http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/12/03/opinion/edkrugman.php


The making of a mess

By Paul Krugman Published: December 3, 2007


NEW YORK: The financial crisis that began late last summer, then took a brief 
vacation in September and October, is back with a vengeance.

How bad is it? Well, I've never seen financial insiders this spooked - not even 
during the Asian crisis of 1997-98, when economic dominoes seemed to be falling 
all around the world.

This time, market players seem truly horrified - because they've suddenly 
realized that they don't understand the complex financial system they created.

Before I get to that, however, let's talk about what's happening right now.

Credit - lending between market players - is to the financial markets what 
motor oil is to car engines. The ability to raise cash on short notice, which 
is what people mean when they talk about "liquidity," is an essential lubricant 
for the markets, and for the economy as a whole. 

But liquidity has been drying up. Some credit markets have effectively closed 
up shop. Interest rates in other markets - like the London market, in which 
banks lend to each other - have risen even as interest rates on U.S. government 
debt, which is still considered safe, have plunged.

"What we are witnessing," says Bill Gross of the bond manager Pimco, "is 
essentially the breakdown of our modern-day banking system, a complex of 
leveraged lending so hard to understand that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben 
Bernanke required a face-to-face refresher course from hedge fund managers in 
mid-August."

The freezing up of the financial markets will, if it goes on much longer, lead 
to a severe reduction in overall lending, causing business investment to go the 
way of home construction - and that will mean a recession, possibly a nasty one.

Behind the disappearance of liquidity lies a collapse of trust: Market players 
don't want to lend to each other because they're not sure they will be repaid.

In a direct sense, this collapse of trust has been caused by the bursting of 
the housing bubble. The run-up of home prices made even less sense than the 
dot-com bubble - I mean, there wasn't even a glamorous new technology to 
justify claims that old rules no longer applied - but somehow financial markets 
accepted crazy home prices as the new normal. And when the bubble burst, a lot 
of investments that were labeled AAA turned out to be junk.

Thus, "super-senior" claims against subprime mortgages - that is, investments 
that have first dibs on whatever mortgage payments borrowers make, and were 
therefore supposed to pay off in full even if a sizable fraction of these 
borrowers defaulted on their debts - have lost a third of their market value 
since July.

But what has really undermined trust is the fact that nobody knows where the 
financial toxic waste is buried. Citigroup wasn't supposed to have tens of 
billions of dollars in subprime exposure; it did. Florida's Local Government 
Investment Pool, which acts as a bank for the state's school districts, was 
supposed to be risk-free; it wasn't (and now schools don't have the money to 
pay teachers).

How did things get so opaque? The answer is "financial innovation" - two words 
that should, from now on, strike fear into investors' hearts.

O.K., to be fair, some kinds of financial innovation are good. I don't want to 
go back to the days when checking accounts didn't pay interest and you couldn't 
withdraw cash on weekends.

But the innovations of recent years - the alphabet soup of CDOs and SIVs, RMBS 
and ABCP - were sold on false pretenses. They were promoted as ways to spread 
risk, making investment safer. What they did instead - aside from making their 
creators a lot of money, which they didn't have to repay when it all went bust 
- was to spread confusion, luring investors into taking on more risk than they 
realized.

Why was this allowed to happen? At a deep level, I believe that the problem was 
ideological: Policy makers, committed to the view that the market is always 
right, simply ignored the warning signs. We know, in particular, that Alan 
Greenspan brushed aside warnings from Edward Gramlich, a member of the Federal 
Reserve Board, about a potential subprime crisis.

And free-market orthodoxy dies hard. Just a few weeks ago Henry Paulson, the 
Treasury secretary, admitted to Fortune magazine that financial innovation got 
ahead of regulation - but added, "I don't think we'd want it the other way 
around." Is that your final answer, Mr. Secretary?

Now, Paulson's new proposal to help borrowers renegotiate their mortgage 
payments and avoid foreclosure sounds in principle like a good idea (although 
we have yet to hear any details). Realistically, however, it won't make more 
than a small dent in the subprime problem.

The bottom line is that policy makers left the financial industry free to 
innovate - and what it did was to innovate itself, and the rest of us, into a 
big, nasty mess.

<<dot_h.gif>>

<<dots_at_narrow.gif>>

<<817-grey.gif>>

Kirim email ke