WHAT THE REALLY HAPPENED...

Similar documents
The Economic Crisis of 2008

The Crash of 2008: Causes and Lessons to Be Learned

SPECIAL TOPIC 5. The Crisis of 2008: Causes and Lessons for the Future FOCUS

Special Note This supplement is from Economics: Private and Public Choice, 13th edition (by James Gwartney, Richard Stroup, Russell Sobel, and David

b. Financial innovation and/or financial liberalization (the elimination of restrictions on financial markets) can cause financial firms to go on a

By James Gwartney, David Macpherson, Russell Sobel, and Richard Stroup *

Capital Market Trends and Forecasts

Group 14 Dallas Hall, Chuck Dobson, Guy Tahye, Tunde Olabiyi

Executive Summary. Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University 1

Lecture 12: Too Big to Fail and the US Financial Crisis

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Economics 134 DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS Spring 2018 Professor David Romer

Why is the Country Facing a Financial Crisis?

Homeownership. Cycling Demand

Common Sense Economics: What Everyone Should Know About Wealth and Prosperity (Gwartney, Stroup, Lee, and Ferrarini - St. Martin s Press, 2010)

The US Housing Market Crisis and Its Aftermath

Homeownership. The State of the Nation s Housing 2009

March 2008 Third District Housing Market Conditions Nathan Brownback

10.2 Recent Shocks to the Macroeconomy Introduction. Housing Prices. Chapter 10 The Great Recession: A First Look

Introduction and Economic Landscape. Vance Ginn Spring 2013

Real Estate Loan Losses, Bank Failure and Emerging Regulation 2011

Economic and Banking Outlook. Major issues

4) The dark side of financial liberalization is. A) market allocations B) credit booms C) currency appreciation D) financial innovation

Economic History of the US

Real Estate Loan Losses, Bank Failure and Emerging Regulation 2010

Global Financial Crisis

A Citizen s Guide to the 2008 Financial Report of the U.S. Government

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. Economics 134 Spring 2018 Professor David Romer LECTURE 19

S&P/Case Shiller index

Making the most of TARP: The Supporting Role of Fannie and Freddie

FRBSF ECONOMIC LETTER

1 U.S. Subprime Crisis

Chapter 14. The Mortgage Markets. Chapter Preview

Exhibit 3 with corrections through Memorandum

The Great Recession. ECON 43370: Financial Crises. Eric Sims. Spring University of Notre Dame

National Housing Market Summary

STUDY GUIDE SHOULD GOVERNMENT BAIL OUT BIG BANKS? KEY TERMS: bankruptcy de-regulation credit bailout depression TARP

S&P/Case Shiller index

THE FINANCIAL CRISIS AND THE GREAT RECESSION

Lecture 10: The Hitchhiker s Guide to Economic Policy Debates

The Financial System: Opportunities and Dangers

Notes Numbers in the text and tables may not add up to totals because of rounding. Unless otherwise indicated, years referred to in describing the bud

Lessons from the Great Depression

Historical Backdrop to the 2007/08 Liquidity Crunch

The Recession

Notes on Hyman Minsky s Financial Instability Hypothesis

IMPLICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS

The state of the nation s Housing 2013

Real gross domestic product

Printable Lesson Materials

Don t Raise the Federal Debt Ceiling, Torpedo the U.S. Housing Market

The Great Recession How Bad Is It and What Can We Do?

2008 STOCK MARKET COLLAPSE

The Mortgage Industry

LOCAL UNION NO. 952 GENERAL TRUCK DRIVERS, OFFICE, FOOD & WAREHOUSE UNION ORANGE COUNTY AND VICINITY, CALIFORNIA

SINGLE-FAMILY SLOWDOWN

Why Are Financial Intermediaries Special?

Capital structure and the financial crisis

Joseph S Tracy: A strategy for the 2011 economic recovery

1. Asymmetric Information and Financial Crises (45 points, 40 minutes)

Ira G. PEPPERCORN. The Tragedy of the Mortgage Commons. President IRA PEPPERCORN INTERNATIONAL, LLC

The Devastation Awaiting Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities

1 Anthony B. Sanders, Ph.D. is Professor of Finance at the School of Management at George Mason University

Weakness in the U.S. Housing Market Likely to Persist in 2008

Money and Banking ECON3303. Lecture 9: Financial Crises. William J. Crowder Ph.D.

