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boutons_
10-03-2008, 11:49 AM
http://www.truthout.org/sites/all/themes/truth/images/logo.gif (http://www.truthout.org/)


The Credit Squeeze Scare

Thursday 02 October 2008

by: Dean Baker, The Center for Economic and Policy Research

The Federal Reserve Board chairman described the credit squeeze as being "as severe as any supply-induced constraint ever, other than from policy actions." That statement should help to prompt Congress into quick passage of the bank bailout bill, except this quote is from February of 1991, and the chairman at the time was Alan Greenspan. (1 (http://www.truthout.org/100308J?print#1))

The economy is in a recession and banks always tighten up on credit in a recession. When the economy's growth prospects are in question, it puts the health of any particular business into question. Therefore, banks will be far more hesitant to make loans during a period of economic weakness. There were literally hundreds of news stories about the credit squeeze in the 1990-1991 recession.

While the story of the big Wall Street banks teetering and/or crashing may be unique to the current downturn, the stories we are hearing of the main street credit squeeze could be cut and pasted from the news coverage of the 1990-1991 recession. There is little reason to believe that the current tightness is any worse than what we have seen in prior recessions.

The most obvious measure of credit tightness is interest rates. We expect that banks will raise interest rates if the demand for credit substantially exceeds the supply. Yet, the interest rates on most categories of loans are far below their averages over recent decades. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, the average interest rate on 30-year fixed rate mortgages was 6.07 percent last week, down from 6.08 percent the prior week. Back in the early 90s, the average interest rate on 30-year mortgages was over 9.0 percent.

State and local governments are complaining about having to pay interest rates of 5.0 percent, but back in the early 90s they were paying more than 6.0 percent. The same applies to loans for large and small businesses. The interest rates are somewhat higher now than they were in prior months, but they are still relatively low by historic standards. (Real interest rates are even lower by historic standards, since the inflation rate is higher today than it was in the early 90s.)

Of course this past history doesn't mitigate the pain being suffered by families and businesses trying to make ends meet. But it is important to put the problem in context. No one told us that the world would collapse if we didn't cough up $700 billion for the Wall Street banks in the 1990-1991 recession.

The bottom line is that we have badly over-leveraged banks who are on the edge of collapse and we have a credit tightening due to an economic downturn. These problems are related, but even if we could snap our fingers and make the banks healthy again tomorrow, we would still have a serious credit problem due to the recession. In other words, many of the businesses and people who have been appearing on news shows because they could not get credit would still not be able to get credit. (Although they probably will not be appearing on the news shows once the bailout passes.)
http://www.truthout.org/files/M_100308J1.jpg Figures 1 and 2 show the results of Federal Reserve Board's Survey of Bank Loan Officers. Figure 1 shows the net percentage (those reporting tightening minus those reporting easing) reporting the tightening of lending standards for commercial and industrial loans. The data go back to the recession of 1990. As can be seen, there is a sharp spike in the percentage of officers reporting tightening this year. However, the data show roughly the same spike in 1990 at the beginning of that recession.
http://www.truthout.org/files/M_100308J2.jpg Figure 2 shows the net percentage of loan officers reporting tightening for commercial real estate loans and credit card loans. These data also show a spike in 2008, but it is not qualitatively different than the spike shown in 1990 for commercial real estate. (The credit card series begins in 1996. Of course it is not surprising if the tightening of standards on credit card debt was much sharper in this recession, given the extraordinary destruction in housing equity in the last two years.

Just to remind everyone, the cause is the loss of more than $4 trillion in housing equity due to the collapse of the housing bubble. The collapse of this bubble has not only devastated the construction and real estate market, it also has forced consumers to cut back. Tens of millions of homeowners no longer have any equity against which to borrow. Even those who still have equity realize that they will have to increase their savings to support themselves in retirement.

And all this came about because the experts who are now insisting that we need a bailout had previously insisted that there was no housing bubble and that everything was just fine. It is always important to keep things in context.


(1 (http://www.truthout.org/100308J?print#A)) "Economic Scene: Barriers to Ending the Credit Crunch," New York Times, February 1, 1991.

© 2008 truthout

http://www.truthout.org/100308J?print

=====================

Like the Iraq WMD scaremongering, the Repug/Paulsen/Bernanke framing of their "solution" is outright scare-monger lying to extort $700B from the US govt/taxpayers.

These liars are, like with post-9/11 exploiting the good faith of the people to transfer $700B in wealth from the US govt to capitalists and corps, in the last weeks, their last chance, of the Repug Reign of Error.

