the quiet 1990s, the panic of 2008, and the great recession of 2008-2010 and more? less seriously?

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The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zP0C- G_iWAg

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Page 1: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008,

and The Great Recession of 2008-2010

AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zP0C-G_iWAg

Page 2: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

The 1990s, the “Belle Epoque”

• Brief Recession July 1990-March 1991• Longest Ever Boom: April 1991 to March 2001

– Inflation declines--- from 4% to an average of 2%– Unemployment falls from 8% to 4%– Rapid productivity growth, rapid growth of GDP but

benefits not equally distributed– Bank failures disappear, very profitable, build up

capital, “Prompt Corrective Action Seems to Work

Page 3: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

The Dot.com Crash 2000• Collapse of stock market focused on

computer/internet/biotech companies.• DJ and S&P barely recover, Nasdaq never (yet)• No Banking Collapse because banks don’t own

stock---stocks widely held, decline in wealth causes consumption to fall

• But huge losses ($1.7 trillion) barely slow continued growth

• Recession: March 2001-November 2001• Economy recovers and grows quickly with low

inflation and low unemployment• Housing Boom begins 2002

Page 4: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

The Panic of 2008 and the Great Recession

• Economy begins to slow December 2007

• Gradually housing boom slows

• Financial crisis starts in late summer 2008

• Panic 2008

• Economy quickly declines

• Unemployment rises rapidly

• Some fear a new Great Depression.

Page 5: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Why Does It Seem Similar?

• Great Depression of 1929-1933 (1939)

• Real estate market crash• Stock market crash• Bank failures• Credit crunch• Rapid Decline in GDP• Rapid Rise in

Unemployment

• Recession of

2007-2009?• Real estate market crash• Stock market crash• Bank failures• Credit crunch• Rapid Decline in GDP• Rapid Rise in

Unemployment

Page 6: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

But on closer inspection….?• How does the current recession compare to:

– Great Depression– Last two recessions– Two worst prior recessions since the Great

Depression

• Are 1929-1933 & 2007-2010 similar?

• Note: Conventional definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of real GDP decline

Page 7: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Today and the Great Depression

60

70

80

90

100

110

Quarters from the Business Cycle Peak

Ind

ex o

f R

eal G

DP

Great Depression Current 1990-1991 2001 1973-1975 1980 and 1981-1982

December 2008

Page 8: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

A Close UpNote: 1980/1981-1982 is a double dip

80

85

90

95

100

105

-4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Quarters from the Business Cycle Peak

Ind

ex o

f R

eal G

DP

Great Depression Current 1990-1991 2001 1973-1975 1980 and 1981-1982

Page 9: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Unemployment1928 6.6%

1929 4.1%

1930 12.4%

1931 21.7%

1932 31.7%

1933 30.0%

2006 4.4%

2007 4.9%

2008 7.2%

Nov 200910.2%

Nov 2010 9.8%

1980 7.2%

1981 8.5%

1982 10.8%

1983 8.3%

1984 7.3%

1985 7.0%

Page 10: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

How Did it Happen?Incentives NOT Symptoms

• Banks and Government Agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac too huge risks

• Why? Bankers more greedy than before? Are they more risk-taking (sky-divers v. librarians)

• What are the incentives to take risk? The perfect combination is:– Deposit Insurance, “Too Big to Fail”– Incentives to buy lower quality, more risky

mortgages

Page 11: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

How Did it Happen?Incentives NOT Symptoms

Page 12: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

How Did It Happen? Chronology

• Housing Market Boom 2002-2006. At peak prices are up 50%.

• July 2006 -September 2007: High FFrate = 5.75%

• Peak of Business Cycle: December 2007: cutting FF rate4.25%.

• Housing Market Collapse Begins 2007, decline in wealth decline in consumption and investment.

• Direct effect on the banks via subprime mortgagesdecline in lending as their balance sheets deteriorate.

Page 13: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Collapse

• Fed maintains tight monetary policy: – “new lending facilities” but sterilizes effects. – 2% FF rate steady but too high AprilOctober

2008recession deepens

• PANIC– No panics on commercial banks because of deposit

insurance– But huge uninsured sector of banking—the investment

banks that depend on “Repo” market for funding. – Baer Stearns is bailed out.– Then Lehman Brothers allowed to fail September 15,

2008. Panic. Credit Crunch, huge interest rate spreads

• What should the Fed do?

