A day of
reckoning for Americans who lived beyond their means
By Joseph Stiglitz
08/12/07 "Taipei
Tomes" -- -- The pessimists who have
long forecast that the US economy was in for trouble finally
seem to be coming into their own. Of course, there is no
glee in seeing stock prices tumble as a result of soaring
mortgage defaults. But it was largely predictable, as are
the likely consequences for both the millions of Americans
who will be facing financial distress and the global
economy.
The story goes back to the recession of 2001. With the
support of former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan,
US President George W. Bush pushed through a tax cut
designed to benefit the richest Americans but not to lift
the economy out of the recession that followed the collapse
of the Internet bubble.
Given that mistake, the Fed had little choice if it was to
fulfill its mandate to maintain growth and employment. It
had to lower interest rates, which it did in an
unprecedented way -- all the way down to 1 percent.
It worked, but in a way fundamentally different from how
monetary policy normally works. Usually, low interest rates
lead firms to borrow more to invest more, and greater
indebtedness is matched by more productive assets.
But given that overinvestment in the 1990s was part of the
problem underpinning the recession, lower interest rates did
not stimulate much investment. The economy grew, but mainly
because American families were persuaded to take on more
debt, refinancing their mortgages and spending some of the
proceeds. And, as long as housing prices rose as a result of
lower interest rates, Americans could ignore their growing
indebtedness.
Even this did not stimulate the economy enough. To get more
people to borrow more money, credit standards were lowered,
fueling growth in so-called "sub?prime" mortgages. Moreover,
new products were invented, which lowered upfront payments,
making it easier for individuals to take bigger mortgages.
Some mortgages even had negative amortization: payments did
not cover the interest due, so every month the debt grew
more. Fixed mortgages, with interest rates at 6 percent,
were replaced with variable-rate mortgages, whose interest
payments were tied to the lower short-term T-bill rates.
What were called "teaser rates" allowed even lower payments
for the first few years. They were teasers because they
played off the fact that many borrowers were not financially
sophisticated and didn't really understand what they were
getting into.
And Greenspan egged them to pile on the risk by encouraging
these variable-rate mortgages. On Feb. 23, 2004, he pointed
out that "many homeowners might have saved tens of thousands
of dollars had they held adjustable-rate mortgages rather
than fixed-rate mortgages during the past decade."
But did Greenspan really expect interest rates to remain
permanently at 1 percent -- a negative real interest rate?
Did he not think about what would happen to poor Americans
with variable-rate mortgages if interest rates rose, as they
almost surely would?
Of course, Greenspan's behavior meant that, under his watch,
the economy performed better than it otherwise would have
done. But it was only a matter of time before that
performance became unsustainable.
Fortunately, most Americans did not follow Greenspan's
advice to switch to variable-rate mortgages. But even as
short-term interest rates began to rise, the day of
reckoning was postponed, as new borrowers could obtain
fixed-rate mortgages at interest rates that were not
increasing.
Remarkably, as short-term interest rates rose, medium and
long-term interest rates did not, something that was
referred to as a "conundrum."
One hypothesis is that foreign central banks that were
accumulating trillions of dollars finally figured out that
they were likely to be holding these reserves for years to
come, and could afford to put at least some of the money
into medium-term US treasury notes yielding -- initially --
far higher returns than T-bills.
The housing price bubble eventually broke and, with prices
declining, some have discovered that their mortgages are
larger than the value of their house. Others found that as
interest rates rose, they simply could not make their
payments.
Too many Americans built no cushion into their budgets, and
mortgage companies, focusing on the fees generated by new
mortgages, did not encourage them to do so.
Just as the collapse of the real estate bubble was
predictable, so are its consequences: housing starts and
sales of existing homes are down and housing inventories are
up. By some reckonings, more than two-thirds of the increase
in output and employment over the past six years has been
real estate-related, reflecting both new housing and
households borrowing against their homes to support a
consumption binge.
The housing bubble induced Americans to live beyond their
means -- net savings have been negative for the past couple
of years. With this engine of growth turned off, it is hard
to see how the US economy would not suffer from a slowdown.
A return to fiscal sanity will be good in the long run, but
it will reduce aggregate demand in the short run.
There is an old adage about how people's mistakes continue
to live long after they are gone. That is certainly true of
Greenspan. In Bush's case, we are beginning to bear the
consequences even before he has departed.
Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is
professor of economics at Columbia University and was
chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under US
president Bill Clinton and a chief economist and senior vice
president at the World Bank. Copyright: Project Syndicate
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