Describe how the credit crisis may have adversely affected many people beyond homeowners and mortgage companies. Do you believe the impact of the credit crisis is still being felt today? Why or why not? Are we headed in the direction of another credit crisis? What indicators hint at what could happen in the future?
I UPLOADED THE LINK IF YOU CAN NOT ACCESS THE LINK ,THE TRANSCRIPT IS BELOW INSTEAD TO HELP ANSWER THE DISCUSSION
https://video-alexanderstreet-com.libdatab.strayer.edu/watch/the-2008-financial-crisis/transcript?context=channel:pbs-crash-course
ADRIENE HILL To explain what happened. First, we have to do a quick explainer about mortgages. And you might already know this, but basically someone that wants to buy a house will often borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars from a bank. In return, the bank gets a piece of paper called a mortgage. Every month the homeowner has to pay back a portion of the principal plus interest to whomever holds the piece of paper. If they stop paying, that’s called a default. And whomever holds that piece of paper gets the house. The reason I’m saying whomever holds the paper rather than the bank is because the bank, the original lender, often cells that mortgage to some third party. And the reason I say often is because this happens all the time. I’ve had my house for nine months and three different banks have had the mortgage. Traditionally, it was pretty hard to get a mortgage if you had bad credit or didn’t have a steady job. Lenders just didn’t want to take the risk that you might default on your loan. But all that started to change in the 2000s. And before we go further, a quick aside here. The story gets complicated fast, and it’s a fascinating story, but we’re trying to keep it relatively simple. So I’ve asked Stan if we could put some additional resources in the YouTube description and Stan said, yes. Thanks, Stan. Anyway, back to our story. In the 2000s investors in the US and abroad looking for a low risk, high return investment, started throwing their money at the US housing market. The thinking was they could get a better return from the interest rates. Homeowners paid on mortgages than they could by investing in things like US treasury bonds, which were paying very, very low interests, but big money global investors didn’t wanna just buy up my mortgage and Stan’s mortgage. It’s too much hassle to deal with us as individuals. I mean, we’re pains. Instead, they bought investments called mortgage backed securities. Mortgage-backed securities are created when a large financial institutions securitize mortgages. Basically they buy up thousands of individual mortgages, bundle them together, and sell shares of that pool to investors. Investors gobbled these mortgage-backed securities up. Again, they paid a higher rate of return than investors could get another places and they looked like really safe bets. For one, home prices were going up and up. So lenders thought worst-case scenario, the borrower defaults on the mortgage, we can just sell the house for more money. At the same time, credit ratings agencies were telling investors these mortgage backed securities were safe investments. They gave a lot of these mortgage backed securities AAA ratings. The best of the best and back when mortgages were only for borrowers with good credit, mortgage debt was a good investment. Anyway investors were desperate to buy more and more and more of these securities. So lenders did their best to help create more of them. But to create more of them, they needed more mortgages. So lenders loosened their standards and made loans to people with low-income and poor credit. You’ll hear these called sub-prime mortgages. Eventually, some institutions even started using what are called predatory lending practices to generate mortgages. They made loans without verifying income and offered absurd adjustable rate mortgages with payments people could afford it first, but quickly ballooned beyond their means. But these new sub-prime lending practices were brand new. That meant credit rating agencies could still point to historical data that indicated mortgage debt was a safe bet, but it wasn’t. These investments were becoming less and less safe all the time, but investors trusted the ratings and kept pouring in their money. Traders also started selling an even riskier product called collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs. And again, some of these investments were given the highest credit ratings from the ratings agencies, even though many of them were made up of these incredibly risky loans. While the investors and traders and bankers were throwing money into the US housing market. The price of homes in the US was going up and up and up. The new lax lending requirements and low interest rates drove housing prices higher, which only made the mortgage backed securities and CDOs seem like an even better investment. If the borrowers defaulted, the bank would still have this super valuable house, right? No, wrong. Let’s go to the thought bubble. Actually, let’s go to the housing bubble. You remember bubbles, right? Rapid price increases driven by irrational decisions. Well, this was a bubble, and bubbles have an annoying tendency to burst. And this one did. People just couldn’t pay for their incredibly expensive houses or keep up with their ballooning mortgage payments. Borrowers started defaulting, which put more houses back on the market for sale. But there weren’t buyers. So supply was up, demand was down, and home prices started collapsing. As prices fell, some borrowers suddenly had a mortgage for way more than their home was currently worth. Some stop paying that lead to more defaults, pushing housing prices down further. As this was happening, the big financial institutions stopped buying subprime mortgages, and subprime lenders were getting stuck with bad loans. By 2007, some really big lenders had declared bankruptcy. The problems spread to the big investors who’d poured money into these mortgage backed securities and CDOs, and they started losing money on their investments, a bunch of money. But wait, there’s more. There was another financial instrument that financial institutions had on their books that exacerbated all of these problems. Unregulated over-the-counter derivatives, including something called credit default swaps that were basically sold as insurance against the default of mortgage backed securities. Does AIG ring about it sold tens of billions of dollars worth of these insurance policies without money to back them up when things went wrong. And as we mentioned, things went terribly wrong. These credit default swaps were also turned into other securities. That essentially allowed traders to bet huge amounts of money on whether the values of mortgage securities would go up or down. All these bets, these financial instruments resulted in an incredibly complicated web of assets, liabilities, and risks. So that when things started going bad, they went bad for the entire financial system. Thanks thought bubble. Some major financial players declared bankruptcy, like Lehman Brothers. Others were forced into mergers or needed to be bailed out by the government. No one knew exactly how bad the balance sheets at some of these financial institutions really were. These complicated, unregulated assets made it hard to tell. Panic set in, trading and the credit markets froze. The stock market crashed, and the US economy suddenly found itself in a disastrous recession.
