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Wednesday, October 1, 2008

PRE-POSTSCRIPT: Drowning in the firehose of commentary about the crisis and "bailout," I can only recommend my favorites, Instapundit (Glenn Reynolds) and Megan McArdle's joint. Reynolds' entries are terse but frequent; McArdle's less frequent and sometimes a bit long-winded (like I'm one to talk). Both have good links to other places. Megan has a funny screed against bad metaphors for the crisis here. Glenn correctly nudges people to use "rescue" instead of "bailout."*

An idea definitely worth supporting is replacing Pelosi and Reid as House Speaker and Senate leader, respectively. Both have been embarrassments to their party and country. Bush's popularity oscillates between 30 and 40%. This Congress' ratings have never been higher than low 20s and have sunk, at times, into single digits. With good reason, it's the most unpopular Congress since World War Two. Assuming the Democrats maintain control of the House (which they probably will, with a smaller majority), the best choice is Clintonista Rahm Emanuel. Politics makes strange bedfellows: weird as I feel typing these words, everyone's disgusted with Reid-elosi, and the Dems desperately need a counter to the cultish children's crusade that is their presidential campaign.


The credit market and housing debt crisis continues to gyrate. Strangely, it seems to have boosted the prospects of the party that bears much of the blame for it. Remember: government is now involved in backing about 40% of home mortgages.

While I would have voted for the bailout bill if no alternative were available, I completely understand the motives of the House members who voted against. They got an earful from their constituents and only weak pressure from the House leadership. It's essential to decouple the credit-liquidity crunch from the longer-term asset-decline problem. It's too early to seriously discuss responding to the latter. The former needs a response now.

Finance/economics blogger Fabius Maximus (F.M. from this point) recently published a fascinating and frightening look at American debt trends since World War Two. While his views are always loaded with doom and gloom, this argument is worth a look; he's backed it up with hard numbers ultimately based on what the Federal Reserve tracks. F.M.'s debt ratio charts show various categories of debt from 1952 until now, as a fraction of GDP. (The GDP is gross domestic product, the annual output of the American economy, the world's largest, at a little more than a quarter of the global total). I'll admit: my jaw dropped too.

Such high debt ratios are the deep fact now spooking credit markets and foreign investors, deeper than the immediate credit crisis or falling housing prices. No society can get into as much debt as we're in and not create a huge crisis of confidence among lenders. With no sign that the debt accumulation will stop, they've cut back their lending, even to the creditworthy. We've been lucky that this debt is denominated in our own currency, allowing the Fed to massage the money supply and keep credit crises at bay in the past. But, still, there is a limit. Evidently, we've reached it.


From these charts, both the numbers and their trends, we can draw some conclusions at some variance with received wisdom.

Government itself, far from being the main debt culprit, is the least. Its ratio reached an absolute peak in 1945 and has not approached it since.

A large federal debt does seem to be a permanent feature of modern America. The period of the 1960s and 1970s, when the federal debt ratio dropped, is misleading in one respect. In that era, government policy was to print money rather than borrow it. The tendency to borrow, established in the 1930s and 40s, returned in the 80s. OTOH, the effect of peace dividends is real: the drop of the federal debt ratio after World War Two and in the late 80s and early 90s reflects the end of one very large and another, less intensive, conflict. Both the 1950s and the 90s were periods of falling federal debt ratios, because the pressure to increase government spending had eased off. The period after 2000 was marked by a smaller, but still significant, surge in federal debt, mostly a result of the Republicans' new eagerness for big government.**

Business enterprises, both financial (banking and insurance, essentially) and non-financial, have developed a large leveraging habit, borrowing in good times -- during economic expansions -- and paying down in bad -- during and just after recessions. They learned to start doing this in the Great Inflation of the 1970s, because inflation makes debt attractive.

But the habit persisted long after high inflation ended in the 80s. The rationale for business debt is simple: borrow now, found or expand a business, and future profits will more than take care of it. While this "leveraging" generally works, it doesn't work consistently enough to prevent major debt crises from hitting poorly performing corporations at every recessionary downturn. It's a risky strategy with extravagant real payoffs, but frequent casualties as well.

Finally, Americans as consumers, individuals and households, have by far the biggest taste for debt -- an extraordinary taste for it, in fact -- much more than corporations and government.

The largest component of this debt consists of mortgages. But it also consists of credit cards, student and home equity loans, and all the rest. Almost 40% of this debt ratio's increase occurred just in the last 15 years or so.

