Showing posts with label deleveraging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deleveraging. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Krugman reviews Geithner's book 'Stress Test'

I don't care much about Tim Geithner or his financial memoir Stress Test. But Krugman's review of the book features many teachable moments so the review is well worth reading, especially as revisionist historians would like to distort what really happened.  Here's the first one:

Quite early on, two somewhat different stories emerged about the economic crisis. One story, which Geithner clearly preferred, saw it mainly as a financial panic—a supersized version of a classic bank run. And there certainly was a very frightening panic in 2008–2009. But the alternative story, which has grown more persuasive as the economy remains weak, sees the financial panic, while dangerous in its own right, as a symptom of something broader and deeper—mainly a large overhang of private debt, in particular household debt.

Krugman obviously and correctly goes with the latter story. The overhang of private debt -- particularly mortgage debt among the middle and lower class, and more recently, student debt, now about $1 trillion -- is the real anchor weighing down our economy today.

Next, Krugman points out that the FIRE sector is not synonymous with the U.S. economy, something that CNBC and Wall Street types seem to forget sometimes [emphasis mine]:

Whatever the reasons, however, the stress test pretty much marked the end of the panic. ...[S]everal key measures of financial disruption—the TED spread, an indicator of perceived risks in lending to banks, the commercial paper spread, a similar indicator for businesses, and the Baa spread, indicating perceptions of corporate risk. All fell sharply over the first half of 2009, returning to more or less normal levels. By the end of 2009 one could reasonably declare the financial crisis over.

But a funny thing happened next: banks and markets recovered, but the real economy, and the job market in particular, didn’t.

That's because the Great Recession wasn't just a mega run on banks that the "confidence fairy" could restore, via cheap money for banks from the Fed. Rather, the Great Recession was a problem of too much private debt dragging down aggregate demand and hence economic growth, in a vicious cycle:

The logic of a balance sheet recession is straightforward. Imagine that for whatever reason people have grown careless about both borrowing and lending, so that many families and/or firms have taken on high levels of debt. And suppose that at some point people more or less suddenly realize that these high debt levels are risky. At that point debtors will face strong pressures from their creditors to “deleverage,” slashing their spending in an effort to pay down debt.  But when many people slash spending at the same time, the result will be a depressed economy. This can turn into a self-reinforcing spiral, as falling incomes make debt seem even less supportable, leading to deeper cuts; but in any case, the overhang of debt can keep the economy depressed for a long time.

And here's where we get down to the brass tacks of the federal government's response, and the Fed's position (Geithner's) on that response:

Unlike a financial panic, a balance sheet recession can’t be cured simply by restoring confidence: no matter how confident they may be feeling, debtors can’t spend more if their creditors insist they cut back. So offsetting the economic downdraft from a debt overhang requires concrete action, which can in general take two forms: fiscal stimulusand debt relief. That is, the government can step in to spend because the private sector can’t, and it can also reduce private debts to allow the debtors to spend again. Unfortunately, we did too little of the first and almost none of the second.

Yes, there was the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, aka the Obama stimulus, and it surely helped end the economy’s free fall. But the stimulus was too small and too short-lived given the depth of the slump: stimulus spending peaked at 1.6 percent of GDP in early 2010 and dropped rapidly thereafter, giving way to a regime of destructive fiscal austerity. And the administration’s efforts to help homeowners were so ineffectual as to be risible.

And Geithner, who was in the middle of Obama's inner circle of trusted economic advisers, opposed both stimulus and debt relief, notes Krugman:

Geithner also makes some demonstrably false statements about the public debate over stimulus. “At the time,” he declares, “$800 billion over two years was considered extraordinarily aggressive, twice as much as a group of 387 mostly left-leaning economists had just recommended in a public letter.” Um, no. A number of economists, including Columbia’s Joseph Stiglitz and myself, were warning that the package was too small; so was Romer, internally. And that economists’ letter called for $300 to $400 billion per year. The Recovery Act never reached that level of spending; even if you include tax cuts of dubious effectiveness, it only briefly grazed that target in 2010, before rapidly fading away.

And then there’s the issue of debt relief. Geithner would have us believe that he was all for it, but that the technical and political obstacles were too difficult for him to do very much. This claim has been met with derision from Republicans as well as Democrats. For example, Glenn Hubbard, who was chief economic adviser under George W. Bush, says that Geithner “personally and actively opposed mortgage refinancing.”

Krugman takes exception to Geithner's victory dance on ending the crisis and the Great Recession:

To the rest of us, however, the victory over financial crisis looks awfully Pyrrhic. Before the crisis, most analysts expected the US economy to keep growing at around 2.5 percent per year; in fact it has barely managed 1 percent, so that our annual national income at this point is around $1.7 trillion less than expected. Headline unemployment is down, but that’s largely because many workers, despairing of ever finding a job, have stopped looking. Median family income is still far below its pre-crisis level. And there’s a growing consensus among economists that much of the damage to the economy is permanent, that we’ll never get back to our old path of growth.

There's more to this story that Krugman forgivingly overlooks, such as why Geithner was so solicitous to Wall Street banks and not Main Street Americans. After all, Geithner "met more often with Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein than Congressional leaders, including the Speaker of the House and the Senate Majority Leader," in his first few months in office.  Why??


By Paul Krugman
June 10, 2014 | The New York Review of Books

Sunday, December 1, 2013

MB360: Americans back to spending on credit

Any economist, pundit or politician who tells you that our economy would get better if we could only increase access to credit (debt) or "incentivize" poor people to work while cutting their food stamps and the minimum wage, is either a charlatan or an idiot.