2017 MORTGAGE MARKET OUTLOOK: EXECUTIVE ECONOMIC REPORT JANUARY 2017

From Wall Street to Main Street: The Financial Crisis in the US

The Equifax Economic and Credit Markets Outlook

Federal National Mortgage Association

Today s Business Environment

Economics of Money, Banking, and Fin. Markets, 10e (Mishkin) Chapter 9 Financial Crises. 9.1 What is a Financial Crisis?

Lessons Learned? Comparing the Federal Reserve s Response to the Crises of and

Chapter 10. The Great Recession: A First Look. (1) Spike in oil prices. (2) Collapse of house prices. (2) Collapse in house prices

Credit Crisis: The Sky is not Falling

COMMON SENSE ECONOMICS ~ WHAT EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW ABOUT WEALTH AND PROSPERITY 2010

The Lehman Shock Financial Disaster the Effects on Japan. found out an attractive and interesting article, which showed the world economic

THE UCLA ANDERSON FORECAST FOR THE NATION

Housing and Mortgage Market Update

Exhibit 2 with corrections through Memorandum

OCR Economics A-level

Mortgage Performance Summary

Remarks on the Housing Market and Subprime Lending. Remarks. Ben S. Bernanke. Chairman. (via satellite) to the International Monetary Conference

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Joseph Dashevsky, Nicole Davessar, Sarah Nicholson, and Scott Symons

Hearing on The Housing Decline: The Extent of the Problem and Potential Remedies December 13, 2007

Chapter 11 11/18/2014. Mortgages and Mortgage Markets. Thrifts (continued)

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES RETHINKING THE ROLE OF FISCAL POLICY. Martin S. Feldstein. Working Paper

DID ICELAND CHANGE MONETARY POLICY RESPONSE IN PERIOD OF FINANCIAL CRISIS?

SUB PRIME CRISIS & EUROZONE CRISIS. Presented by Amitesh Kumar Sinha, Dir. Fin (Accounts)

Keynesian excess: Easy policy and slower economic growth

The Financial and Economic Crisis of 2008: A Systemic Crisis of Neoliberal Capitalism

Mortgage Modifications after the Great Recession

Economic Shocks: the Great Depression and Great Recession. Andy Bauer Senior Regional Economist October 19, 2017

1. What was life like in Iceland before the financial crisis? 3. How much did Iceland s three banks borrow? What happened to the money?

Origins of the Financial Market Crisis of 2008 Anna J. Schwartz

Massachusetts Tax Revenue Forecasts for FY 2009 and FY 2010

The Future of the Mortgage Market: Where Do We Go From Here?

Mortgage REITs. March 20, Calvin Schnure Senior Vice President, Research & Economic Analysis

Data Brief. Dangerous Trends: The Growth of Debt in the U.S. Economy

U.S. Residential. Mortgage Default. Performance Update. & Market Analysis

Comments on Forecasts

Fiscal Policy & Colored Animals

Transcription:

WHAT THE F#@K REALLY HAPPENED... THE ECONOMIC CRISIS OF 08 EDMOND GRADY A BANKER IS A FELLOW WHO LENDS YOU HIS UMBRELLA WHEN THE SUN IS SHINING, BUT WANTS IT BACK THE MINUTE IT BEGINS TO RAIN. MARK TWAIN WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS IS THAT WE DON T KNOW VERY MUCH. PAUL SAMUELSON IMAGINE THE BIG RATING AGENCIES AS THREE COMPETITIVE SALOONS STANDING SIDE BY SIDE, WITH EACH FREE TO SET ITS OWN DRINKING AGE. BEFORE LONG, NINE-YEAR-OLDS WOULD BE DOWNING BOURBON ROGER LOWENSTEIN 1