00:07:10JACOB CLIFFORD So what did the government do? Well, it did a lot. The Federal Reserve stepped in and often make emergency loans to banks. The idea was to prevent fundamentally sound banks from collapsing just because their lenders were panicking. The government enacted a program called tarp, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which the rest of us call the bank bailout. This initially earmarked $700 billion to shore up the banks. It actually ended up spending $250 billion bailing out the banks and was later expanded help automakers, AIG, and homeowners. In combination with lending by the fed, this helped stop the cascade of panic in the financial system. Treasury also conducted stress tests and the largest Wall Street banks, government accountants swarmed over bank balance sheets and publicly announced which ones were sound and which ones needed to raise more money. This eliminated some of the uncertainty that had paralyzed lending among institutions. Congress also passed a huge stimulus package in January 2009. This pumped over $800 billion into the economy through new spending and tax cuts. This helps slow the free fall of spending, output, and employment.
00:08:05ADRIENE HILL In 2010, Congress passed a financial reform called the Dodd-Frank law. It took steps to increase transparency and to prevent banks from taking on so much risk. Dodd-Frank did a lot of things. It set up a Consumer Protection Bureau to reduce predatory lending. It required that financial derivatives be traded in exchanges that all market participants can observe. And it put mechanisms in place for large banks to fail in a controlled, predictable manner. But there’s no consensus on whether this regulation is enough to prevent future crises.
00:08:40JACOB CLIFFORD So what have we learned from all this? Well, one key factor that led to the 2008 financial crisis was perverse incentives. A perverse incentive is when a policy ends up having a negative effect, opposite of what was intended like mortgage brokers got bonuses for lending out more money, but that encouraged them to make risky loans which hurt profits in the end. That leads us to moral hazard. This is when one person takes on more risk because someone else bears the burden of that risk. Banks and lenders were willing to lend to subprime borrowers because they planned to sell them mortgages to somebody else. Everyone thought they could pass the risk of the line. The phrase too big to fail is a perfect example of moral hazard. If banks know that they’re gonna be bailed out by the government, they have an incentive to make risky or perhaps unwise bets. Former Fed Chairman, Alan Greenspan summed it up really nicely when he said, if they’re too big to fail, they’re too big.
00:09:25ADRIENE HILL When something terrible happens, people naturally look for someone to blame. In the case of the 2008 financial crisis, no one had to look very far because the blame and the pain was spread throughout the US economy. The government failed to regulate and supervise the financial system. To quote the bi-partisan financial crisis inquiry commission report. The sentries were not at their posts, in no small part due to the widely accepted faith in the self-correcting nature of the markets, and the ability of financial institutions to effectively police themselves. The report play some of the blame on the years of deregulation in the financial industry and blamed regulators themselves for not doing more. The financial industry failed. Everyone in the system was borrowing too much money and taking too much risk from the big financial institutions to individual borrowers. The institutions were taking on huge debt loads to invest in risky assets. And huge number of homeowners were taking on mortgages they couldn’t afford. But the thing to remember about this massive systemic failure is that it happened in a system made up of humans with human failings. Some didn’t understand what was happening. Some willfully ignored the problems, and some were simply unethical, motivated by the massive amounts of money involved. I think we should give the last word today to the financial crisis inquiry commission report. To paraphrase Shakespeare, they wrote, “The fault lies not in the stars, but in us.” Thanks for watching. Crash Course Economics is made with the help of all these nice people, we’re able to stave off our own financial crisis each month. Thanks to your support at patreon, you can help keep crash course free for everyone forever and get great rewards at patreon.com. And given today’s subject, be exuberant, but keep it rational.
Describe how the credit crisis may have adversely affected many people beyond homeowners and mortgage companies.
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