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Crucified By Your House

Posted by Ian Welsh, Firedoglake at 4:20 AM on December 25, 2007.


As many have noted, the last time the US saw widespread housing price declines was the Great Depression.
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In 1896 William Jennings Bryan brough down the house with his Cross of Gold speech, in which he railed against the gold standard. Americans responded because many felt they had indeed been crucified upon a cross of gold by the bankers and the rich men of the east. Today, it's their houses they've been nailed to, and it's their houses they'll go down with.

As in Bryan's day, today one of the main problems in the US is the monetary system, but unlike in 1896, when tight money was used to keep creditors, most especially farmers, in their place, today it has been loose credit and repeated inflationary asset bubbles driven by uncontrolled money creation which threatens the middle class. While the uncontrolled creation of money isn't limited to the housing bubble, or what is laughably called "sub-prime", since the problems extend far past sub-prime, understanding how real-estate and housing work is integral to understanding the impact, because for most Americans their home is the most important asset they own.

To talk about Housing one has to first talk about what money is. In the modern world money is generally created as debt. The simplest form is where someone goes to the bank, say "I have asset X that's worth Y and I want to borrow money." The bank takes a look at the asset, checks you out and if they think you can pay them back, they give you the loan. Because a bank can loan multiples of the money it has been given to keep for other people (deposits) most of that money is, in effect, created out thin air.

That's the fractional reserve system, and it creates money.

Now before this system, the US and most other countries were on gold based monetary systems. In that system the money supply could only expand as fast as the supply of gold or a multiple thereof (although since notes were redeemable in cash, a gold economy was always in danger of bank runs). Since the supply of gold doesn't have much, if any correlation to the size of an economy, that meant that gold backed economies were often short on liquidity--there just wasn't enough money to support the economic activity of the country. At other times you might get a Gold boom (say in California or Alaska) and gold would flood the economy. Again, this didn't have much to do with the fundamental growth rate of the economy, just with how the gold mining sector was doing.

The end result of this, especially as industrialization increased the rate of economic growth by an order of magnitude over pre-industrial periods, were repeated financial crises. If you pick up a history of the economy in the 19th century you'll be numbed by the number of recessions, Panics and yes, even Depressions. The 30's Depression was called the "Great" depression not just because it was so bad, but to distinguish it from other depressions that had occurred.

This also sets the background of the silver movement, and William Jenning Bryan's "Cross of Gold". Farmers and many others wanted to allow silver to also be used as money. They were very aware that this would lead to inflation and that's what they wanted because they were mostly debtors. They owed money and they wanted to pay it back cheaper. And they wanted more money so there'd be fewer panics etc... (And they were very economically literate. Farmers would listen to multiple-hour, in-depth debates by candidates or even just paid speakers.)

When the US and other countries went off gold, and onto the modern lending system of creating money the basis of how you decided how much money to create changed. Instead of it being "how much gold is there", it became "does someone have an asset which can be used to pay the loan back?"

Now, for both individuals and companies this can simply be "I have an income". A company can say "well, we make X million dollars a year of profit and therefore we can pay you back." An individual can say "I have a job, and my expenses are low enough that I can pay you back."

But for big loans you generally needed collateral. For businesses real estate, or a factory, or perhaps an equity stake in the company. For individuals it might be a car, but most often it was a house, or real-estate of some variety.

Indeed, for the median houshold, as of 2000, almost 75% of their net wealth is tied up in their home. Since then, with the decline in US savings rates and the rise of housing prices in the bubble, that number will have only risen.

A huge chunk of the money generation in the US since the thirties, then, has been driven by house loans and the majority of the net wealth of Americans is tied up in house values.

This made sense, not so much because people would buy the house if someone defaulted on their mortgage (though they generally would) but because the house had value, beyond simple shelter, for a number of reasons.

The first is based on location. Real Estate in general, and a house in particular is valuable if it has access to good jobs, to sewage, to water, to power, to shopping and so on. To examine the truth of this, simply note that houses in the middle of nowhere almost always sell for much, much less than those near metropolitan centers. And in general, the further you are out of the city, the less real-estate costs. There are exceptions to the rule, sure, but they have specific explanations such as white flight or the hollowing out cities (which is a confirmation of the rule--when an industry moves out, the real-estate is worth less because there are fewer jobs.) So real-estate is worth something because you can make money from it (retailers and manufacturers locating near ports or railway depots are other examples.)