MAJOR EVENTS THAT LEAD UP TO THE CRISIS REAL ESTATE PRICES RAPIDLY INCREASED FROM -, THEN STABILIZED AND SHORTLY AFTER BEGAN A STEEP DECLINE DEFAULT AND FORECLOSURE MORE THAN TRIPLED FROM TO BEAR STEARNS, LEHMAN BROTHERS, AIG: FALL OF MAJOR INVESTMENT BANKS IN 08 08 COLLAPSE OF STOCK PRICES EXHIBIT 1: HOUSE PRICE CHANGE HOUSING PRICES WERE RELATIVELY STABLE DURING THE 90S, BUT THEY BEGAN TO RISE TOWARD THE END OF THE DECADE. BETWEEN JANUARY AND MID-YEAR, HOUSING PRICES INCREASED BY A WHOPPING 87 PERCENT. THE BOOM HAD TURNED TO A BUST, AND THE HOUSING PRICE DECLINES CONTINUED THROUGHOUT AND 08. BY THE THIRD QUARTER OF 08, HOUSING PRICES WERE APPROXIMATELY 25 PERCENT BELOW THEIR PEAK. Annual Existing House Price Change.0% 15.0% 10.0% 5.0% 0.0% -5.0% -10.0% -15.0% 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 96 97 08 -.0% Source: www.standardpoors.com, S and P Case-Schiller Housing Price Index. 2

EXHIBIT 2A: THE DEFAULT RATE THE DEFAULT RATE FLUCTUATED, WITHIN A NARROW RANGE, AROUND 2 PERCENT PRIOR TO. IT INCREASED ONLY SLIGHTLY DURING THE RECESSIONS OF 82, 90, AND. THE RATE BEGAN INCREASING SHARPLY DURING THE SECOND HALF OF IT REACHED 5.2 PERCENT DURING THE THIRD QUARTER OF 08. Default Rate 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 79 80 81 82 84 85 86 87 89 90 91 92 94 96 97 0% EXHIBIT 2B: FORECLOSURE RATE HOUSING PRICES WERE RELATIVELY STABLE DURING THE 90S, BUT THEY BEGAN TO RISE TOWARD THE END OF THE DECADE. BETWEEN JANUARY AND MID-YEAR, HOUSING PRICES INCREASED BY A WHOPPING 87 PERCENT. THE BOOM HAD TURNED TO A BUST, AND THE HOUSING PRICE DECLINES CONTINUED THROUGHOUT AND 08. BY THE THIRD QUARTER OF 08, HOUSING PRICES WERE APPROXIMATELY 25 PERCENT BELOW THEIR PEAK. Foreclosure Rate 1.4% 1.2% 1.0% 0.8% 0.6% 0.4% 0.2% 79 80 81 82 84 85 86 87 89 90 91 92 94 96 97 0.0% Source: www.mbaa.org, National Delinquency Survey. 3

EXHIBIT 3: STOCK MARKET RETURNS AS OF MID-DECEMBER OF 08, STOCK RETURNS WERE DOWN BY 37 PERCENT SINCE THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR. THIS IS NEARLY TWICE THE MAGNITUDE OF ANY YEAR SINCE 50. THIS COLLAPSE ERODED THE WEALTH AND ENDANGERED THE RETIREMENT SAVINGS OF MANY AMERICANS. S and P 5 Total Return 60% 50% 40% 30% % 10% 0% -10% -% -30% 92 89 86 83 80 77 74 71 68 65 62 59 56 53 50-40% Source: www.standardpoors.com KEY QUESTIONS ABOUT THE CRISIS OF 08 WHY DID HOUSING PRICES RISE RAPIDLY AND THEN FALL? WHY DID THE MORTGAGE DEFAULT AND HOUSING FORECLOSURE RATES BEGIN TO INCREASE MORE THAN A YEAR BEFORE THE RECESSION OF WHY ARE THE RECENT DEFAULT AND FORECLOSURE RATES SO MUCH HIGHER THAN AT ANY TIME DURING THE WHY 08 STARTED? 80S AND 90S? DID INVESTMENT BANKS LIKE BEAR STEARNS AND LEHMAN BROTHERS RUN INTO FINANCIAL TROUBLES SO QUICKLY? FOUR FACTORS PROVIDE THE ANSWERS TO ALL OF THESE QUESTIONS. 4

