Buat Begawan Ekonomi Neoliberalisme mudah-mudahan
cepat sadar. Jangan sampai menjerumuskan rakyat
Indonesia dalam krisis ekonomi lebih jauh akibat
membabi-buta pada sistem Ekonomi Neoliberalisme yang
dikembangkan AS.

Saat ini Keuangan AS seperti tengah sekarat di ruang
ICU. Terburuk sejak tahun 1930-an tanpa harapan
membaik.

Semoga SBY sadar dan mengganti orang2 Neoliberalis di
kabinetnya dengan ekonom yang pro rakyat.

Mantan PM Australia, John Howard, menyadari
kesalahannya ketika sistem Neoliberalisme yang
dianutnya justru memperburuk kesejahteraan rakyat. Dia
berubah jadi lebih sosialis pada era jabatan yang
kedua. Mudah2an SBY-JK bisa begitu.

Salam

http://finance.yahoo.com/banking-budgeting/article/105785/Worst-Crisis-Since-1930s-With-No-End-Yet-in-Sight
Worst Crisis Since '30s, With No End Yet in Sight
by Jon Hilsenrath, Serena Ng and Damian Paletta
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
provided by

The financial crisis that began 13 months ago has
entered a new, far more serious phase.

Lingering hopes that the damage could be contained to
a handful of financial institutions that made bad bets
on mortgages have evaporated. New fault lines are
emerging beyond the original problem -- troubled
subprime mortgages -- in areas like credit-default
swaps, the credit insurance contracts sold by American
International Group Inc. and others firms. There's
also a growing sense of wariness about the health of
trading partners.

More from WSJ.com: 

• Morgan Stanley in Talks With Wachovia, Others 

• Dow Falls 449.36 as AIG Rescue Rattles Investors 

• Your Cash: How Safe Is Safe?  

The consequences for companies and chief executives
who tarry -- hoping for better times in which to raise
capital, sell assets or acknowledge losses -- are now
clear and brutal, as falling share prices and fearful
lenders send troubled companies into ever-deeper
holes. This weekend, such a realization led John Thain
to sell the century-old Merrill Lynch & Co. to Bank of
America Corp. Each episode seems to bring intervention
by the government that is more extensive and expensive
than the previous one, and carries greater risk of
unintended consequences.

Expectations for a quick end to the crisis are fading
fast. "I think it's going to last a lot longer than
perhaps we would have anticipated," Anne Mulcahy,
chief executive of Xerox Corp., said Wednesday.

"This has been the worst financial crisis since the
Great Depression. There is no question about it," said
Mark Gertler, a New York University economist who
worked with fellow academic Ben Bernanke, now the
Federal Reserve chairman, to explain how financial
turmoil can infect the overall economy. "But at the
same time we have the policy mechanisms in place
fighting it, which is something we didn't have during
the Great Depression."

Spreading Disease

The U.S. financial system resembles a patient in
intensive care. The body is trying to fight off a
disease that is spreading, and as it does so, the body
convulses, settles for a time and then convulses
again. The illness seems to be overwhelming the
self-healing tendencies of markets. The doctors in
charge are resorting to ever-more invasive treatment,
and are now experimenting with remedies that have
never before been applied. Fed Chairman Bernanke and
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, walking into a
hastily arranged meeting with congressional leaders
Tuesday night to brief them on the government's
unprecedented rescue of AIG, looked like exhausted
surgeons delivering grim news to the family.

Fed and Treasury officials have identified the
disease. It's called deleveraging, or the unwinding of
debt. During the credit boom, financial institutions
and American households took on too much debt. Between
2002 and 2006, household borrowing grew at an average
annual rate of 11%, far outpacing overall economic
growth. Borrowing by financial institutions grew by a
10% annualized rate. Now many of those borrowers can't
pay back the loans, a problem that is exacerbated by
the collapse in housing prices. They need to reduce
their dependence on borrowed money, a painful and
drawn-out process that can choke off credit and
economic growth.

At least three things need to happen to bring the
deleveraging process to an end, and they're hard to do
at once. Financial institutions and others need to
fess up to their mistakes by selling or writing down
the value of distressed assets they bought with
borrowed money. They need to pay off debt. Finally,
they need to rebuild their capital cushions, which
have been eroded by losses on those distressed assets.

But many of the distressed assets are hard to value
and there are few if any buyers. Deleveraging also
feeds on itself in a way that can create a downward
spiral: Trying to sell assets pushes down the assets'
prices, which makes them harder to sell and leads
firms to try to sell more assets. That, in turn,
suppresses these firms' share prices and makes it
harder for them to sell new shares to raise capital.
Mr. Bernanke, as an academic, dubbed this self-feeding
loop a "financial accelerator."

"Many of the CEO types weren't willing...to take these
losses, and say, 'I accept the fact that I'm selling
these way below fundamental value,'" says Anil
Kashyap, a University of Chicago Business School
economics professor. "The ones that had the biggest
exposure, they've all died."

