The
simple reason for all great downturns is that credit is massively
destroyed. Based on the flimsy expectation of a federal
intervention to prevent losses, the natural reliance on loan quality
evaporated and lawlessness prevailed until the music stopped. When
it stopped, the pricing was adjusted downward leaving the whole
market effectively underwater. This type of event take years to
resolve without effective intervention and that was never forthcoming
as ignorance prevails anyway.
In
Canada we are experiencing necessary pressure upward on loan quality
a a huge part of the market adjusts to million dollar pricing. In
the process the market deepens and naturally strengthens to make it
better able to handle any downward pressure.
Here
are the slowly evolving statistics and the good news really is that
the portfolios are now sorted out and we have business returning to
normal in the USA. Thus bargains are beginning to disappear.
The
Simple Reason for the Long Downturn: Housing Bubble Burst
Monday,
16 September 2013 10:58By Dean Baker,
Many
economists and business writers view the duration and severity of the
downturn as being a mystery. They argue that it has something to do
with the financial crisis, although the exact nature of the
relationship is often not quite clear, with the financial crisis
looming as a dark cloud hanging over the head of an otherwise healthy
economy.
Fortunately,
for arithmetic fans the story was never very difficult. In the last
business cycle the economy was being driven in large part by a
housing bubble. The unprecedented run-up in nationwide house prices
lead to booms in both residential construction and consumption.
This
was easy to see even before the bubble burst and should be completely
apparent to everyone now. In the 1980s and 1990s before the bubble
began to drive the housing market, residential construction accounted
for an average of less than 4.4 percent of GDP. At the peak of the
bubble driven building boom in 2005, construction rose to more than
6.5 percent of GDP.
The
extraordinary rate of construction in the bubble years led to
enormous overbuilding which manifest itself most clearly in a
record vacancy rate. When the bubble burst construction
plummeted to well below normal levels. After several years of below
normal construction the vacancy rate has fallen, although it is still
at an unusually high level.
The
whittling away at the backlog of excess housing has allowed for a
recovery in construction. It is now just under 3.1 percent of GDP.
Given pre-bubble trends there is some room for further recovery, but
it is unlikely to provide much additional boost to the economy from
current levels.
Barring
another bubble, residential construction will only add a bit more
than 1.0 percentage point to GDP as it recovers further. This is
helpful, but in an economy that it still 6.0 percentage points (@
$1,000 billion in annual output) below its potential, it will not go
far towards getting us back to full employment.
The
other route through which the housing bubble was driving the economy
was consumption. The $8 trillion in equity created by the housing
bubble made homeowners feel wealthier. They consumed based on this
wealth, believing that it would be there for them to draw on for
their children’s education, their own retirement or for other
needs.
When
the bubble burst, homeowners cut back their consumption since this
wealth no longer existed. However contrary to what you often read in
the paper, consumption is not currently low, it is actually quite
high when compared to any time except the years of the stock and
housing bubbles.
In
the decades of the sixties, seventies, and eighties, people on
average consumed less than 90 percent of their after-tax income,
meaning that the saving rate was over 10 percent. The share of income
going to consumption rose sharply in the 1990s due to the stock
bubble and then even more in the last decade due to the housing
bubble. Consumption peaked at more than 97 percent of income in 2005.
The
consumption share fell during the downturn, but it has inched back up
so that consumers are again spending almost 96 percent of their
income, implying a saving rate of just over 4 percent. While this
rate of spending is not as high as the bubble peaks of the last two
decades, it is far higher than in the decades preceding the bubbles.
There
is no reason to expect the consumption share of income to go still
higher. In other words, the idea that people will just get over their
pessimism and spend a lot more money is silly. People have the same
need to save for retirement and other purposes as they always did.
Going forward it is at least as likely that the share of income going
to consumption will fall as rise. We have lost the bubble wealth that
was driving consumption before the crash; we will not get back to
bubble levels of consumption without another bubble.
If
it is unreasonable to expect a bounce back in either housing or
consumption, then what about investment? Here too the optimists flunk
the arithmetic test. The problem is that investment has already
pretty much returned to its pre-bubble shares of output. In the
most recent quarter investment was 12.2 percent of GDP. This compares
to an average share of 12.4 percent in the prior business cycle.
While there is some room for an increase in the investment share of
GDP as the economy recovers further, there is no basis for expecting
any big surge.
There
is one last place to look for private sector demand: the secret place
that the business press agrees never to mention. That would be net
exports. Currently our net exports are negative, meaning that we
import more than we export to the tune of more than $500 billion a
year or 3.0 percent of GDP.
This
deficit, which was considerably larger before the crash, has created
an enormous hole in demand since it means that income being generated
in the United States is not being spent in the United States. The
hole in demand was filled in the 1990s by the demand generated by the
stock bubble. It was filled in the last decade by the demand
generated by the housing bubble. Without a bubble, there is nothing
to fill this hole.
If
we could get trade close to balanced it would raise output to near
full employment. We can assume that the gain to GDP will be roughly
1.5 times the increase in net exports, so that an increase in net
exports equal to 3.0 percentage points of GDP will raise output by
4.5 percentage points of GDP, filling most of the gap between
potential GDP and actual GDP.
There
also is an easy way to boost net exports, get the value of the dollar
down against other currencies. This makes U.S. goods more competitive
in world markets, leading to an increase in exports and a drop in
imports.
However
a lower valued dollar is not even an item on the national agenda.
Instead we get over-hyped trade deals that are mostly about giving
corporations more protection against environmental and safety
regulations, and increasing protections in the pharmaceutical and
software sectors. The potential gains from these deals are trivial
even by their proponents’ own estimates.
So
there you have it. A long and severe downturn that was entirely
predictable. There is no mystery about the downturn or the potential
routes to recovery. The only problem is that the people in control of
economic policy have no interest in taking the steps necessary to
bring the economy back to full employment. And most of the people who
write about the economy are doing their best to say that it is all
just so mysterious since it is far too simple for them to understand.
Happy 5th anniversary!
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