WHAT CAUSED THE CRISIS OF 08? FACTOR 1: BEGINNING IN THE MID-90S, GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS TO ERODE THE CONVENTIONAL LENDING STANDARDS. BEGAN FANNIE MAE AND FREDDIE MAC HOLD A HUGE SHARE OF AMERICAN MORTGAGES. BEGINNING IN, HUD REGULATIONS REQUIRED FANNIE MAE AND FREDDIE MAC TO INCREASE THEIR HOLDINGS OF LOANS TO LOW AND MODERATE INCOME BORROWERS. HUD REGULATIONS IMPOSED IN REQUIRED FANNIE AND FREDDIE TO ACCEPT MORE LOANS WITH LITTLE OR NO DOWN PAYMENT. REGULATIONS STEMMING FROM AN EXTENSION OF THE COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT ACT REQUIRED BANKS TO EXTEND LOANS IN PROPORTION TO THE SHARE OF MINORITY POPULATION IN THEIR MARKET AREA. CONVENTIONAL LENDING STANDARDS WERE REDUCED TO MEET THESE GOALS. EXHIBIT 4: FANNIE MAE/FREDDIE MAC SHARE THE SHARE OF ALL MORTGAGES HELD BY FANNIE MAE AND FREDDIE MAC ROSE FROM 25 PERCENT IN 90 TO 45 PERCENT IN. THEIR SHARE HAS FLUCTUATED MODESTLY AROUND 45 PERCENT SINCE. Freddie Mac/Fannie Mae Share of Outstanding Mortgages 50% 45% 40% 35% 30% 25% 08 97 96 94 93 92 91 90 % Source: Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, www.ofheo.gov. 5

EXHIBIT 4.1: SUBPRIME MORTGAGES SUBPRIME MORTGAGES AS A SHARE OF TOTAL MORTGAGES ORIGINATED DURING THE YEAR, INCREASED FROM 5% IN94 TO 13% IN AND ON TO% IN-. 25.0% Subprime Mortgage Originations as a Share of Total.0% 15.0% 10.0% 5.0% 0.0% 94 96 97 Subprime (FRB) Subprime (JCHS) Source: Data from 94- is from the Federal Reserve Board while - is from the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University EXHIBIT 4.2: SUBPRIME, ALT-A, AND HOME EQUITY LIKE SUBPRIME, ALT-A AND HOME EQUITY LOANS HAVE INCREASED SUBSTANTIALLY AS A SHARE OF THE TOTAL SINCE. IN, SUBPRIME, ALT-A, AND HOME EQUITY LOANS ACCOUNTED FOR ALMOST HALF OF THE MORTGAGES ORIGINATED DURING THE YEAR. 50% Subprime, Alt-A, and Home Equity as a Share of Total 40% 30% % 10% 0% 94 96 97 Subprime (FRB) Subprime (JCHS) Subprime + Alt-A Subprime + Alt-A + Home Equity Source: Data from 94- is from the Federal Reserve Board while - is from the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University 6

WHAT CAUSED THE CRISIS OF 08? FACTOR 2: THE FED S MANIPULATION OF INTEREST RATES DURING - FED'S PROLONGED LOW-INTEREST RATE POLICY OF - INCREASED DEMAND FOR, AND PRICE OF, HOUSING. THE LOW SHORT-TERM INTEREST RATES MADE ADJUSTABLE RATE LOANS WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENTS HIGHLY ATTRACTIVE. AS THE FED PUSHED SHORT-TERM INTEREST RATES UPWARD IN -, ADJUSTABLE RATES WERE SOON RESET, MONTHLY PAYMENT ON THESE LOANS INCREASED, HOUSING PRICES BEGAN TO FALL, AND DEFAULTS SOARED. EXHIBIT 5: SHORT-TERM INTEREST RATES THE FED INJECTED ADDITIONAL RESERVES AND KEPT SHORT-TERM INTEREST RATES AT 2% OR LESS THROUGHOUT -. DUE TO RISING INFLATION IN, THE FED PUSHED INTEREST RATES UPWARD. INTEREST RATES ON ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES ROSE AND THE DEFAULT RATE BEGAN TO INCREASE RAPIDLY. Federal Funds Rate and 1-Year T-Bill Rate 8% 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 96 96 97 97 08 0% Federal Funds 1 year T-bill Source: www.federalreserve.gov and www.economagic.com 7

