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Economic Crisis Workshop

Economic Crisis Workshop. Causes of the Crisis and the Great Recession. How Bad is the Lesser Depression?. Housing: 1 foreclosure every 11 seconds (24/7) = 2.9 million in 2010 1 in 10 “homeowners” may eventually face foreclosure Household wealth $13 trillion lost 2008/2009 (20%)

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Economic Crisis Workshop

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  1. Economic Crisis Workshop Causes of the Crisis and the Great Recession

  2. How Bad is the Lesser Depression? • Housing: • 1 foreclosure every 11 seconds (24/7) = 2.9 million in 2010 • 1 in 10 “homeowners” may eventually face foreclosure • Household wealth • $13 trillion lost 2008/2009 (20%) • US “Big Three” auto companies faced bankruptcy • US GDP declined at 6.2% annual rate 1QW08 • And then there is unemployment…. DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  3. The Great Recession – and “Recovery:” Unemployment by Race and Ethnicity DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  4. Was it just an accident? DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay CPEG Economic Crisis Workshop - Barclay 4

  5. If you remember nothing else from this workshop today….. • The economic crisis in which we are mired – the worse since the 1930s - was not an unforeseeable accident • There were a series of policies – political decisions – that led us to where we are • Taken together, these decisions and policies represent a way of looking at and thinking about the world: neo-liberalism • However, neo-liberalism has its own narrative of causes • Different narratives suggest very different policy solutions • This is why accurately understanding the causes of the Long Depression is essential DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 5

  6. How Did We Get Here? • Three causes: • Fundamental Cause: Long term upward redistribution of income in the US • Financialization: Credit, and Debt and growth of Finance • Change in US Role in World Economy DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 6

  7. The First Cause Growth of Economic Inequality: Class Redistribution of Income

  8. Inequality of Income in US • How much income inequality is there? • How has it changed over time? • We answered these questions by: • Dividing all US households into 6 groups ranked by income level • Four of these are income “quintiles” (20% of all households) • We have divided the highest income quintile into the top 1% and the other 19% • Same number of households in each quintile (approximately 22,500,000 households in 2006 vs. 16,200,000 in 1979) • Compare average after tax income in each group in 1979 and 2006, using 2006 dollars • Each marker on the floor represented $5,000 or $10,000 of 2006 income • Our households started by opening their 1979 envelope and walking to the marker (or space in between markers) that represents the average income for that quintile in 2006 dollars for 1979 • The top 1% of households by also walked to the appropriate marker • After we saw where we all were in 1979, each quintile and the top 1% then opened their second envelope and walked to the 2006 marker • Use 1979 – 2006 period for comparison: the cause of 2008 economic collapse • Conservatives like to talk about “skill gaps” and need for more education – as a result, when they acknowledge increased inequality it is in terms of gains to the top 10 or 20% • But that is not the real story…… DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 8

  9. Income Redistribution to the Top 1%, 1950 - 2007 What skills or education could cause 1% of the population to reap such gains? DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  10. Average Income by Quintiles and Top 1%, 1979 and 2006 (2006 $) There are some distances that only money can measure DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 10

  11. Just in case you wondered…income thresholds per household in 2008 Bill Barclay - Columbus DSA 11-2011

  12. Why Did Inequality Grow So Much in the US • Increasing inequality was the result of economic choices • Decline in unionization and workers’ political power • Dramatic decrease in the tax rates for top incomes • Policies: • Failure to increase the minimum wage propelled the growth of a low wage sector • De – actually re – regulation of industries with the new regulations favoring owners over workers and consumers (e.g., bankruptcy “reform,” trucking deregulation and especially financial re-regulation) • All fit in a market fundamentalist (neo-liberal) world view DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 12

  13. DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 13

  14. Income Redistribution: Policies • By 1970s the service sector is growing much faster than the manufacturing • What kind of employment would people find in the “new economy” • Low wage or high wage? • The decline of unionization and the lag in US minimum wage drove creation of a large low wage sector • US: 1 in 6 workers make less than 50% of the median wage • US labor markets are “segmented” • Result: industry, ethnicity, race, gender and wage levels are linked • Not all advanced capitalist societies have a large low wage sector: • in many Western European countries fewer than 1 in 10 workers make less than 50% of median wage DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  15. Labor Force Segmentation, 2009: Job Share/Labor Force Share A ratio of 1.0 means job share = labor force share DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 15

  16. Labor Force Segmentation: Unequal Access to Good Jobs Jobs that are generated are not allocated randomly across the different strata of the U.S. labor force Evident from income distribution (full time wkrs only) 2009 white male/white female median income ratio: 1.26 2009 white male/black male median income ratio: 1.36 2008 white male/Hispanic male median income ratio: 1.48 2008 black male/black female median income ratio: 1.07 2008 Hispanic male/Hispanic female median income ratio: 1.12 Flows from occupational distribution DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 16

