are even questioning is this something we've never seen before shows just how far out in left field you are.
2/23/2009 8:34:27 AM
I don't ever recall hearing someone say that bubbles in the economy only happen every hundred years. Anyone who looks at our economy over the last hundred could tell you that was wrong without even trying. So if he's talking about mere bubbles, then he's lying.
2/23/2009 8:42:23 AM
2/23/2009 8:48:53 AM
So then enlighten me oh great wise one. What is he talking about that "they all said" only happen every hundred years or so, but has been happening every 1 or 2 years? Is he talking about bubbles? Financial recessions? Crises which shake our belief in the stability of the financial system? What? What are these "events" that "they all said" would occur every hundred years that have been occurring every 1 or 2 years? It seems to me he's talking about big financial shake downs, you seem to think he's talking about something else, so what is it?
2/23/2009 9:17:02 AM
Look, you took issue because it was a Democrat and called it fear mongering right up front. I'm not doing you the favor of explaining that which you don't understand when your mind is closed already. What he has said is pretty simple and plain if you don't try and make what he is saying more than he has said.
2/23/2009 9:47:42 AM
I know it will scar your little brain to believe this, but I'm not some partisan hack and I don't just throw things out the window because of the letter next to a person's name. I took issue because the statements made are inconsistent with themselves at worst and horribly ambiguous at best leading me to think (as you will note I stated in my first post, without any reference to party or politics) that it was either fear mongering or a poorly thought out statement. So unless you can point out what you can substitute for the word "events" in his statement that makes sense, I'm sticking by that initial interpretation.
2/23/2009 2:44:01 PM
The reason you think they are inconsistent is you are conflating 100 yr events with an economic disaster akin to the Great Depression (ie, you are thinking in terms of 100 yr natural disasters), and my interpretation is Volcker isn't saying that at all. He is saying that financial engineering is producing events you'd expect to see once in a blue moon more and more frequently as the math alchemist behind the scenes are finding holes in regulation quicker than they can be filled. And shocker, every so often (like now) one of these events is going to do more than just correct, it's going to be an outright explosion in our face. It isn't fear mongering, it isn't ambiguity, it's your lack of comprehension as to what he is saying.
2/23/2009 3:00:40 PM
Compare the decline in real GDP over the past 4 quarters (from The Economist):U.S. -0.2%France -1.0Germany -1.6Britain -1.8Italy -2.6Japan -4.6Does it make sense to blame the largest declines in GDP on one country with the smallest decline? If so, then we need some explanation of how some uniquely American “illness has spread” to so many innocent victims.If the explanation is supposed to be falling U.S. imports, then the worst decline by far would have been in Canada and Mexico (where real GDP was rising even in the third quarter). If the alleged causality is supposed to be because of some undefined links between financial centers, then Italy would not be among the hardest hit.When it comes to trade, in fact, the shoe is mainly on the other foot: Collapsing foreign economies crushed U.S. exports.In the second quarter of 2008, U.S. exports accounted for 1.54 percentage points of the 2.83% annualized rise in real GDP. But falling exports subtracted 2.84 percentage points from fourth quarter GDP. Falling exports, not falling consumption, were the biggest single contributor to the overall drop of 3.8%.After looking at which economies fell first and fastest, it might be more accurate to say that some foreign illness has spread to the U.S. economy than to assert or assume the causality ran only in the opposite direction.http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2009/02/22/the-us-didnt-cause-the-world-recession/
2/23/2009 4:03:46 PM
The saying has always been that when Wall Street coughs, the rest of the world catches a cold. This downturn has certainly showed that to be true.[Edited on February 23, 2009 at 4:14 PM. Reason : 2]
2/23/2009 4:10:09 PM
Where did the 2.93% import growth come from? That makes no sense to me.
2/23/2009 4:32:41 PM
Try to predict shifts in relative prices!"In Agatha Christie's autobiography, she mentioned how she never thought she would ever be wealthy enough to own a car - nor so poor that she wouldn't have servants..."
2/26/2009 10:03:10 AM
Are you drunk?
2/26/2009 10:26:06 AM
-6.2%http://www.cnbc.com/id/29426821
2/27/2009 8:51:22 AM
Bleed Until Bankruptcy
2/27/2009 9:19:17 AM
jesus, that is a huge revision downward.....
2/27/2009 9:53:51 AM
2/27/2009 4:33:10 PM
Bullshit. The problem is not us, per-se. The problem is the rest of the planet:
2/27/2009 4:43:16 PM
yeah, yeah, it's never our fault. mhum.... there's no way American's have been living far beyond our means for 40 years now. Right - we've been living just fine, and it's everybody else's fault for not buying our shit. Forget that we went into a negative trade balance in the 60's because American's decided it was easier, and more profitable (at least in the short term) to just push money around and let the rest of the world actually make shit.
2/27/2009 5:06:22 PM
2/27/2009 5:24:23 PM
Sure, use the revised number and were worse than all those listed there besides Japan.What now?
2/27/2009 5:34:08 PM
2/27/2009 5:34:24 PM
2/27/2009 5:37:20 PM
crickets
2/27/2009 6:30:24 PM