Transcript Lecture 21
The Quiet 1990s,
The Panic of 2008,
and
The Great Recession of 2008-2010
AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zP0C-G_iWAg
The 1990s, the “Belle Epoque”
• Brief Recession July 1990-March 1991
• Longest Ever Boom: April 1991 to March 2001
– Inflation declines--- from 4% to an average of 2%
– Unemployment falls from 8% to 4%
– Rapid productivity growth, rapid growth of GDP but
benefits not equally distributed
– Bank failures disappear, very profitable, build up
capital, “Prompt Corrective Action Seems to Work
The Dot.com Crash 2000
• Collapse of stock market focused on
computer/internet/biotech companies.
• DJ and S&P barely recover, Nasdaq never (yet)
• No Banking Collapse because banks don’t own
stock---stocks widely held, decline in wealth
causes consumption to fall
• But huge losses ($1.7 trillion) barely slow
continued growth
• Recession: March 2001-November 2001
• Economy recovers and grows quickly with low
inflation and low unemployment
• Housing Boom begins 2002
The Panic of 2008 and the Great
Recession
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Economy begins to slow December 2007
Gradually housing boom slows
Financial crisis starts in late summer 2008
Panic 2008
Economy quickly declines
Unemployment rises rapidly
Some fear a new Great Depression.
Why Does It Seem Similar?
• Great Depression of
1929-1933 (1939)
• Real estate market crash
• Stock market crash
• Bank failures
• Credit crunch
• Rapid Decline in GDP
• Rapid Rise in
Unemployment
• Recession of
2007-2009?
• Real estate market crash
• Stock market crash
• Bank failures
• Credit crunch
• Rapid Decline in GDP
• Rapid Rise in
Unemployment
But on closer inspection….?
• How does the current recession compare to:
– Great Depression
– Last two recessions
– Two worst prior recessions since the Great
Depression
• Are 1929-1933 & 2007-2010 similar?
• Note: Conventional definition of a recession is
two consecutive quarters of real GDP decline
110
Today and the Great Depression
December 2008
90
80
70
Quarters from the Business Cycle Peak
Great Depression
Current
1990-1991
2001
1973-1975
1980 and 1981-1982
40
38
36
34
32
30
28
26
24
22
20
18
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
-2
60
-4
Index of Real GDP
100
A Close Up
Note: 1980/1981-1982 is a double dip
105
Index of Real GDP
100
95
90
85
80
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Quarters from the Business Cycle Peak
Great Depression
Current
1990-1991
2001
1973-1975
1980 and 1981-1982
12
Unemployment
1928
6.6%
1980 7.2%
2006
4.4%
1929
4.1%
1981 8.5%
2007
4.9%
2008
7.2%
1930 12.4%
1982 10.8%
1931 21.7%
1983 8.3%
1932 31.7%
Nov 2009 10.2%
1984 7.3%
Nov 2010 9.8%
1933 30.0%
1985 7.0%
How Did it Happen?
Incentives NOT Symptoms
• Banks and Government Agencies (Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac too huge risks
• Why? Bankers more greedy than before?
Are they more risk-taking (sky-divers v.
librarians)
• What are the incentives to take risk? The
perfect combination is:
– Deposit Insurance, “Too Big to Fail”
– Incentives to buy lower quality, more risky
mortgages
How Did it Happen?
Incentives NOT Symptoms
How Did It Happen? Chronology
•
•
•
•
•
Housing Market Boom 2002-2006. At peak
prices are up 50%.
July 2006 -September 2007: High FFrate =
5.75%
Peak of Business Cycle: December 2007:
cutting FF rate4.25%.
Housing Market Collapse Begins 2007,
decline in wealth decline in consumption and
investment.
Direct effect on the banks via subprime
mortgagesdecline in lending as their balance
sheets deteriorate.
Collapse
•
Fed maintains tight monetary policy:
– “new lending facilities” but sterilizes effects.
– 2% FF rate steady but too high AprilOctober
2008recession deepens
•
PANIC
– No panics on commercial banks because of deposit
insurance
– But huge uninsured sector of banking—the investment
banks that depend on “Repo” market for funding.