  17. Percent of Population with Income Less than 50% of Median(ca 2007/08)  DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  18. Was the Neo-liberal growth model successful: Average Annual GDP Growth per Capita, (1979 – 2008)  DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 18 18

  19. The Second Cause Financialization: Credit, Debt and the Growth of Finance

  20. Mortgage Borrower: 2003 – 2007* • 2003: house value $300,000; loan at $294,000 = leverage of 50:1 • 2005: house value $350,000; refinance with $320,000 loan • $26,000 withdrawal; $30,000 equity • 2007: house value $260,000 • Borrower “underwater” by $60,000 • $30,000 equity wiped out • Refinance requires an additional $60,000 *Note: for simplicity, property taxes are omitted and interest is calculated as simple interest DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 20

  21. The Buying a House Skit: What Happened – Lending, Debt and Foreclosure • 2003: housing borrower is pushed to take out a loan that they are unlikely to be able to repay unless house prices rise continuously • Court records leave no doubt that lenders pushed – even to the point of lying or urging borrowers to lie about their financial situation/prospects and even making up phony W-2 forms • Result is a highly leveraged mortgage borrower • Bank lending is – or at least was - a simple business with one crucial decision • What is the probability that a borrower can repay the loan? • A new mortgage lending model (see below) ignored that risk • 2005: House prices rise and equity is extracted • 2007: House prices fall – leverage destroys their equity and pushes them underwater • Houses are the largest single asset for households <90th income percentile • This is more true for Hispanics and African-Americans because of lower average income and historical exclusion from other forms of wealth accumulation DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 21

  22. The Great Recession: Loss of Wealth (median wealth per family) DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  23. Mortgage Banking Model Changes: I • Mortgage banking used to be: • Assess the financial standing of the potential home buyer • Make a loan based on income and long term financial outlook • The 30 year fixed mortgage was a product of the New Deal • Carry the loan in bank’s portfolio • Incentive: risk averse • Repeal of New Deal Glass-Steagall Act opened door to very different model of banking in mortgage lending area • Review credit score • Make a loan (“initiate” a loan) • Sell (“distribute”) the loan for packaging into mortgage backed securities (MBS) • “Securitize the loan so packages of mortgages can be sold to other investors (Mortgage Backed Securities or MBS) • Use the proceeds to make the next loan • Incentive: make as many loans as quickly as possible and get them out the door – lender has only “pipeline” risk DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 23

  24. Mortgage Banking Model Changes: II • Different banking model brought new entities into mortgage banking – a “shadow banking” system: • Mortgage brokers, hedge funds, money market funds • Investment banks and SIVs (special investment vehicles) • Incentive was to make subprime loans rather than prime: • Countrywide Mortgage: prime loans sold to investors had average profit margin of 0.93% vs subprime average profit margin of 3.64% • Incentives drove widespread fraud by lenders • Ameriquest – largest US mortgage lender (for a short time!) – TX Ranger’s Stadium, Super Bowl ads, Rolling Stones 2005 US tour • Brokers developed fraud specialties – creating mortgage histories or doctoring W-2 forms to change income levels and instructed their employees to tell borrowers to ignore the “Good Faith Estimate” required under federal law • Ameriquest took appraises off their lists if the valuations didn’t meet their needs • “If they have a house, if the owner has a pulse, we’ll give them a loan” – Russ Jedniak, Guardian S&L CEO • FAMCO bugged conference rooms to overhear borrowers discussions about what they could afford • Extensive use of RoBo signers • Washington Mutual (WaMu – “The Power of Yes”) allowed borrowers to apply and be accepted online • Who was sold subprime mortgages – disproportionately minority and single parent households • A new form of redlining – WSJ study found >50% actually qualified for prime mortgages DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 24

  25. Shadow Banking System • This “shadow banking system” was not subject to existing regulatory oversight • Who drove the decline in lending standards, the push to increase the amount of mortgage loans outstanding, securitization and the ratings assigned to MBS? • Did borrowers, hoping to buy houses, come in and say, “Give one of those exploding 2/28 or 3/27 loans that I can’t afford and, oh by the way, I want to lie about my income?” • By mid 2000s, most mortgages were not originated by the banking sector that was subject to the Community Reinvestment Act requirements and other regulatory oversight • Median down payment in 2005: 2% • In contrast, governmental agencies such as FHA and VA required income documentation and 10% down payment • Fed could have acted but Greenspan was opposed • Characteristics of “shadow banking system” • Bonuses based on short term “mark to market” valuations • Mathematical models used to analyze risk of and take positions • Leverage used to enhance returns • E.g., Bear Sterns and Lehman leverage 30:1 or higher • Does anybody remember Long Term Capital Management? DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 25

  26. Why Would Anyone Buy Debt Based on the Loan Practices as Described?? • Securitization of assets existed pre-housing bubble but was limited in scope • Change in mortgage lending model required rating agencies to provide assessments of this new flow of securities: AAA ratings were the goal • Here are how some S&P employees described the resulting process: • “We rate every deal. It could be structured by cows and we would rate it.” • “Let’s hope we are all wealthy and retired by the time this house of cards falters.” (“IBG/TBG”) • Why: “They’ve become so beholden to their top issuers for revenue they have developed a kind of Stockholm syndrome which they mistakenly tag as Customer Value creation.” DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 26

  27. Financialization Changes the US Political Economy Change • Two major changes between 1960s/1970s and later: • Huge increase in role of financial sector in US economy • 1929 – 1988 financial sector profits averaged 1.2% of US GDP and never exceeded 1.7% vs. 2005 level of 3.3% • Remain above any pre-1990 levels • Pre-1988 financial sector profits never more than 20% of total business profits vs. over 40% by mid-2000s • Financial sector and the 1%: • Average income to financial sector employees went from <2 times US average to 5.5 times • Financial speculation absorbed much of top !% increased income share • Developed new instruments: mortgage backed securities • Needed flow of new debt as assets for trading • Household debt increased 6x between 1984 – 2005 (mortgage debt>75% total) • Financial sector debt increased 17x in same period • At the top levels, financial sector employment is predominantly white and male DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  28. DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay CPEG Economic Crisis Workshop - Barclay 28 Dr. Wm Barclay - The Financial/Economic Crisis 28

  29. By 2007, household debt was 120% of US GDP DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 29

  30. By 2007, Financial Sector Debt was over 150% of US GDP DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 30

  31. Financial sector compensation was (and still is) divorced from economic contribution CPEG Economic Crisis Workshop - Barclay CPEG Economic Crisis Workshop - Barclay 31

  32. The Third Cause Changing Role of US in World Political Economy

  33. The US in the Global Economy For several decades before and after WWII, US was a net exporter as well as the world’s largest creditor nation US balance of trade turned negative in 1970s and current account (trade + capital flows) turned negative in 1980s By mid 2000s the current account deficit had increased to 6% of GDP, a level that is not sustainable What was happening? In answering this question we will learn why the economic crisis is not just a US economic crisis. DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 33 33

  34. Industrial Policy - Exporting Jobs: I • Jack Welch (long time CEO of GE): “Ideally you'd have every plant you own on a barge.” • This means no loyalty to any location or any labor force • Contrast: Germany’s Siemans, BMW, Daimler, Thyssen Krupp have agreed to keep jobs in Germany • Germany is a high wage country: manufacturing wages 50% > US: but a very successful exporter • To a significant extent, Jack Welch has described what has happened to US jobs, particularly those in large companies • Treason: disloyalty to one’s sovereign or one’s country DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 34

  35. Industrial Policy - Exporting Jobs: II • Altho US MNCs are less than 1% of total US businesses: • Account for 74% of private sector R&D • Pay wages 35 – 40% above non-MNCs • Employ 15% of US workers • US MNC employment is going abroad • Apple employs more than 275,000 people to make its IPods, IPhones, etc – 250,000 of them in Shenzhen (PRC) • In 2001, 32% of total revenues for the companies in the S&P 500 came from abroad; in 2008 almost half (48%) came from abroad • More than 50,000 manufacturing facilities have closed in the past two decades DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  36. Where Did the Jobs Go? US MNC Employment, 1989 - 2009 DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay

  37. Problems for the US Dollar • Exporting of jobs/importing of goods = trade deficit • Undercuts the role of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency • Sustained trade deficits threaten to role of the dollar as world reserve currency • Foreign central banks have diversified holdings • Some petroleum exports now denominated in other currencies (oil is the largest by value commodity in world trade) • Is there something the US could export that would help balance our trade flows? DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 37

  38. Globalizing the Housing Bubble • Deutsche Bank: 45% of US-originated asset-backed securities owned by non-US investors (2005) • Total amounted to $3 trillion held by non-US individuals and institutions (1/3 of their total holdings of US assets) • US MBS represented 8% of world total bank loans and securities • A range of non-US institutions bought this debt - e.g., Norway town, Iceland’s banks, etc • At year end 2006, European banks alone had over $300 billion of MBS (almost 3.5 times their total profits in that same year) • Thus the financial impact became of the housing bubble, including its bursting – became world wide • Other countries with similar housing bubbles, e.g., Spain, UK found themselves hit by both the collapse of the US housing bubble and their own DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 38

  39. Some Suggestions for Reading • Kevin Phillips - Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics, and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism • Mark Zandi – Financial Shock: A 360º Look at the Subprime Mortgage Implosion • Charles Morris – The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash DSA 2011 Convention Workshop - Barclay 39

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