EXHIBIT 5.1: ARM LOANS OUTSTANDING FOLLOWING THE FED'S LOW INTEREST RATE POLICY OF -, ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES (ARMS) INCREASED SHARPLY. MEASURED AS A SHARE OF TOTAL MORTGAGES OUTSTANDING, ARMS INCREASED FROM 10% IN TO 21% IN. ARM Loans Outstanding 25% % 15% 10% 5% 08 97 96 94 93 92 91 90 0% Source: Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, www.ofheo.gov. WHAT CAUSED THE CRISIS OF 08? FACTOR 3: AN SEC RULE CHANGE ADOPTED IN APRIL LED TO HIGHLY LEVERAGE LENDING PRACTICES BY INVESTMENT BANKS AND THEIR QUICK DEMISE WHEN DEFAULT RATES INCREASED. THE RULE FAVORED LENDING FOR RESIDENTIAL HOUSING. LOANS FOR RESIDENTIAL HOUSING COULD BE LEVERAGED BY AS MUCH AS 25 TO 1, AND AS MUCH AS 60 TO 1, WHEN BUNDLED TOGETHER AND FINANCED WITH SECURITIES. BASED ON HISTORICAL DEFAULT RATES, MORTGAGE LOANS FOR RESIDENTIAL HOUSING WERE THOUGHT TO BE SAFE. BUT THIS WAS NO LONGER TRUE BECAUSE REGULATIONS HAD SERIOUSLY ERODED THE LENDING STANDARDS AND THE LOW INTEREST RATES OF - HAD INCREASED THE SHARE OF ARM LOANS WITH LITTLE OR NO DOWN PAYMENT. WHEN DEFAULT RATES INCREASED IN AND, THE HIGHLY LEVERAGED INVESTMENT BANKS SOON COLLAPSED. 8

EXHIBIT 5.2: LEVERAGE RATIOS THE LEVERAGE RATIOS OF LOANS AND OTHER INVESTMENTS TO CAPITAL ASSETS FOR VARIOUS FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS ARE SHOWN HERE. WHEN BEAR STEARNS WAS ACQUIRED BY JP MORGAN CHASE ITS LEVERAGE RATIO WAS 33 TO 1. NOTE, THIS WAS NOT PARTICULARLY UNUSUAL FOR THE GSES AND LARGE INVESTMENT BANKS. Leverage Ratios (June 08) Freddie Mac 67.9 Fannie Mae 21.5 31.6 Brokers/hedge Funds Savings institutions 9.4 Commercial banks 9.8 Credit unions 9.1 0 40 60 80 Source: The Rise and Fall of the U.S. Mortgage and Credit Markets: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Meltdown, Milken Institute WHAT CAUSED THE CRISIS OF 08? FACTOR 4: DOUBLING OF THE DEBT/INCOME RATIO OF HOUSEHOLDS SINCE THE MID-80S. THE DEBT-TO-INCOME RATIO OF HOUSEHOLDS WAS GENERALLY BETWEEN 45 AND 60 PERCENT FOR SEVERAL DECADES PRIOR TO THE MID 80S. BY, THE DEBT-TO-INCOME RATIO OF HOUSEHOLDS HAD INCREASED TO 135 PERCENT. INTEREST ON HOUSEHOLD DEBT ALSO INCREASED SUBSTANTIALLY. BECAUSE INTEREST ON HOUSING LOANS WAS TAX DEDUCTIBLE, HOUSEHOLDS HAD AN INCENTIVE TO WRAP MORE OF THEIR DEBT INTO HOUSING LOANS. THE HEAVY INDEBTEDNESS OF HOUSEHOLDS MEANT THEY HAD NO LEEWAY TO DEAL WITH UNEXPECTED EXPENSES OR RISING MORTGAGE PAYMENTS. 9