Congress is being stampeded into a non-solution.

Bernanke, Paulsen, Wall St. are definitely laughing their asses off at pulling off their Sting.

DarrinS
10-03-2008, 11:52 AM
You know who called for Paulsen to resign?


Obama? Nope.


McCain? Nope.


Newt Gingrich

Anti.Hero
10-03-2008, 12:09 PM
What a partisan little bitch.

boutons_
10-03-2008, 12:09 PM
HUSSEIN and unstable McNasty are in an election, and are quite content to hide in the herd, keep their heads down, take no risk, knowing the big disconnect between The People of the Great Country of America and what Congress actually gets up to will protect them from a bail out backlash at the polls, esp when both are pro-bail-out, leaving The Great American People no choice.

Attaching the bail-out extortion to huge pork is trying to buy off citizens, as always. Everybody hates pork, unless it falls into their district and lines their pockets. All of Congress sucks, except my Congress people (as long as they keep the pork flowing to me).

Aggie Hoopsfan
10-03-2008, 12:20 PM
Pelosi, Maxine Waters, Barnie Frank, and Biden are talking about the credit crunch too. This is huge news, I never knew they switched parties!

You're such a partisan bitch boutons.

2centsworth
10-03-2008, 12:32 PM
almost $100 billion out of short-term commerical paper in one week (record drop). over $200 billion in 3 weeks. It's like a car with a major oil leak. Soon we will come to a screeching halt.

boutons_
10-03-2008, 12:51 PM
The capitalist bailout is a REPUG frame-job, not a Dem initiative, like the Iraq war-for-oil was a Repug initiative.

The Dems have been fear-mongered, like in the Iraq/WMD fear-mongering, into complicity, but that's no excuse, just the facts.


If the Repugs had not initiated the Iraq war nor this bail out, I'm the Dems would not have initiated either one.

You're such a dickless twerp, Aggie.

Anti.Hero
10-03-2008, 02:57 PM
What a partisan little bitch.

boutons_
10-03-2008, 03:00 PM
There were 5 big investment banks before they created their own crisis.

Guess which one is still exists and which one is the big winner from the bail out? Paulsen's own Goldman Sachs. What a freaking co-incidence.

http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/whos-profiting-crisis-goldman-sachs/story.aspx?guid=C177EA75-3EB8-4631-B1EC-6EBAE68CDCB7&dist=SecMostRead

Anti.Hero
10-03-2008, 03:03 PM
What are the heroic dems going to do about it?

boutons_
10-03-2008, 03:33 PM
Even dickless Aggie contributes more text to this forum than your chickshit, gutless ad-hominems forever.

Why do you ask me about Dems?

GO FUCK YOURSELF

Aggie Hoopsfan
10-03-2008, 05:45 PM
The capitalist bailout is a REPUG frame-job, not a Dem initiative, like the Iraq war-for-oil was a Repug initiative.

The Dems have been fear-mongered, like in the Iraq/WMD fear-mongering, into complicity, but that's no excuse, just the facts.


If the Repugs had not initiated the Iraq war nor this bail out, I'm the Dems would not have initiated either one.

You're such a dickless twerp, Aggie.

Who were the first people to endorse the Paulson plan last week?

You probably don't know the answer to that question, but it was Obama and Pelosi, you stupid fuck.

smeagol
10-03-2008, 06:02 PM
boutons is so detached from reality.

Do you post from a log cabin up in Montana?

You could be the next una-bomber . . .

boutons_
10-03-2008, 07:14 PM
Paulsen in REPUG Secy Treasury

Bernanke was appointed by the Repug administration

dubya is REPUG President to whom the Treasury reports

The Dems had NOTHING to do with initiating Paulsen's plan,
like they had NOTHING to do with initiating the Iraq invasion.

The REPUGS framed the $700B/7days/no-string/no-oversight 3-page plan,
NOT them Dems.

cool hand
10-03-2008, 07:20 PM
Paulsen in REPUG Secy Treasury

Bernanke was appointed by the Repug administration

dubya is REPUG President to whom the Treasury reports

The Dems had NOTHING to do with initiating Paulsen's plan,
like they had NOTHING to do with initiating the Iraq invasion.

The REPUGS framed the $700B/7days/no-string/no-oversight 3-page plan,
NOT them Dems.



you need to wake up. both parties are getting kickbacks from banks and lobbyists to pass this thing. the people need to realize that its not republicans and democrats, its banks vs. the will of the people.