"As local currencies tanked all over Southeast and East Asia, corporations and banks that had borrowed in dollars suddenly stood no chance of repaying their loans. The lesson that these countries--and China, which survived the 1997-98 scare but only just barely--drew from the experience was not just to stop borrowing in dollars but to stop borrowing from the rest of the world, period.
"These were the world's natural capital recipients," Wolf said. "Instead, they started to export capital in a big way." Add that to perennial capital exporters Japan and Germany, and oil-exporting countries that were getting ever flusher as crude prices rose, and you had a vast, sloshing wave of money that ended up flowing to the countries with the most "elastic" banking systems--the U.S., the U.K., Australia, Spain--and financing spectacularly unsustainable house-price booms. (And there are people who want to blame this whole thing on the Community Reinvestment Act?!?)"
Read the whole interesting post.
Here's my comment:
"and you had a vast, sloshing wave of money that ended up flowing to the countries with the most "elastic" banking systems--the U.S., the U.K., Australia, Spain--and financing spectacularly unsustainable house-price booms."
I'm still not sure about this connection. It makes it sound like a spigot that can't be turned off. It sounds a bit like completely blaming Greenspan.
Surely the people who made these loans and investments knew they could lose money. After all, if you borrow money at low interest rates, you're still borrowing.
I just feel that without people believing that the government, including the Fed, would bail us out of a huge crisis if we had one, it wouldn't have been so easy for people to ignore the precariousness of their investments.
Again, I can see the incentive to invest this pool of money, just not, immediately, the incentive to invest it poorly.