What happens when Americans, as a nation, start saving and stop spending on credit is economic stagnation or recession. So we must increase Americans' household incomes, and/or lower their household expenses to allow them to continue spending. After all, the well-off can buy only so many houses, yachts and luxury goods. Yes, they can save and invest in stocks and other securities... but their investments won't translate into U.S. jobs and economic growth if there is no market (consumer demand) to drive it. 

Indeed, the Dow just hit a record high, corporate profits and U.S. workers' productivity are at all-time highs, and yet... nobody is doing an economic endzone dance right now. Working class Americans feels more economically insecure than ever.

And that's why Obamacare is so necessary, among other federal programs.  

According to a 2013 study by the AARP, over the past 10 years, health care spending for average middle-income households increased 51 percent, compared to only 30 percent growth in household income. Over that same period, healthcare inflation increased three times the rate of growth for all other products and services; and per capita expenditure on health care increased 72 percent! 

We must cut our per capita expenditure on health care while protecting average Americans from treatable illness and medical bankruptcy. Only the Democrats are proposing real solutions to do that.  Republicans keep dawdling while Americans are dying and drowning in debt.  

Under President Obama, the rate of healthcare inflation has finally slowed and is projected to slow further. Coincidence?


Posted by mybudget360 | December 1, 2013

Monday, November 25, 2013

Bankrate: Americans still struggling to pay debts

Ordinary Americans are still de-leveraging after the Great Recession. Their continued debts are hurting consumer demand, which in turn is hurting employment and investment because companies don't want to produce or sell what people don't have the money to buy.

What can politicians do to ease the pain and get our economy going again?  Republicans' knee-jerk reaction is to cut taxes. Yet... the same folks struggling to pay their bills are the same "47 percent" of "entitled" moochers who already pay little or no income tax. And corporations are more profitable than ever, with billions of cash on hand. Meanwhile, Republicans urge fiscal austerity -- mainly by cutting "welfare" like WIC, food stamps and unemployment benefits for these same struggling Americans.

Something's gotta give. The Fed's continued quantitative easing is not reaching average Americans. If their struggles continue, then we can anticipate another decade of economic malaise: the "secular stagnation" theory.  In this context the risk -- the temptation, for some -- is to blow up another asset bubble to give the economy the appearance of health and spur consumer confidence, thus consumer spending. But we know that such bubbles burst eventually, leaving those same working-class people worse off.  

It's a shame our leaders can't come up with anything to break this vicious cycle, besides yet more asset bubbles that benefit business insiders, and free money for Wall Street banks that don't need it and doesn't "trickle down" in the form of loans to Main Street Americans.


By Polyana da Costa
November 25, 2013 | Bankrate

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Fed's zero-interest policy has consequences

The Fed thinks it's wonderful American households are de-leveraging. With their zero interest-rate policy the Fed is clearly trying to induce Americans to pay down debt and/or spend, since ordinary savings earn no return.

However the Fed's Duke neglected to mention that U.S. student loan debt has reached nearly $1 trillion, with default rates at for-profit colleges rivaling sub-prime loans. All those poor students -- many of them U.S. troops -- believed the hype that "education is the key" to employment, and now they're in high water.


By Sarah Hutchins
October 22, 2011 | Reuters

Households' caution about taking on debt and spending will stand them in good stead when the economic recovery becomes more robust, a top Federal Reserve official said on Saturday.

Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke did not comment on the outlook for the economy or the monetary policy in a speech about financial planning.

Household debt-to-income ratios skyrocketed during 2001-2007, but households cut debt and spending significantly during the financial crisis that began in 2007, Duke said.

The declines in spending and borrowing reflect the weak economy, but also a greater aversion to debt and a desire to hold down debt levels.

"Going forward, as income and asset values recover, these improvements in the aggregate household position should be felt by more and more U.S. households.," she said.

The Fed cut benchmark interest rates to near zero almost three years ago and has bought $2.3 trillion in bonds to boost economic growth.

Recent data suggest the economy may have escaped slipping back into recession over the summer, but Fed officials will debate further steps to lower a high unemployment rate at their next meeting November 1-2.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Consumer debt, not federal debt, is the crisis

The real debt problem in the U.S. is private household debt. U.S. federal debt by historical standards is still manageable and not in a crisis; it's not holding the economy back; although long term it must be faced. Right now consumer/household debt -- which is still at 154 percent of wages and salaries -- is the crisis. Until Americans clean up their personal balance sheets and start spending again, all kinds of businesses which depend on them for sales won't start increasing capacity or hiring again.

Without some gov't policies to induce home mortgage modifications, speeding foreclosures, and debt write-offs, the de-leveraging process will take several years, perhaps a decade, of needlessly low economic output, which will in turn cause lower tax receipts and more strain on the federal budget than necessary.

This is pretty basic economics and yet it is such a sore political topic, which forces me to conclude that that many Americans are willfully ignorant about it. Also, I think there is some deep-seeded American moralism at play here: many believe we should "take our medicine" and suffer for our mistakes, even if that suffering is needless and the "innocent" suffer, too.

If you want a more detailed explanation then read this analysis by Henry Blodget of Business Insider: HERE'S WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE ECONOMY... (And How To Fix It): We must "reduce the debt that is crippling the productive part of the economy:" consumer debt.


By Karina Frayter
October 2, 2011 | CNBC.com