Very good account of the economic crisis
This is an outstandingly good introduction to our current economic plight. Writer John Lanchester explains the crisis in simple and humorous terms.
The banks' larger profits and bonuses came not because they were doing anything better, but just because they were making bigger bets. Between 1986 and 2006, the average return per year on banking shares rose from 2 per cent to 16 per cent. Andrew Haldane, of the Bank of England, explained, "Since 2000, rising leverage fully accounts for movements in UK banks' ROE [return on equity] - both the rise to around 24% in 2007 and the subsequent fall into negative territory in 2008."
Lanchester points out, "If we had joined the euro and our mortgages were tied to those groovily low euro interest rates, money would have been even cheaper, and credit even more easily available, so the housing bubble would have been even bigger, and the crash correspondingly crashier. (Two examples of countries where that happened: Ireland and Spain.)"
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan admitted, "The consequent surge in global demand for US subprime securities by banks, hedge, and pension funds supported by unrealistically positive rating designations by credit agencies was, in my judgment, the core of the problem."
Lanchester observes, "the credit crunch was based on a climate (the post-Cold War victory party of free-market capitalism), a problem (the sub-prime mortgages), a mistake (the mathematical models of risk) and a failure, that of the regulators."
As he notes, "the process of lending is no longer driven the legitimate desire of poor-but-reliable people to own a house, but is instead a manufactured process driven by capital which is set loose looking for people to sign up loans. An epidemic began of what has come to be known as 'predatory lending': mortgage lenders doing everything they could to sign up borrowers at higher-than-ordinary, sub-prime interest rates, so that the debt they created could then be pooled and securitized and sold on as tranches of various grades of CDO [collateralized debt obligations]." The USA has 250,000 mortgage brokers, mostly unlicensed and unregulated.
So, "we arrived in the bizarre position in which poor people struggling to pay back their mortgages had miraculously produced the world's most secure financial instruments. This was a fortunate conclusion to reach for both the banks which made money issuing the CDOs and the rating agencies which made money assessing them."
Goldman Sachs "went from having to end its status as an investment bank and take federal support, in September 2008, to declaring all-time record profits - with bonuses to match - in July 2009. The bank which would have gone under without government help, and had to borrow $10 billion from the taxpayer, was less than a year later setting aside $16.8 billion in pay, bonuses and benefits for itself."
In sum, it was "a huge unregulated boom in which almost all the upside went directly into private hands, followed by a gigantic bust in which the losses were socialized."
The OECD rates British banks the 44th safest in the world, six places behind Botswana. Canada's banks are the world's safest, because they are regulated, and this has been good for growth - Canada's incomes have risen by 11 per cent a year since 2004.
Lanchester proposes, "The change should be that, if a bank (broadly defined) receives any taxpayers' money, the existing shareholders are (broadly speak
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Overview
Part economic primer, part fiscal and historical analysis, New Yorker and London Review of Books contributor John Lancaster offers his brilliantly witty, succint overview of the current financial crisis.
For most people, the reasons for the sudden collapse of our economy remain obscure. I.O.U. is the story of how we came to experience such a complete and devastating financial implosion, and how the decisions and actions of a select group of individuals had profound consequences for America, Europe, and the global economy overall. John Lanchester begins with "The ATM Moment," that seemingly magical proliferation of cheap credit that led to an explosion of...