– Baer Stearns is bailed out.
– Then Lehman Brothers allowed to fail September 15,
2008. Panic. Credit Crunch, huge interest rate spreads
•
What should the Fed do?
Road to Recovery
•
•
Turning Point: October 2008 Crisis—failure of
Lehman and AIG, general financial panic
Fed eases monetary policy
–
•
Monetary Expansion:
–
•
Cuts Fed Funds rates, beginning Oct, by Dec 2008, FF= 0.25%
supplemented by TAF Term Auction Facility (Discount Window)
Traditional Open Market Ops plus “Quantitative Easing: Fed
buys $750 billion agency mortgage-backed securities and $300
long-term Treasury securities. March 18, 2009
Should Banks Be Allowed to Fail? Too Big to Fail.
October 2008: TARP to buy preferred stock in financial
institutions (Troubled Asset Relief Program)
Road to Recovery?
•
•
•
Large Fiscal Stimulus: Federal Deficit Estimate
to be 10% of GDP 2009 (size of the multiplier?)
Financial Markets: Major intervention to
influence credit flows: March 2009, TALF (Term
Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility) which
include autos, credit cards and student
loans…….TSLF (Term Securities Lending
Facility), CPFF (commercial paper), MMIFF
(money market mutual funds….etc.etc.
Pushing all the buttons.
Road to Recovery?
•
•
Banking Policy: Inconsistent Policy, “Too Big to
Fail” Baer Yes, Lehman No, Bailout of Banks and
MMMF
Banking Policy:
– The BIG Banks---May 7, 2009 “Stress Tests” for 19
largest BHCs, all “pass.”
– Remove “toxic assets”??: Public-Private Investment
Program for Legacy Assets (postponed) No one will
buy them
– Recapitalize—Treasury buys preferred shares, but too
much
– Rising smaller bank failures
•
Banking Policy:
– Policy makers: Banks should not take excessive
risks/Banks should not hold excessive reserves?
– Forbearance AGAIN!! Hope economy and subprime
loans recover so don’t have to bail out more banks
Causes for Concern
• TODAY
• Recovery Just Beginning
• Now Fed (with a Trillion $ in new assets)
concerned to reduce liquiditytoo fast,
recession continues, too slow inflation starts up
• Banking policy has not directly addressed the
question of bank insolvency, curtailing lending
• Government continues to prop up the insolvent:
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Citibank, BA, AIG
&GMAC
• Regulatory reaction: Dodd-Frank Act of 2010--will it revive or constrict financial system?
Prolonged High Levels of Unemployment?
• Yes.
• If the recession was brought about because we had
overinvested in certain sectors—housing and finance,
then, labor and other factors need to be reallocated
• Restructuring---Bankruptcies are important to reallocate
• If a bubble, then people thought they were wealthier than
they were, long-time to adjust consumption patterns.
• We can help speed the transfer but we should not
impede the flow.
• Monetary and Fiscal Policy are corrective actions that
can be taken---but what reforms are needed?
• The right medicine requires the right diagnosis!
The Cost of 20thC– 21stC Crises
• 1930s
– Depositors and stockholders lose $2.5 billion
– 2.4% of GDP
– $38.7 billion in 2008$.
• 1980s
– S&Ls lose $74 Billion and Commercial banks $52
billion.
– 3.4% of GDP
– $200 billion in 2008$
• 2008-2010
– One estimate of the losses to the banks is $1.7 trillion
– 11.6% of 2008 GDP.
Can We Supervise Banks Better?
Free market failures or
Government policy failures?
• Is it insurance of banks & housing policies? Or
greedy/predatory bankers?
• Proposals
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–
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New Consumer Protection Agency
Cap banker compensation
Restrict investments
Force derivatives to be exchange trade
New Federal Council of Regulators
• But if root cause of crisis is moral hazard from
deposit insurance/Too Big to Fail and policies to
increase risky mortgage lending---these then
treat the symptoms not the the disease.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0OrLXoyZ4M
OK…You fix the budget
New York Times Interactive Puzzle
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/11/13/weekinrevie
w/deficits-graphic.html