Tuesday, November 4, 2008

"New data today provides evidence that both of those claims have problems."

Floyd Norris on the NY Times:

"To those who argued that the recession was a figment of the imagination of a handful of pessimists, and that the credit crunch was vastly overstated, two sets of statistics stood out: Rising exports and rising commercial and industrial loans at banks.

New data today provides evidence that both of those claims have problems."

Good points. Read the whole post. Here's my response:

“The survey has been reporting for some time that banks said they were tightening lending standards across the board. This survey, taken in October, shows that most banks say they have tightened credit substantially since July, whether for businesses or individuals. They say they are charging more while being less willing to lend.”

It seems rational that standards would be tightened and lending decrease, either because of:
1) Less money
2) Less demand
3) Lenders being careful
The question was whether lending was becoming perilously uncommon. Given those figures, the numbers might be a rational policy in this environment. How would we tell?

As for charging more, that might have to do with having to pay more for deposits in this environment.

It still seems that the depth and cause of the contraction is hard to measure.

— Don the libertarian Democrat

No comments: