America was conned - who will pay?

The South Sea Bubble ended in riots as trust was lost. Wall Street also
duped the public

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/mar/17/economics.useconomy
 About this article Close
 This article appeared in the
Guardian<http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian>on Monday
March 17 2008 <http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2008/mar/17> on p30 of
the 
Financial<http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2008/mar/17/mainsection/financial3>section.
It was last updated at 00:05 on March 17 2008.

Bear Stearns marks the moment when the global financial crisis went
critical. Up until last Friday, it had been possible - just about - to
believe that the worst was over and that things were about to get better.
That pretence was stripped away when JP Morgan, at the behest of the Federal
Reserve, stepped in when the hedge funds pulled the plug on the
fifth-biggest US investment bank.

It is now clear that no end is in sight to the turmoil, and the reason for
that is that the Fed and the US treasury are no closer to solving the
underlying problem than they were eight months ago. The crisis will only end
when house prices stop falling and banks stop racking up huge losses on
their loans. Doing that, however, will require the US government to
intervene directly in the real estate market to end the wave of
foreclosures. Ideologically, it is ill-equipped to take that step and, as a
result, property prices will fall and the financial meltdown will go on and
on.

Ultimately, though, action will be taken because there will be political
pressure for it. Indeed, it is somewhat surprising that there is not already
rioting in the streets, given the gigantic fraud perpetrated by the
financial elite at the expense of ordinary Americans.

The US has just had its weakest period of expansion since the 1950s.
Consumption growth has been poor. Investment growth has been modest. Exports
have been sluggish. But if you are at the top of the tree, the years since
the last recession in 2001 has been a veritable golden age. Salaries for
executives have rocketed and profits have soared, because the productivity
gains from a growing economy have been disproportionately skewed towards
capital.

*Patriotic *

For ordinary Americans, though, it has been a different story. Real wages
have been growing slowly; at just 1.6% a year on average over the latest
upswing, well down on the experience of earlier decades. Business, of
course, needs consumers to carry on spending in order to make money, so a
way had to be found to persuade households to do their patriotic duty. The
method chosen was simple. Whip up a colossal housing bubble, convince
consumers that it makes sense to borrow money against the rising value of
their homes to supplement their meagre real wage growth and watch the
profits roll in.

As they did - for a while. Now it's payback time and the mood could get very
ugly. Americans, to put it bluntly, have been conned. They have been duped
by a bunch of serpent-tongued hucksters who packed up the wagon and made it
across the county line before a lynch mob could be formed.

The debate now is not about whether the US is in recession but how deep and
long that recession will be. Super-bears have started to say that this is
perhaps "The Big One", by which they mean the onset of a new Great
Depression. The need to rescue Bear Stearns has done little to still those
voices.

As the economics team at HSBC recently pointed out, there has been a
"catastrophic breakdown" of trust, and when that has happened in the past -
the US in the 1930s, Japan in the 1990s - chucking extra money at the banks
in the hope that they will start lending again proves ineffective.

It's not hard to see why trust has become such a rare commodity: Wall Street
at the height of the securitisation mania had, in effect, become London at
the time of the South Sea Bubble crisis in 1720. Vast quantities of funny
paper were changing hands even though those involved in the deals had no
idea of their true worth. Nor did they care. Inevitably, now the bubble has
burst and the huge Ponzi securitisation scam has been exposed, there has
been a reaction. The securitisation market is dead, there is less money
sloshing round the system, banks are hoarding their cash.

Having allowed the housing boom to rage out of control for too long and then
delaying cuts in interest rates until the housing market was gripped by
recessionary forces, the Fed is now trying to make up for lost time with a
burst of hyperactivity. It will cut interest rates on Wednesday and keep
cutting them: financial markets expect the Fed funds rate to be 1% by the
summer, and they are probably right. In most downturns, easier monetary
policy does the trick. Lower interest rates make it cheaper to borrow and
also change the trade-off between saving and spending. This may not be the
usual sort of downturn, however, with consumers going through a period of
debt revulsion after the excesses of recent years, even so the consensus is
that after two or three quarters of falling output, a slow and sluggish
recovery will be under way.

*Deflation *

These hopes are likely to be dashed, unless there is intervention at home
and internationally to tackle the crisis. Domestically, the priority should
be to stop homes that have been foreclosed being auctioned on the open
market, since by selling them at a 50% discount property prices are driven
down. The US does not seem to have learned the lessons from Japan, which
encouraged a fire sale of property in the 1990s and was sucked into a
classic debt deflation trap as a result. Those who argue, with some force,
that it would be counter-productive to intervene in the market because the
US needs to work the rottenness out of its system must recognise that the
cold turkey option will be very long and painful.

The second form of intervention should be to shore up the dollar, the
collapse of which is worrying countries that rely heavily on exports and is
the main reason for the surge in commodity prices. Co-ordinated intervention
by the major central banks needs to be at the top of the agenda at next
month's G7 meeting in Washington, and there could be action even sooner if
the dollar continues to tank.

In the longer term, lessons must be learnt from the turmoil. One is that you
don't solve the problems of a collapsing bubble by blowing up another, which
is what Alan Greenspan did after the dotcom fiasco in 2001 - the most
irresponsible behaviour of any central banker in living memory.

The second lesson is that there has to be far stricter regulation not just
of the US real estate market but of Wall Street, to prevent the return of
irresponsible lending as soon as the recovery is firmly under way. If this
is, heaven help us, The Big One, one of the only consolations will be that
the repugnance at the orgy of speculation that has sapped the strength of
the US economy will put a new New Deal on the political agenda.

But for this to happen there has to be a political response and even though
this year's presidential election will be held in the shadow of recession,
there appears not to be a potential FDR among the contenders for the White
House. Yet if this crisis really does get as bad as some are forecasting,
the public will rightly demand more than a slap on the wrist for Wall
Street.
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