Housing though has another value, especially in America. Because schools are paid for from property taxes, neighbourhoods with high real-estate values tend to have well-funded schools. All other things being equal those schools perform better than schools with less money. And credentials are how the American middle and lower upper classes have attempted to pass their status down to their children. Eventual earnings track educational attainment better than anything else. So a house in a good area is one of the best things you can do for your children's future prosperity.

And houses are retirement accounts. It's not an IRA that funds most people's "golden" years, it's their house. Borrowing against the house, or very commonly selling it, moving to a southern state with lousy property values and cheap labor (to take care of you when you can't take care of yourself) is very common. Much of the middle class lives and work where the good jobs and good schools are, then move to where the lousy jobs are when they get old.

With housing doing all of these things it might seem to be good for it to become more expensive. Bigger retirement accounts, better schools--what's not to like?

Leaving aside that when housing becomes too expensive it pulls up the ladder and strands young adults, or forces them to take on too-large loans the real problem is that the US's cost structure is too expensive and real-estate costs are just another area where this is true. If you have to spend six hundred thousand to live near a decent job, that job has to justify the payments on a $600,000 house and, more to the point, the job has to be profitable enough for a corporation to justify a salary large enough to pay that mortgage and those property taxes.

When there are countries like India and China where employees can live for much less, and therefore can be paid much less and still live very well, that's a problem. (Indeed, a computer programmer in India earning half what an American does has a much better standard of living in most ways than that American.)

So high real-estate prices, while they allow for increased money supply, also require that American enterprises be much more relatively productive than domiciles with lower real-estate costs. And while American productivity is generally higher, it's not that much higher, especially when you add in artificially low exchange costs, various taxes and so on.

The money supply is still created, mind you, but instead of being used for production in the US, a large amount of it used to buy foreign goods, or floods out of the country as US assets (including mortgages) are bought up by foreign governments and investors. The remainder pools in the US, and is one of the main causes of inflation--both in basic goods like food and energy and in assets like housing itself. A bubble is a case of a self-reinforcing upwards spiral.

When a bubble bursts you get a self-reinforcing downward spiral and a real chance at deflation. I've said for a long time that I expect stagflation first, but after that one of the real options for the US economy is deflation (the other is hyperinflation). That's a large topic, but at its base it's simple enough. If you have a house you bought for 1 million, and no one will buy it for more than $500,000 and you borrowed $1,100,000 against it, a combination of you and the bank are eating a loss of $600,000. That's money that effectively just disappears. Poof, it's gone. And it can't be loaned again, because the house (which you probably don't own, since it's been foreclosed) is now worth only half a million, the money supply can't be increased as much as if it was worth a million.

The same thing can happens with stocks (see Internet bubble). It is currently happening with entire classes of bonds. What matters is when it happens in salaries--when pension funds have no choice but to unilaterally cut payments, when companies unilaterally cut wages or go under, when school boards have to cut jobs and wages.

People have less money--not only because they can borrow less, but because they're earning less. They have to sell even more stuff--houses, cars, stocks, bonds, consumer goods, and the price on those items collapses because they're desperate and everyone else is poor and cheap.

And as the assets that everything is borrowed against collapse in price, the money supply starts to, for a change, actually contract. And just as more money in an economy, given the same amount of economic activity, transalates into inflation, the reverse is true.

Now deflation is only one scenario after stagflation, the other is hyperinflation. Hyperinflation would occur in almost the same scenario except that instead of prices for goods collapsing they explode, because the money supply is so much higher than the amount of economic activity. And it's not yet clear to me which will happen or if we can avoid both because a large amount of what will happen will occur due to deliberate policy choices made by the Fed, Congress, the President and various regulatory agencies and government-sponsored companies.

But there is certainly a great deal to worry about, and it's because housing prices aren't just about housing, they're about money supply, education, competitiveness, retirement and much more. As the largest store of wealth for most Americans, they are one of the lynchpins of the US economy, and if they get knocked out the very foundations of the US economy will be disturbed.

As many have noted, the last time the US saw widespread housing price declines was the Great Depression.

That's not an accident.

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Tagged as: economy, housing

Ian Welsh is the managing editor of The Agonist and a sometime contributor to FDL and the Huffington Post.


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It is not an accident.
Posted by: leland61 on Dec 25, 2007 5:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nothing could be truer. It is not an accident. Economic processes are not magic; they are not controlled by gods; they are not controlled by "the forces of destiny"; they are not controlled by "historic forces"; they are in fact controlled by the bankers, businessmen and politicians whose hands are on the controls of economic activity.

