Economist: Housing bubble caused Great Depression, too
JOHN STARK - THE BELLINGHAM HERALD

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BELLINGHAM - Nobel Prize-winning economist Vernon Smith draws some
disturbing parallels between the events that led up to the Great Depression
of the 1930s and the severe economic slump of today.

Smith, professor of economics and law at Chapman University, won his Nobel
in 2002. He spoke Friday, June 5, before a standing-room-only crowd in
Fraser Hall at Western Washington University.

Most people think of the Great Depression as originating in the stock market

crash of 1929. But Smith's research indicates that the 1929 crash was itself

the result of an earlier collapse in the boom housing market during the
Roaring '20s.

He argued that stock market crashes in themselves are not enough to drag the

whole economy under: The collapse of the dot.com stock bubble of the 1990s,
painful though it was, did not lead to wider economic collapse.

But in the 1920s, and again in the first few years of the 21st century,
there was a rapid expansion in housing construction, and a rapid increase in

household debt as more people borrowed more money to get their own homes. In

both periods, housing construction and investment collapsed even more
rapidly once the phenomenon peaked, Smith's data showed. Only then - in both

cases - did stock prices fall off a cliff as concerns about the financial
system began to mount.

When a questioner asked Smith if more economic shocks are still to come,
Smith was far from reassuring.

"We've got a lot of this stuff coming due yet," he said. "We still have
shoes to drop out there."

Examples: Large numbers of adjustable-rate mortgages will reset at higher
rates in the next couple of years, putting more households at risk of
foreclosure and piling more losses on mortgage lenders. And sharp drops in
consumer spending have yet to play themselves out in the commercial real
estate markets. Increasing numbers of commercial loans to retailers are
likely to go sour in the months ahead.

"That has yet to hit the banking sector," Smith said.

The housing boom and bust that touched off the economic chain reaction was
at least partly due to federal policies that made it easier for people to
borrow money to buy homes. Politicians from both parties pushed those
policies because they were popular, Smith said.

Once the boom got rolling, everyone invested on the assumption that house
prices could only go up, Smith said. That includes the home buyer, the
mortgage lender, the buyer of mortgage-backed bonds and the companies that
insured repayment on those bonds. Nobody involved had the cash reserves to
withstand the inevitable drop in home prices when it finally came.

Now, Smith said, federal officials are still feeling their way through an
economic crisis unlike anything in their lifetimes.

He praised the expertise of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke but added
that expertise may not be enough.

"Probably no one is better-fitted than Bernanke," Smith said. "But 'knowing
that' and 'knowing how' are not the same. ... Knowing about art does not
make a painter."

Reach JOHN STARK at
[email protected]<john.stark%40bellinghamherald.com>or
call 715-2274.
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