Page 14: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Road to Recovery

• Turning Point: October 2008 Crisis—failure of Lehman and AIG, general financial panic

• Fed eases monetary policy – Cuts Fed Funds rates, beginning Oct, by Dec 2008, FF= 0.25%

supplemented by TAF Term Auction Facility (Discount Window)

• Monetary Expansion: – Traditional Open Market Ops plus “Quantitative Easing: Fed

buys $750 billion agency mortgage-backed securities and $300 long-term Treasury securities. March 18, 2009

• Should Banks Be Allowed to Fail? Too Big to Fail. October 2008: TARP to buy preferred stock in financial institutions (Troubled Asset Relief Program)

Page 15: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Road to Recovery?

• Large Fiscal Stimulus: Federal Deficit Estimate to be 10% of GDP 2009 (size of the multiplier?)

• Financial Markets: Major intervention to influence credit flows: March 2009, TALF (Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility) which include autos, credit cards and student loans…….TSLF (Term Securities Lending Facility), CPFF (commercial paper), MMIFF (money market mutual funds….etc.etc.

• Pushing all the buttons.

Page 16: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Road to Recovery? • Banking Policy: Inconsistent Policy, “Too Big to Fail”

Baer Yes, Lehman No, Bailout of Banks and MMMF• Banking Policy:

– The BIG Banks---May 7, 2009 “Stress Tests” for 19 largest BHCs, all “pass.”

– Remove “toxic assets”??: Public-Private Investment Program for Legacy Assets (postponed) No one will buy them

– Recapitalize—Treasury buys preferred shares, but too much

– Rising smaller bank failures• Banking Policy:

– Policy makers: Banks should not take excessive risks/Banks should not hold excessive reserves?

– Forbearance AGAIN!! Hope economy and subprime loans recover so don’t have to bail out more banks

Page 17: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Causes for Concern

• TODAY• Recovery Just Beginning• Now Fed (with a Trillion $ in new assets)

concerned to reduce liquiditytoo fast, recession continues, too slow inflation starts up

• Banking policy has not directly addressed the question of bank insolvency, curtailing lending

• Government continues to prop up the insolvent: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Citibank, BA, AIG &GMAC

• Regulatory reaction: Dodd-Frank Act of 2010---will it revive or constrict financial system?

Page 18: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Prolonged High Levels of Unemployment?

• Yes.• If the recession was brought about because we had

overinvested in certain sectors—housing and finance, then, labor and other factors need to be reallocated

• Restructuring---Bankruptcies are important to reallocate• If a bubble, then people thought they were wealthier than

they were, long-time to adjust consumption patterns.• We can help speed the transfer but we should not

impede the flow.• Monetary and Fiscal Policy are corrective actions that

can be taken---but what reforms are needed?• The right medicine requires the right diagnosis!

Page 19: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

The Cost of 20thC– 21stC Crises

• 1930s– Depositors and stockholders lose $2.5 billion– 2.4% of GDP – $38.7 billion in 2008$.

• 1980s– S&Ls lose $74 Billion and Commercial banks $52

billion.– 3.4% of GDP– $200 billion in 2008$

• 2008-2010 – One estimate of the losses to the banks is $1.7 trillion– 11.6% of 2008 GDP.

Page 20: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Can We Supervise Banks Better?

Page 21: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

Free market failures or Government policy failures?

• Is it insurance of banks & housing policies? Or greedy/predatory bankers?

• Proposals– New Consumer Protection Agency– Cap banker compensation– Restrict investments– Force derivatives to be exchange trade– New Federal Council of Regulators

• But if root cause of crisis is moral hazard from deposit insurance/Too Big to Fail and policies to increase risky mortgage lending---these then treat the symptoms not the the disease.

Page 22: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0OrLXoyZ4M

Page 23: The Quiet 1990s, The Panic of 2008, and The Great Recession of 2008-2010 AND MORE? LESS SERIOUSLY?

OK…You fix the budget

New York Times Interactive Puzzle

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/11/13/weekinreview/deficits-graphic.html