There are no accidents. There are, however, deliberate actions by politicians, bankers and government operatives to serve themselves. These are men (for the most part) who are under the control of greed and the lust for power. They do not care what happens to the peasants - they never have.

There are no accidents. And there are never any accidents in economics. The lie that is told and believed by so many people is that there are "economic forces" and there are the "market forces" and all the rest of the fairy tales invented so that the rich and the elites can manipulate the masses and keep them deluded are quite amazing. Most economists are really mystifiers - that is people who shroud the simple realities of greed and corruption with pages of bullshit and bamboozle the millsions in order to manipulate them.

The "science of economics" is pretty much like the "science of theology" - all fiction.

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Step back and look long and hard
Posted by: wisewebwoman on Dec 25, 2007 7:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I couldn't agree more, it is all an illusion created by the greedy for the greedy encouraging sheeple to put their livelihoods on the line in order to enrich their overseers. How very distant we all have become as to what constitutes reality when the Occupant of the White House encouraged people to 'go shopping' after 9/11. Business as usual, more debt, more deranged acquisitions of Chinese tchotchkas at Walmart paid for by another line of credit/mortgage on the roof over one's head. Which will soon be seized right out from under you (see Katrina, just the beginning trickle of the coming flood) with the help of the Blackwater forces now gathering on the precious homeland. Another illusion. Nothing homey about the homeland either.
I have seen the future and there is absolutely nothing brave or free about it.

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Shakespeare (Shylock) should have said,
Posted by: thekidde on Dec 25, 2007 9:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
first we kill all the bankers. Start with the FED, a huge fraud on the American public that benefits and keeps afloat the oligarchs and new-age robber barons, then the multi-nationals and the all of their ilk - it would be a good start toward global, fiscal sanity that would really float all boats - not just the yachts of the rich - which should be loaded with the rich and sunk in the North Atlantic.

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Foreclosure: Bush's parting gift to the masses
Posted by: bettyn on Dec 25, 2007 10:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some Christmas present this SOB has given to the middle class, isn't it? I know many young people in my very expensive area who are absolutely SCREWED by this mortgage mess. They can't sell without coughing up $20,000 or more because their homes aren't worth anywhere near what they paid for them. And the mortgage is about to go through the roof. They can't pay THAT either.

They try to call the lender to get an extension of their lower interest rate mortgages and are told "tough shit". (You pay of they throw you out on the street!) And you haven't even dealt with the lawsuit the PMI company is going to slap you with next.(You know: the mortgage insurance that was supposed to help you out if you got in trouble which you have been paying for years? Don't think they're not gonna want their piece of flesh, too! You're getting SUED by these clowns as soon as your property goes into foreclosure. )

I went through this in Houston in the 1980's. Luckily we were able to pay these clowns off. It still hurts, however.

We need a combination of the two Roosevelts, Teddy and Franklin to reign in the robber barons and give folks jobs rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure with federal money. Unfortunately I don't see anyone running who has the stones to implement such programs. Besides, Santa Bush has given away all our money to the rich.

Merry Christmas, my ***!

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So, what do we do?
Posted by: sarandib on Dec 25, 2007 10:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This economy is insane. Two years ago I had my own apartment with a view. Now, even with my pay a dollar higher than it was then, the most I can afford is a basement room with no windows in the house of a single mother who would have to foreclose her home if I weren't renting from her. I'm eating almost nothing but oatmeal and spaghetti. I haven't had meat in three months, and I can only afford two pieces of fruit a day, at most. My energy and health are suffering. I don't have the financial capacity for this to get much worse.

I've heard the argument that we should go back to the gold standard, that it was more stable, but it sounds like it apparently wasn't any more stable - in fact was much more unpredictable and uncontrollable - than the current economic system that we have now. So if neither the loan system nor the gold standard are viable economies, what is the solution? What do we do now? Is there any way to stop us from falling into another Great Depression? What can we do as individuals that would add up to a positive effect on the situation? And, by God, is there *any* presidential candidate out there with a good idea on how to fix this? I thought Ron Paul might be a possibility, but between the history on the failure of the Gold Standard in this article and his position on other issues, I've lost hope in him. Thanks for your ideas.