Borrowing Slowdown

Deleveraging started with securities tied to subprime
mortgages, where defaults started rising rapidly in
2006. But the deleveraging process has now spread well
beyond, to commercial real estate and auto loans to
the short-term commitments on which investment banks
rely to fund themselves. In the first quarter,
financial-sector borrowing slowed to a 5.1% growth
rate, about half of the average from 2002 to 2007.
Household borrowing has slowed even more, to a 3.5%
pace.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economist Jan Hatzius
estimates that in the past year, financial
institutions around the world have already written
down $408 billion worth of assets and raised $367
billion worth of capital.

But that doesn't appear to be enough. Every time
financial firms and investors suggest that they've
written assets down enough and raised enough new
capital, a new wave of selling triggers a
reevaluation, propelling the crisis into new
territory. Residential mortgage losses alone could hit
$636 billion by 2012, Goldman estimates, triggering
widespread retrenchment in bank lending. That could
shave 1.8 percentage points a year off economic growth
in 2008 and 2009 -- the equivalent of $250 billion in
lost goods and services each year.

"This is a deleveraging like nothing we've ever seen
before," said Robert Glauber, now a professor of
Harvard's government and law schools who came to the
Washington in 1989 to help organize the savings and
loan cleanup of the early 1990s. "The S&L losses to
the government were small compared to this."

Hedge funds could be among the next problem areas.
Many rely on borrowed money to amplify their returns.
With banks under pressure, many hedge funds are less
able to borrow this money now, pressuring returns.
Meanwhile, there are growing indications that fewer
investors are shifting into hedge funds while others
are pulling out. Fund investors are dealing with their
own problems: Many have taken out loans to make their
investments and are finding it more difficult now to
borrow.

That all makes it likely that more hedge funds will
shutter in the months ahead, forcing them to sell
their investments, further weighing on the market.

History of Trauma

Debt-driven financial traumas have a long history,
from the Great Depression to the S&L crisis to the
Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s. Neither
economists nor policymakers has easy solutions.
Cutting interest rates and writing stimulus checks to
families can help -- and may have prevented or delayed
a deep recession. But, at least in this instance, they
don't suffice.

In such circumstances, governments almost invariably
experiment with solutions with varying degrees of
success. Franklin Delano Roosevelt unleashed an
alphabet soup of new agencies and a host of new
regulations in the aftermath of the market crash of
1929. In the 1990s, Japan embarked on a decade of
often-wasteful government spending to counter the
aftereffects of a bursting bubble. President George
H.W. Bush and Congress created the Resolution Trust
Corp. to take and sell the assets of failed thrifts.
Hong Kong's free-market government went on a massive
stock-buying spree in 1998, buying up shares of every
company listed in the benchmark Hang Seng index. It
ended up packaging them into an exchange-traded fund
and making money.

Today, Mr. Bernanke is taking out his playbook, said
NYU economist Mr. Gertler, "and rewriting it as we
go."

Merrill Lynch & Co.'s emergency sale to Bank of
America Corp. last weekend was an example of the
perniciousness and unpredictability of deleveraging.
In the past year, Merrill has hired a new chief
executive, written off $41.4 billion in assets and
raised $21 billion in equity capital.

But Merrill couldn't keep up. The more it raised, the
more it was forced to write off. When Merrill CEO John
Thain attended a meeting with the New York Fed and
other Wall Street executives last week, he saw that
Merrill was the next most vulnerable brokerage firm.
"We watched Bear and Lehman. We knew we could be
next," said one Merrill executive. Fearful that its
lenders would shut the firm off, he sold to Bank of
America.

This crisis is complicated by innovative financial
instruments that Wall Street created and distributed.
They're making it harder for officials and Wall Street
executives to know where the next set of risks is
hiding and also contributing to the crisis's spreading
impact.

Swaps Game

The latest trouble spot is an area called
credit-default swaps, which are private contracts that
let firms trade bets on whether a borrower is going to
default. When a default occurs, one party pays off the
other. The value of the swaps rise and fall as market
reassesses the risk that a company won't be able to
honor its obligations. Firms use these instruments
both as insurance -- to hedge their exposures to risk
-- and to wager on the health of other companies.
There are now credit-default swaps on more than $62
trillion in debt, up from about $144 billion a decade
ago.

One of the big new players in the swaps game was AIG,
the world's largest insurer and a major seller of
credit-default swaps to financial institutions and
companies. When the credit markets were booming, many
firms bought these instruments from AIG, believing the
insurance giant's strong credit ratings and large
balance sheet could provide a shield against bond and
loan defaults. AIG believed the risk of default was
low on many securities it insured.

As of June 30, an AIG unit had written credit-default
swaps on more than $446 billion in credit assets,
including mortgage securities, corporate loans and
complex structured products. Last year, when rising
subprime-mortgage delinquencies damaged the value of
many securities AIG had insured, the firm was forced
to book large write-downs on its derivative positions.
That spooked investors, who reacted by dumping its
shares, making it harder for AIG to raise the capital
it increasingly needed.

