Kevin Graham wrote:You still don't get it do you?
I have no idea why this is so difficult for you to grasp. Here, let me dumb it down further for you. There are several groups of people who were involved in the Housing Crisis.
Borrowers:
A. Poorer folks.
B. Minorities.
C. Middle-class folks.
D. Wealthier folks.
Lenders:
E. Government lenders.
F. Private lenders.
Now the Right Wing immediately started blaming those who fall into categories A, B and E.
Thank you for dumbing it down, but I think you've hit rock bottom so please don't attempt to go any lower.
Instead of trying to break up the bubble and crash into players, I think economist Jeff Holt does a great job explaining the four key factors that led all the players to participate in the bubble:
http://www.uvu.edu/woodbury/jbi/volume8 ... Bubble.pdf
1. Low mortgage interest rates - (primarily a result of an influx of Chinese, Japanese, and other money into the US economy).
2. Low short-term interest rates - they encouraged the use of Adjustable-Rate Mortgages (ARM) and encouraged leveraging.
3. Relaxed standards for mortgage loans - brought about by "new governmental policies aimed at fostering an increase in home-ownership rates among lower-income households, greater competition in the mortgage loan market, the increasing securitization of home mortgage debt, and the irrational exuberance that engulfed all parties involved in the mortgage lending process."
4. "Irrational Exuberance" - "All the participants who contributed to the housing bubble (government regulators, mortgage lenders, investment bankers, credit rating agencies, foreign investors, insurance companies, and home buyers) acted on the assumption that home prices would continue to rise."
Wouldn't it be ironic if we tried to solve the problems caused by the housing crash by trying to implement those four factors again? And while three of the key factors are fairly easy to replicate, how does one encourage "irrational exuberance"? If the government or Wall Street wanted to foster "irrational exuberance" to get a bubble going again, what could they do?