Friday, October 3, 2008

Whither The Credit Crisis

Via Ezra Klein, an interesting transcript from "This American Life":

"Adam Davidson: Maybe you've noticed that the press and others don't call it a sub
prime housing crisis as much anymore. They call it a credit crisis. The global pool of
money still has no idea how much money they lost. How much went into the furnace.
And because of that, they’ve totally changed their thinking. They used to be
obsessed just with getting some profit, trying to make a slightly higher interest rate
return. Now the global pool of money has the exact opposite obsession. It wants no
risk whatsoever. It just wants safety. Suddenly, those US government treasury
bonds--still near historic lows of 1 and 2 percent--are beautifully attractive. Because
they're safe. They won't blow up like sub-prime CDOs did.

The global pool of money is avoiding anything with even the slightest hint of risk and
that affects everybody, no matter who you are. It's harder to borrow money to buy a
house, or build a factory, or bring your country boldly into the 21st century. Take
Iceland. A year ago it was easy for them to borrow billions. Now, they're seen as too
risky. Their central bank has to pay more than 15 percent interest get anyone to loan
them money. They could do better putting their national debt on a credit
card. Hungary, Kazakhstan, Turkey, are all in similar situations. You might have
heard about problems in student lending. Companies that needed credit to survive
are shutting down. The US expects more than 1.1 million bankruptcies this year:
twice the 2006 number.

This freezing of credit all around the world is something new, the world has never
seen anything on this scale. When the crisis hit, last August, central bankers and
finance economists couldn't figure out how bad things might get. There was this
question people would ask: will things get like the 1930s or the 1970s? There was
real fear that, just like in the '30s, hundreds of banks would collapse, there would be
massive unemployment, there was talk of a new Great Depression."

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