EXHIBIT 6A: HOUSEHOLD DEBT AS A SHARE OF INCOME BETWEEN 50-80, HOUSEHOLD DEBT AS A SHARE OF DISPOSABLE (AFTER-TAX) INCOME RANGED FROM 40 PERCENT TO 60 PERCENT. HOWEVER, SINCE THE EARLY 80S, THE DEBT-TO-INCOME RATIO OF HOUSEHOLDS HAS BEEN CLIMBING AT AN ALARMING RATE. IT REACHED 135 PERCENT IN, MORE THAN TWICE THE LEVEL OF THE MID-80S. Household Debt to Disposable Personal Income Ratio 140% 1% 1% 80% 60% 40% 53 55 58 60 63 65 68 70 73 75 78 80 83 85 88 90 93 08 % Source: www.economagic.com EXHIBIT 6B: DEBT PAYMENTS AS A SHARE OF INCOME TODAY, INTEREST PAYMENTS CONSUME NEARLY 15 PERCENT OF THE AFTER-TAX INCOME OF AMERICAN HOUSEHOLDS, UP FROM ABOUT 10 PERCENT IN THE EARLY 80S. Debt Payments to Disposable Personal Income Ratios 16% 14% 12% 10% 8% Total Debt 97 96 93 92 91 90 88 87 86 85 83 82 81 80 6% Mortgage Source: www.economagic.com 10

EXHIBIT 7A: FORECLOSURE RATES ON SUBPRIME COMPARED TO THEIR PRIME BORROWER COUNTERPARTS, THE FORECLOSURE RATE FOR SUBPRIME BORROWERS IS APPROXIMATELY 10 TIMES HIGHER FOR FIXED RATE MORTGAGES AND 7 TIMES HIGHER FOR ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES. THERE WAS NO TREND IN THE FORECLOSURE RATE PRIOR TO FOR ADJUSTABLE RATE OR FIXED RATE MORTGAGES. STARTING IN, THERE WAS A SHARP INCREASE IN THE ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE RATE. Foreclosure Rates on Subprime Mortgages 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% Fixed 0% Adjustable Source: Liebowitz, Stan J., Anatomy of a Train Wreck: Causes of the Mortgage Meltdown, Ch. 13 in Randall G. Holcombe and Benjamin Powell, eds, Housing America: Building Out of a Crisis (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 09 (forthcoming) We would like to thank Professor Liebowitz for making this data available to us. EXHIBIT 7B: FORECLOSURE RATES ON PRIME WHILE THE FORECLOSURE RATE ON FIXED RATE MORTGAGES WAS RELATIVELY CONSTANT, THE FORECLOSURES ON ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES BEGAN TO SOAR IN THE SECOND HALF OF. THIS WAS TRUE FOR BOTH PRIME AND SUBPRIME LOANS. Foreclosure Rates on Prime Mortgages 1.2% 1.0% 0.8% 0.6% 0.4% 0.2% Fixed 0.0% Adjustable Source: Liebowitz, Stan J., Anatomy of a Train Wreck: Causes of the Mortgage Meltdown, Ch. 13 in Randall G. Holcombe and Benjamin Powell, eds, Housing America: Building Out of a Crisis (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 09 (forthcoming) We would like to thank Professor Liebowitz for making this data available to us. 11

FIXED VS. VARIABLE RATE MORTGAGES DEFAULT AND FORECLOSURE RATES ON FIXED INTEREST RATE MORTGAGES DID NOT RISE MUCH IN AND 08. THIS WAS TRUE FOR LOANS TO BOTH PRIME AND SUB-PRIME BORROWERS. IN CONTRAST, THE DEFAULT AND FORECLOSURE RATES ON ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGES SOARED DURING AND 08 FOR BOTH PRIME AND SUB-PRIME BORROWERS. THE COMBINATION OF LOWER LENDING STANDARDS, ADJUSTABLE RATE LOANS, AND THE FED'S INTEREST RATE POLICIES OF INCENTIVES MATTER - WAS DISASTROUS. AND PERVERSE INCENTIVES CREATED THE CRISIS OF 08. ARE WE HEADED TOWARD ANOTHER GREAT DEPRESSION? ARE THE CURRENT CONDITIONS UNPRECEDENTED? HOW DO THE CURRENT CONDITIONS COMPARE WITH THE GREAT DEPRESSION? 12

