Friday, March 27, 2009

The Medicine Is Making You Sick

The problem with President Obama's solution to our economic woes is that his "cure" is what made us sick in the first place: over-spending and too much debt.

The Business Insider Blog had a great post explaining how Treasury Secretary Geithner's plan to fix the banks is totally ass backwards and full of totally false premises. I believe the administration knows this, but is following through because it is in the best interest of their banking buddies. Here are the five misconceptions they have:

The trouble with the economy is that the banks aren't lending. The reality: The economy is in trouble because American consumers and businesses took on way too much debt and are now collapsing under the weight of it. As consumers retrench, companies that sell to them are retrenching, thus exacerbating the problem. The banks, meanwhile, are lending. They just aren't lending as much as they used to. Also the shadow banking system (securitization markets), which actually provided more funding to the economy than the banks, has collapsed.

The banks aren't lending because their balance sheets are loaded with "bad assets" that the market has temporarily mispriced. The reality: The banks aren't lending (much) because they have decided to stop making loans to people and companies who can't pay them back. And because the banks are scared that future writedowns on their old loans will lead to future losses that will wipe out their equity.

Bad assets are "bad" because the market doesn't understand how much they are really worth.
The reality: The bad assets are bad because they are worth less than the banks say they are. House prices have dropped by nearly 30% nationwide. That has created something in the neighborhood of $5+ trillion of losses in residential real estate alone (off a peak market value of housing about $20+ trillion). The banks don't want to take their share of those losses because doing so will wipe them out. So they, and Geithner, are doing everything they can to pawn the losses off on the taxpayer.

Once we get the "bad assets" off bank balance sheets, the banks will start lending again.
The reality: The banks will remain cautious about lending, because the housing market and economy are still deteriorating. So they'll sit there and say they are lending while waiting for the economy to bottom.

Once the banks start lending, the economy will recover.
The reality: American consumers still have debt coming out of their ears, and they'll be working it off for years. House prices are still falling. Retirement savings have been crushed. Americans need to increase their savings rate from today's 5% (a vast improvement from the 0% rate of two years ago) to the 10% long-term average. Consumers don't have room to take on more debt, even if the banks are willing to give it to them.


In the end, you can not fix a problem unless you accurately define it's cause. In this case, the medicine the administration is administering is going to create an even bigger future economic disaster. Getting people to borrow more is not the answer to fixing our economy. We need to become a nation of producers again, not a nation of debt-ridden over borrowers...

1 comment:

Steph said...

Good post. In the end, this financial collapse will be a good thing for us. So few people understood the concepts of savings ... or living within their means. Good lessons are coming out of this. They just happen to be painful ones.

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