Powerful institutional and social habits reinforce the preference for personal and household debt. Many of our institutions, both public and private, make debt look and feel very attractive. While bankruptcy was made more punitive a few years ago, lending standards have continued to drop (at least, until a few weeks ago). Inevitably, there will soon be a lot of people in a lot of financial pain and legal trouble. It was fine to make bankruptcy more punitive -- but only if borrowing itself had been made more difficult as well.

F.M.'s charts make me wonder something else. Rather than take on too much debt themselves, government (in relation to housing and higher education) and banks (in relation to credit cards, mortgages, and home equity loans) have instead encouraged ordinary people to take on debt, a lot of it. Preaching prudence and probity, but also enticing us with borrowing and spending, often ready to "juice" the economy with cheap credit, these are institutions at war with themselves, sending very mixed messages.
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* More accurately, Part I (credit crunch) is a "rescue"; Part II (falling house prices) is a "distressed asset collection and fire sale."

But, ah!, a cynical Ann Althouse smirks in the background :)

** An important feature F.M.'s charts is that his current federal debt totals about $6 trillion, not the $9 trillion you usually hear.

The reason is that he doesn't count $3 trillion in past Social Security and Medicare debt, which (as he rightly points out) merely consists of IOUs written by government to itself. It is not part of the federal debt held by bondholders. In any case, present entitlement costs are at this time paid for by present tax revenue. That will start to change in the next decade, however.

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3 Comments

let's count the goods that have come out of this:

- It raises the profile and power of the senate vs. the executive. One of the reasons we have a polarized and increasingly radicalized electorate is that the executive branch is too powerful. People may get to vote for that person every 4 years, but they have effectively no influence on him once he's in office. The same argument applies as in the middle east. Lack of opportunities to participate in ones gov't lead to marginalization, defensive psychology and sublimation, and radicalization. If people can't influence a politician, they have to choose between feeling helplessness or some kind of self defeating rationalization. Shifting the balance of power towards the senate, where people have more influence, and away from the exec will yield dividends for us in time, and this crisis has done that.

- it has forced us to discuss a variety of issues that have been festering for a long time. The moral hazards associated with quasi-governmental financial organizations, the negative effects of a lot of well intentioned social engineering, and the risks we face when financial institutions are allowed to get either "too big to fail" or too entrenched, as well as others.

- it will usher in a healthier period for us. the financial sector has been much too big a portion of our economy and that fact alone has caused lots of distortions. Some of those are directly related to real estate and the issues everybody has been discussing, but others include a lack of capital available to industry(ies), and a general degradation in the business culture that has come to expect easy and ever growing profits no matter what has to be done to achieve them. It's no surprise that the conservative party has been trending away from its cautious/conservative roots. The phenomenon has been widespread. We can look forward to an economy that is better diversified, where opportunities tickle down better and where genuine conservative thinking becomes fashionable again.

- the pain that will accompany a general contraction of debt (because you're right that the general level of indebtedness is not sustainable) will be less than you might imagine. It will mean an absolute reduction in the size of the economy, but what will disappear will be money that has already ceased to circulate properly, so we won't miss it so much.

There's a good opportunity for a president to make very positive changes here. Too bad both candidates seem utterly unphilosophical and unable to grasp the implications of what's happening, but it'll sink in eventually no matter which one gets elected.

The sooner the crash comes, the better. I crashed and burned 6 years ago.

First 6 years of Bush presidency, the economy was fine, sorta. Pelosi sits on the throne, gas doubles and the stock market dives. Obama, McCain, and Bush are for bailing out the bastards who put us in this mess. [Obama, McCain, and Bush also have the same Iraq platform. Obama's more nuanced than me. lmao.]

Adam makes some interesting comments that are, mostly, on target, I think.

The slowing or reversal of debt accumulation will cause immediate pain. It will lead in a few years to a world of good. It'll be like that nasty 1979-83 wringing inflation out of the economy. That was a recession to remember. What they call "recessions" these days, ain't like that :)

Discussing the moral hazards of so much government-backed debt is a very good thing. We need even more discussion.

The shrinking financial sector will hurt New York City, a lot. But the reduction of the debt associated with it will do the economy a lot of good. Just keep in mind: ultimately, Wall Street was doing nothing more than slicing and dicing the debt that all of us out here are were taking on. They didn't create it out of nothing.

I'm not sure raising the profile of the Senate is all that great, at least right now. Congress is generally pretty buffoonish. But if they can take some responsibility for something, more power to them.

I don't like Nancy Pelosi either. But I don't think she's responsible for high gas prices, at least not in an immediate sense.

Myself, I crashed and burned around 1990, but I'm okay now ;-)

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