EXHIBIT 8A: UNEMPLOYMENT IN RECENT SEVERE RECESSIONS AT THE END OF JANUARY 09, THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE WAS 7.6 PERCENT AND IT WILL SURELY GO HIGHER. THIS IS NOT UNPRECEDENTED. THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE ROSE TO 9.6 PERCENT DURING THE 74-75 RECESSION, AND TO 10.8 PERCENT DURING THE 80-82 RECESSION. EVEN DURING THE RELATIVELY SHORT RECESSION OF 90-91, THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE ROSE TO NEARLY 8 PERCENT AND IT REMAINED AT, OR NEAR, 7 PERCENT FOR ALMOST TWO YEARS. Peak Monthly Unemployment Rates in Recent Severe Recessions 12.0% 10.8% 10.0% 9.0% 8.0% 7.8% 7.6% 90-91 -? 6.0% 4.0% 2.0% 0.0% 73-75 80-82 Source: www.bls.gov EXHIBIT 8B: GREAT DEPRESSION UNEMPLOYMENT THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE SOARED TO NEARLY 25 PERCENT DURING 33. THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE WAS 14 PERCENT OR MORE EVERY YEAR THROUGHOUT 31-39. Unemployment Rates During the Great Depression 30% 25% 24% 25% 22% % % % 14% 15% 10% 17% 17% 16% 9% 5% 0% 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 Source: Bureau of the Census, The Statistical History of the United States from Colonial Times to the Present (New York: Basic Books, 76) 13

LESSONS FROM THE GREAT DEPRESSION AVOID THESE POLICIES: MONETARY CONTRACTION TRADE RESTRICTIONS TAX INCREASES CONSTANT CHANGES IN POLICY; THIS MERELY CREATES UNCERTAINTY AND DELAYS PRIVATE SECTOR RECOVERY. THIS RECESSION IS LIKELY TO BE LENGTHY IT WILL TAKE TIME FOR THE MALINVESTMENTS TO BE CORRECTED AND FOR HOUSEHOLDS TO IMPROVE THEIR PERSONAL FINANCIAL SITUATION. VARIOUS TYPES OF STIMULUS PACKAGES ARE NOT LIKELY TO BE VERY EFFECTIVE. DANGER: FREQUENT POLICIES OF THE POLICY CHANGES WILL RETARD RECOVERY. BUSH ADMINISTRATION THE RECENT ILLUSTRATE THIS POINT. 14

WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE? 1. THE KEYS TO SOUND POLICY ARE WELL-DEFINED PROPERTY RIGHTS, MONETARY AND PRICE STABILITY, OPEN MARKETS, LOW TAXES, CONTROL OF GOVERNMENT SPENDING, AND ABOVE ALL, NEUTRAL TREATMENT OF BOTH PEOPLE AND ENTERPRISES. 2. MONETARY POLICY IS WAY OFF TRACK. SINCE THE LATE 90S IT HAS BEEN ON A STOPAND-GO COURSE THAT GENERATES INSTABILITY. THE FED NEEDS TO ANNOUNCE IT WILL FOLLOW A STABLE COURSE IN THE FUTURE. THERE WILL BE NO REPEAT OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION, BUT NEITHER WILL THERE BE A REPEAT OF THE 70S. 3. PRESIDENT OBAMA AND CONGRESS SHOULD ANNOUNCE THAT: i. THE MISTAKES OF THE 30S WILL NOT BE REPEATED, INCLUDING THE UNCERTAINTY GENERATED BY THE FREQUENT POLICY CHANGES THAT CHARACTERIZED THE NEW DEAL. ii. IN THE FUTURE, GOVERNMENT SPENDING WILL BE CONTROLLED AND THE DEFICIT REDUCED. CRISIS OF MARKETS OR A CRISIS OF POLITICS? ARE THE CURRENT CONDITIONS UNPRECEDENTED? BOTH THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE CURRENT CRISIS ARE THE RESULT OF PERVERSE POLICIES. DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION ERA, DISASTROUS POLICIES LED TO A HUGE EXPANSION IN THE SIZE AND ROLE OF GOVERNMENT. HAPPEN THIS TIME? THE ANSWER ECONOMIC STATUS OF WILL THE SAME THING TO THIS QUESTION WILL DETERMINE THE FUTURE AMERICANS. 15

END 16