Credit default swaps "didn't cause the problem, but
they certainly exacerbated the financial crisis," says
Leslie Rahl, president of Capital Market Risk
Advisors, a consulting firm in New York. The sheer
volumes of outstanding CDS contracts -- and the fact
that they trade directly between institutions, without
centralized clearing -- intertwined the fates of many
large banks and brokerages.

Few financial crises have been sorted out in modern
times without massive government intervention.
Increasingly, officials are coming to the conclusion
that even more might be needed. A big problem: The Fed
can and has provided short-term money to sound, but
struggling, institutions that are out of favor. It
can, and has, reduced the interest rates it influences
to attempt to reduce borrowing costs through the
economy and encourage investment and spending.

But it is ill-equipped to provide the capital that
financial institutions now desperately need to shore
up their finances and expand lending.

More from Yahoo! Finance: 

• How to Weather Wall Street's Storm

• 10 Ways to Guard Your Cash Amid Economic Turmoil

• Financial Crisis: What Would the Candidates Do? 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Visit the Banking & Budgeting Center 

Resolution Trust Scenario

In normal times, capital-starved companies usually can
raise money on their own. In the current crisis, a
number of big Wall Street firms, including Citigroup,
have turned to sovereign wealth funds, the
government-controlled pools of money.

But both on Wall Street and in Washington, there is
increasing expectation that U.S. taxpayers will either
take the bad assets off the hands of financial
institutions so they can raise capital, or put
taxpayer capital into the companies, as the Treasury
has agreed to do with mortgage giants Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac.

One proposal was raised by Barney Frank, the
Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the House Financial
Services Committee. Rep. Frank is looking at whether
to create an analog to the Resolution Trust Corp.,
which took assets from failed banks and thrifts and
found buyers over several years.

"When you have a big loss in the marketplace, there
are only three people that can take the loss -- the
bondholders, the shareholders and the government,"
said William Seidman, who led the RTC from 1989 to
1991. "That's the dance we're seeing right now. Are we
going to shove this loss into the hands of the
taxpayers?"

The RTC seemed controversial and ambitious at the
time. Any analog today would be even more complex. The
RTC dispensed mostly of commercial real estate.
Today's troubled assets are complex debt securities --
many of which include pieces of other instruments,
which in turn include pieces of others, many steps
removed from the actual mortgages or consumer loans on
which they are based. Unraveling these strands will be
tedious and getting at the underlying collateral,
difficult.

In the early stages of this crisis, regulators saw
that their rules didn't fit the rapidly changing
financial system they were asked to oversee.
Investment banks, at the core of the crisis, weren't
as closely monitored by the Securities and Exchange
Commission as commercial banks were by their
regulators.

The government has a system to close failed banks,
created after the Great Depression in part to avoid
sudden runs by depositors. Now, runs happen in spheres
regulators may not fully understand, such as the
repurchase agreement, or repo, market, in which
investment banks fund their day-to-day operations. And
regulators have no process for handling the failure of
an investment bank like Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
Insurers like AIG aren't even federally regulated.

Regulators have all but promised that more banks will
fail in the coming months. The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. is drawing up a plan to raise the
premiums it charges banks so that it can rebuild the
fund it uses to back deposits. Examiners are
tightening their leash on banks across the country.

Pleasant Mystery

One pleasant mystery is why the crisis hasn't hit the
economy harder -- at least so far. "This financial
crisis hasn't yet translated into fewer...companies
starting up, less research and development, less
marketing," Ivan Seidenberg, chief executive of
Verizon Communications, said Wednesday. "We haven't
seen that yet. I'm sure every company is keeping their
eyes on it."

At 6.1%, the unemployment rate remains well below the
peak of 7.8% in 1992, amid the S&L crisis.

In part, that's because government has reacted
aggressively. The Fed's classic mistake that led to
the Great Depression was that it tightened monetary
policy when it should have eased. Mr. Bernanke didn't
repeat that error. And Congress moved more swiftly to
approve fiscal stimulus than most Washington veterans
thought possible.

In part, the broader economy has held mostly steady
because exports have been so strong at just the right
moment, a reminder of the global economy's importance
to the U.S. And in part, it's because the U.S. economy
is demonstrating impressive resilience, as information
technology allows executives to react more quickly to
emerging problems and -- to the discomfort of workers
-- companies are quicker to adjust wages, hiring and
work hours when the economy softens.

But the risk remains that Wall Street's woes will
spread to Main Street, as credit tightens for
consumers and business. Already, U.S. auto makers have
been forced to tighten the terms on their leasing
programs, or abandon writing leases themselves
altogether, because of problems in their finance
units. Goldman Sachs economists' optimistic scenario
is a couple years of mild recession or painfully slow
economy growth.

Aaron Lucchetti, Mark Whitehouse, Gregory Zuckerman
and Sudeep Reddy contributed to this article.

Write to Jon Hilsenrath at [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Serena Ng at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and Damian Paletta at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Copyrighted, Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All rights reserved.

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