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Alan Greenspan: The Boy in the Bubble

By Dean Baker, TruthOut.org. Posted December 20, 2007.


Even long-time Greenspan watchers had to be impressed by his latest effort at self-vindication.
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You don't get to top positions in Washington unless you're very good at blaming others for your mistakes. And when it comes to economic policy, Alan Greenspan has long held some of the very top positions. Therefore, we should expect some pretty good excuses for the housing crash that is now threatening to engulf the US economy.

However, even long-time Greenspan watchers had to be impressed by his latest effort at self-vindication. In a Wall Street Journal column last week, Mr. Greenspan placed the blame for the housing bubble on the end of the Cold War. There's no point in going through the argument, let's just acknowledge this is the work of a true master.

The issue for most of us is not Greenspan's personal culpability. The real policy question is what the Fed can and should do in response to financial bubbles like the housing bubble and the 90s stock bubble that preceded it. The Greenspan doctrine on this topic (adjusted as needed for political circumstances) appears to be:

1) bubbles cannot be recognized before they burst;
2) there is nothing that the Fed could do even if it did recognize a bubble; and
3) collapsing bubbles are no big deal anyhow.

Taking these points in turn, for some of us, it just does not seem to be very hard to recognize financial bubbles. The basic methodology is to note when prices of assets like stocks or houses have diverged from long-term trends. When there is such a divergence, you go to step two, which is to see whether there is a plausible explanation in the fundamentals of the economy.

In the case of the stock market bubble, we saw the average price-to-earnings ratio for the stock market, which had historically been around 14 to 1, rise above 20 to 1 in the mid-nineties. Returns on stock are directly related to price-to-earnings ratios (this is third grade arithmetic, not complex economics). This meant, unless investors had hugely more optimistic views about the future growth of profits than the overwhelming majority of economic forecasters or they were prepared to accept really low returns on the stock they held, then the market was being driven by an irrational bubble.

Since neither of these explanations seemed plausible, some of us (including, on certain days, Alan Greenspan) recognized the stock bubble for what it was. Similarly, in the years from 1995 to 2006, when house prices rose by 70 percent after adjusting for inflation, some of us were prepared to call the run-up a bubble, since house prices had just kept even with the overall rate of inflation for the prior hundred years. These bubbles were recognizable and some of us did recognize them at the time.

Greenspan's next line of defense is that there is nothing the Fed can do about a bubble even if it did recognize it. The story of the powerless Fed is really hard to accept. First, it has enormous regulatory powers. For starters, it could have tightened up the rules on the predatory subprime mortgages. More importantly, Alan Greenspan could have used his enormous megaphone as Federal Reserve Board chair to lay out the evidence for the existence of a stock or housing bubble.

This does not mean mumbling "irrational exuberance" on rare occasions. The point is to use Congressional testimonies and other public appearances to carefully explain how stock or housing prices are unsustainable.

If Alan Greenspan had followed this route, every financial manager would have been forced to carefully assess his arguments. All the bankers and fund managers who now must own up to multi-billion dollar losses for their companies and clients would be forced to explain why they ignored Alan Greenspan's analysis. Anyone who said they paid no attention to the Fed chairman's words would be sued for the full value of their personal wealth, their 401ks, and their homes. Would this Fed talk have been sufficient to deflate the bubbles? My guess is it would, but talk is cheap. Why not try?

Finally, Greenspan would have us believe it is easy to repair the damage from a burst bubble. This is a ridiculous claim in light of recent experience. In the wake of the stock crash in 2002 and 2003, Greenspan and others were worried about the threat of deflation and mass unemployment for the first time since the Great Depression. The fallout from the housing crash is likely to be even more severe.

The upshot is the Fed must try to combat asset bubbles before they do serious damage to the economy. Greenspan's tenure was a disastrous failure because he was AWOL when it came to the most important dangers the economy faced on his watch. No silly excuses will get around this fact.

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Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

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Greenspan clearly messed up. Assuming someone else would have done things differently is very naive!
Posted by: yellow on Dec 20, 2007 5:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alan "bubbles" Greenspan, at the end of the day, is a conservative, anti-inflation economist whose chief concern is stabilizing the market and the inflation rate for long term financial investors, particularly bond traders. The idea that he didn't know of bubbles or their consequences is contradicted by two speeches given at the Fed's annual retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyoming sponsered by the Kansas CIty Fed.

One speech made in 1996 was the irrational exhuberance speech in which he not only recognized the NASDEQ bubble but stated unequivocally the solution, raise the margin requirement to slow down the unprecedented 400% increase in equities growth in the late 1990s. He not only refused to undertake this measure but lauded the capital gains taxes cuts of 1997 which fed the bubble even more with the hundreds of billions of tax savings for the rich. He then proceeded to slam on the brakes the following year by raising interest rates just as the middle class saw some income gains. This was the result of inflation fears. He later reversed his position as the economy slowed attempting to restart it with rate cuts. This was a short term failure.

In 2005, shortly before leaving the fed, he announced that home buyers were investing in houses as if they were a one way bet and were not allowing for the possibility of house prices declines. Clearly he understood the dangers here as well. The consequences are now well know to all of us. Since the last quarter of 2001 however, the extraordinarily weak recovery has been fairly dependent on the housing market which has provided the bulk of the good paying jobs. Though construction accounts for about 5% of employment in the overall US economy, it accounts for about 12% of the post-recession job growth in the current cyclical upswing. Clearly, low interest rates were needed to maintain the weak recovery and the housing market itself which is even more directly related to these interest rates.

Yet, here's the rub. The US economy became inherently stagnant in the era of the post-Reagan/Volcker recession which squeezed the hyper-inflation out of the economy and the all too familiar wage-price spirals of the 1970s. This it did by sending the highest paying jobs overseas and by replacing domestic manufacturing with cheap imports. Big business gained but the working and middle classes, dependent for their survival on high domestic demand and consumer purchasing power, suffered enormously. The new financialization relied on bubbles and consumer debt not just periodically but systematically. Since the mid-1980s US capitalism, and much of world capitalism, has entered an epoch of a new and intense contradiction. That is rising profits and profit rates from the concentration of income and wealth and the cheapening of labor globally with a simultaneous slow down in overall GDP growth rates which are often a third of what they were in times of greater social equality. Thus, the true contradiction of late capitalism is the exact opposite of that predicted by Karl Marx. Instead of a rapidly growing economy outpacing a falling rate of profit resulting in investment cutbacks and a downcycle immiserating the proletariat, we have rapid growth of profits both in terms of average rates of return and as a proportion of the total economy compared shrinking real wages and salaries as overall economic growth begins to slow way down. Lower wages, rather than unemployment, immiserates the proletariat.

Bubbles have been the bane of the economy's existance even as they sustains it. Wealth and profit concentrates to much at the top depressing sufficient effective consumer demand forcing us to base the economy on financial speculation. Thus, Greenspan's folly is his reaction to the basic contradiction of late capitalism which juxtaposes slow economic growth with growing concentrations of wealth.

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Sub-prime lending and red lining
Posted by: peacelf on Dec 20, 2007 6:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Greenspan, as far as I can see, is not responisible for the housing bubble that is near bursting. Greedy mortgage lenders are the problem, as usual. The Fed is responsible for encouraging unfair lending practices.

Lending today is simply legalized usury and it doesn't stop with housing. Check cashing and pay day lending, buy here pay here car lots and rent to own centers are just a few of the ways in which lenders have robbed low income consumers with interest rates that can only be described as loan shark rates.

The home mortgage companies are no different, locking low income home buyers into flex rate mortgages that jump a point or more as soon as the families move in. And, of course, homes previously located in red lined areas were now qualified for those high interest loans.

Low income people with less income flexibility excited to purchase their first home quickly had their bubble burst when the payment jumped due to prime rate increases. In making these loans, the mortgage lenders had to know that the government through the arm of the Fed would bail them out when those loans fail, and the Fed did. The Fed lowered interest rates as soon as a lender crisis appeared.

So, the housing bubble is a unique problem in which low income families were finally given a chance for home ownership, lenders took advantage of their desires expanding markets into previously red lined areas, knowingly charging usury interest rates and also knowing that the government would bail them out if large numbers of those loans fail.

The only solution to the housing bubble is government subsidization of housing purchases for low income home buyers. Let the government compete against private mortgage companies for home loans to poorer families, not at usury rates but at interest rates that prime borrowers have the luxury to finance their homes with. Moreover, to further prevent legalized loan sharking, force banks to reduce the costs of their services, so low income families do not have to depend on check cashing companies for banking services, and hold accountable and regulate any lenders (car, appliance, check or mortgage) who charge usury interest rates to low income families.

As for the Fed and Greenspan the Libertarian, if they so firmly believe in letting the market decide, then the mortgage companies should eat the losses incurred because of their greed, and force them to negotiate reasonable interest rates with homeowners facing foreclosure.

peace

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