Tuesday, November 18, 2008

"You might have noticed that there’s been a lot of gnashing of teeth lately along the lines of, “Why oh why didn’t we recognize the housing bubble?”"

Interesting post in the WSJ:

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The Historical Record on the Bubble

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You might have noticed that there’s been a lot of gnashing of teeth lately along the lines of, “Why oh why didn’t we recognize the housing bubble?” Such sentiments are dotted with bits of triumphalism from others who decree, “I was one of the few who saw the bubble.”

Let’s go to the record.

While home prices didn’t peak until some time later, housing activity as measured by new home sales peaked in July 2005. That was also when shares of homebuilders peaked.

A Factiva search of the top 50 newspapers in the U.S. returns 268 stories referring to a housing or real-estate bubble in 2003. In 2004 that number increases to 369 and in 2005 it swells to 1,608. Going month by month in 2005, there’s a steady increase in “bubble” stories in the first part of the year, coming to a peak in June.

This isn’t to say that reporters somehow “got” the bubble when nobody else did. Reporters’ main job is to report, and if they’re writing more stories about a housing bubble, it’s probably because more people are saying that there is one. Indeed, 81% of respondents in an online WSJ.com poll in May 2005 said they thought the U.S. housing market was in a bubble. Most of the people who responded “yes” thought the bubble would keep growing."

Here's my comment:

“For policymakers, how widespread knowledge of the housing bubble was matters. It is one thing to say that hardly anybody saw the bubble. It is quite another to say it was generally recognized, yet nobody did anything to stop it and nobody recognized just how bad the fallout from the eventual bust would be”

If people don’t know exactly when the bubble ends, and people are still making money in it, who exactly is going to turn the lights out on the party and live to tell the tale? As well, at a certain point, one probably fears turning the lights out,because one doesn’t want to deal with the mess in the morning.

Comment by Don the libertarian Democrat - November 18, 2008 at 10:16 am

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