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» RE: So, what do we do? Posted by: TheLimit
This is the Greenspan/Bush disaster
Posted by: UnEasyOne on Dec 25, 2007 11:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alan Greenspan got his political start in the Nixon administration coordinating his campaign in 1968. First time I heard his name, it was as an apologist for Nixon's disastrous economic policies. He was always expert as a promoter of whatever insane economic policies any wingnut was promoting at the time and he held various positions in that administration (Wiki is incomplete on that subject) culminating as Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers.

A strong advocate of fiscal responsibility and tight money whenever a Democrat is in office who raised interest rates whenever anyone got a job in the Clinton administration, doing his level best to cause a recession in the year before the 2000 election (he raised interest rates several times that year - unusual, to say the least, in an election year), he then had to drop them dramatically after W's appointment to prevent a complete collapse of the economy. He continued well past any sane level, dropping the overnight bank rate to an unprecedented 1%!

People who thought of Greenspan as a true fiscal conservative - rather than a partisan hack - were a bit shocked by his support for Bush's insane raid on the treasury by way of huge tax cuts for the rich. Not me.

I have to admit that even I was knocked off my chair when - simultaneous with flooding the market with cheap credit - he encouraged (in Senate testimony) mortgage lenders to engage in "creative financing" options, to get people into houses.

BOOM! Suddenly we had a wide open, wild west in mortgages. 100% or more financing, insanely low teaser rates, warm body qualification, everybody else using their home equity as a piggy bank, Home Depot is going through the roof and Bush was able to claim a booming economy and the highest rate of home ownership in history for the 04 election.

As we are seeing now, it was a house of cards. The dollar has collapsed, homeownership is now lower than before Bush took office - and we haven't seen the worst of it yet.

Thanks a bunch, Alan.

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Thank you Ian
Posted by: graffen48 on Dec 25, 2007 3:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wanted to thank you for this well written article. I learned a lot just by reading what you've said. You've presented the material in an understandable way. Thanks again!!

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HOUSING has become the 21st Century version of a mindless MANIA in which everybody participated!
Posted by: cgandpg on Dec 25, 2007 7:13 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I enjoyed reading this insightful article, but noticed one huge omission in the fact-gathering. The last time the United States experienced a similar FINANCE ECONOMY was in the 1920's which led to the 1929 Great Depression. I expect no less this time around, both created by the same cause: COLLAPSE OF DEBT.

Credit is disappearing faster than the global central bankers can pump it out. Nothing else will cleanse the enormous malinvestments and distortions that have taken place on such a massive scale since 1971. I actually welcome it. Perhaps only a severe Depression can restore some of our former basic values and much needed sanity which seemed to have disappeared by the corruption that GREED manifested in the big players as well as the small.

And while scapegoating is a convenient excuse and feels better than assuming any responsibility for the resulting chaos we've already witnessed, I assure you, just about everybody played a hand in this Mania, and are simply "outraged" that REAL ESTATE could actually decline. It feels like a scene out of Sodom and Gemorrah.

I plan to vote for DR. RON PAUL who is the only candidate endorsing abolishment of the FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, the INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE as well as a much reduced central government. Sounds good to me. Let's try to remember what our beautiful Constitution has always stood for, and how very far we have strayed from its virtues. I advocate the Libertarian way of life, where Manias cannot possibly spring up. Manias are the direct result of the Tribal Mind.

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Look out for the BIG guys
Posted by: luckypuck on Dec 26, 2007 1:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Leland61: You’re absolutely right. “Economic forces” or “market forces” ARE a fiction. The money manipulators use the term because it makes their profiteering seem to be natural and immutable. Nothing could be further from the truth. ANY economy is a man-made process. There’s nothing natural or immutable about it. If an economy crashes it’s because the people who operate it, the wealthy, the politicians, caused it to crash. If an economy prospers, it’s because the operators caused it to prosper. They also can cause it to prosper for one or two groups within the economy and crash for the rest. That’s the Cheneybush economy, that’s the Republican way. The reverse also is true: They can cause it to prosper for most people and crash for a few. That was the Clinton economy, that’s the Democrat way.

I agree with you UnEasy: Edwards is the only one who has had the courage to say out loud that BIG business is the main cause of our weak and worsening economy. I intend to vote for him. He also has had the courage to point out that BIG business is the cause of the corruption of our BIG government. The twisting point is that we, the little people, need BIG government to protect us from the excesses of any kind of BIG-ness. BIG oil, BIG pharmaceuticals, BIG insurance, BIG WalMart, BIG military, BIG foreign government, BIG coalitions of little foreign governments. That’s what a BIG government is SUPPOSED to do, PROTECT the little guys from the BIG guys.

Don’t get me wrong, there's lots of good can come from BIG-ness, but there is a dark side to it. BIG-ness comes from BIG money, and not too long ago, they went over to the dark side. They shifted from “reasonable” profit-taking to ANY profit is reasonable and then they redefined the term “profiteering” to exclude those nasty things the term originally addressed. That in turn left the money manipulators free to go to any kind of extreme, engage in any kind of excesses to maximize their profits.

In the Broadway musical, “Li’l Abner,” they sing a little ditty that goes, “What’s good for General Bullmoose, is good for the USA.” Bullmoose is the epitome of the ruthless, grasping, profiteering, exploiting businessman. That’s exactly what business-dominated Republicans want us all to swallow: What’s good for business is good for the USA.

Remember Ronald Reagan’s “trickle-down economy?” Even Bush Senior called that one voodoo economics, but when he got into office he adopted it. So has every Republican president to follow. Trickle-down is just another version of the Bullmoose philosophy. The idea is that the more money the wealthy have, the more money will trickle down to the little guys at the bottom of the pyramid. That’s how they keep us in line. Misbehave and they slow the trickle. Go along with their profiteering and they speed up the trickle. And, of course, they expect us to be grateful for that little trickle.

How about a “percolate-up economy?” Put all the money in the hands of the lower and middle-class citizens and let it percolate up to the top of the pyramid. Sound good to you? Well, if it does, I’d say vote Democrat next year, except the Democratic leadership can’t seem to get up enough guts to face down the Cheneybush machine.

I guess I’ll just vote for Edwards or whichever Democrat wins the primary and hope for the best. Any Democrat will be a better president than any of the Republicans. They ALL, every single one of them, favor small government (easy to control by the BIGGYS) and deregulating the very businesses that are sucking this country dry. Unfortunately, it seems some of the Democrats favor these ideas too.

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Still no cigar
Posted by: luckypuck on Dec 26, 2007 7:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Democrats still represent the people, all the people, and if you want to call that BIG BROTHER go ahead, but I don’t know ANY Democrats, especially on the liberal side, who are willing to expend our personal freedoms. I am aware, however, that trading freedom to gain security is a principle of Centrists. In fact, we little Democrat guys want BIG government to inure us from the excesses of BIGNESS so as to make it possible for each citizen to exercise his/her personal freedom without exploitation.

Any “new beginning [that] will require down-sizing of the Government at all levels” is only the beginning of the end. Downsizing is exactly the wrong way to go. I can say, though, that indeed, you are probably correct that there are some similarities now with the Great Depression. In large measure, The Crash was a combination of really bad political oversight and the deplorable economic manipulation engaged in by the business cartels operating at the time. Other than that, the similarities are quite, quite different.

Today, however, the modern cartels won’t allow their political puppets, as you call them, to institute a 90% tax rate, although that is a fairer way to go about it. If, for example only, 5% of the population controls 90% of the country’s wealth, collectively that 5% should pay 90% of the cost of that government which they have manipulated so successfully for their economic benefit. Any other tax plan, of necessity would have to exploit the lower and middle income people.

Somehow, we have to find a way of insisting our politicians be fiscally responsible and will cut waste ($32 toilet seats). That they see it as not in their own best interests as opposed to the interests of the nation is a difficult, difficult view to overcome. But we won’t get that change with any of the current crop of candidates. As I previously posted, Edwards is the closest to holding that principle.

I stand by my original point that ANY economy is man-made and thus man-controlled. The notion that omnipotent, unchangeable forces are at work is pure nonsense and only serves to convince the gullible. That includes Kondratieff waves. Here’s what Wikipedia says about these so-called long waves of economic ups and downs:

“Long wave theory is not accepted by most academic economists . . . . Among economists who accept it, there has been no universal agreement about the start and the end years of particular waves. This points to another criticism of the theory: that it amounts to seeing patterns in a mass of statistics that aren't really there. Moreover, there is a lack of agreement over the cause of this phenomenon.”

All we need to do to restore our great nation is elect honest, competent, courageous politicians who won’t take any shit from big business or anyone or anything else that is so wholly self-serving and doesn’t have ALL citizens’ best interests at heart. Easy to say, hard to do.

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