Analytics wrote:The main engine of the housing bubble was the free-market decision of consumers to borrow as much money as possible to purchase houses,
I disagree. You're only looking at one side of the coin.
If we are going to blame the consumers who borrowed the money, we must also blame the lenders who made the bad loans. I blame both, and neither were working in a "free market".
The housing market was severely distorted by government intervention via lower interest rates and guaranteeing the bad loans through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Not to mention that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were huge into bundling and selling the Mortgage Backed Securities that were feeding the housing bubble.
At every step of the way, you have the government doing everything they can to inflate the housing bubble (both Democrats and Republicans), and then doing everything they can to stop it from deflating (both Democrats and Republicans). This is the exact opposite of a "free market".
There were even instances of local cities and states consumer groups and politicians seeing the danger in the sub-prime loans, and the Federal Government actually stepped in at the request of the banks to prevent them from acting to slow things down!
Certainly there were free market elements involved in the bubble, and it's very possible to have bubbles in free markets, but the real estate bubble was
only possible with heavy government intervention. It would have ended far sooner, and been much smaller, without the government getting involved.
For a good overview on all the players involved, I recommend the book "All the Devils are Here"
and the free-market decisions of savers to invest in the free-market products of mortgage-backed securities backed by sub-prime mortgages. The free-market correction to this was the housing market crash, along with the bankruptcy of the free-market lenders and other free-market players, including Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and AIG.
You've left out the Fed and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. They were very, very important gears in the machine that helped the bubble grow bigger, and last longer, than it otherwise would have.
There is also the sad fact that in order for it to be a "free market", the losers would have to take their losses. We can argue about whether or not it was a good thing for the government to transfer the losses to the tax payers, but the fact that it happened means it wasn't a "free market" by any definition.
People look back at the real estate bubble and think "wow, you had janitors buying million-dollar mansions. That was insane!" But we don't realize that things are still just as insane! For example, the Federal Reserve is currently, as we speak, printing money and using that newly created money to buy Mortgage Backed Securities! People are getting home loans
right now, and those loans are ultimately being paid for with money that is created out of thin air by the Fed!
http://buzz.money.cnn.com/2012/09/13/fed-mbs-qe3/So even today, the housing market is not a "market" at all. It is a government program set up to transfer government-created money to banks and home builders on behalf of people who want to pay a mortgage instead of renting. Lenders are not lending their own money, they are only the middlemen between this newly created money and people who want to buy homes.
It’s impossible to know what would have happened had the government not stepped in when it did, but most experts believe that the results would have been disastrous. Because of this, I find your position that free-markets necessarily lead to balance as a bit naïve.
As I said above, the housing crash wasn't a "free market" problem with a government solution. It was a "market"
and "government" problem with a market and government solution. I think too much "government" and not enough "market" for the solution.
That being said, I think the predictions of doom are a little overstated, and while it would have been messy and more acutely painful, a totally free-market solution would have been much, much "fairer", with the costs and the pain being most felt by those who were most responsible. The business system is set up to deal with failure "fairly" (look at Lehman Brothers), and it's only to the degree that the government got involved that the pain was spread to people that weren't directly involved (i.e. all taxpayers). This also goes for foreclosures and individual mortgages. The banks and individual borrowers should have also been made responsible for their actions through the mechanisms that had been set up (and successfully dealing with such problems for decades).
Yes, it would have been "painful", but it would have been much more "fair", and a lot quicker.
But getting back to my main point, what would be happening in the economy if the government wasn’t distorting interest rates? Interest rates would be a little higher. That would result in companies borrowing less to invest in capital improvements. People would borrow less to purchase homes and cars. Would the economy be better off if companies were investing less and people were spending less? How so?
The question is whether or not a "dollar" is worth anything. Does having "money" actually mean anything? Is there a limit on what "money" can do?
Ultimately, the answer is that "money" (i.e. "dollars" for us in the US) isn't limitless. It has to be a reflection of the allocation of resources. Money has to be a useful indicator for people to make decisions.
For example, a family needs to be able to use their money as a reliable indicator of their "resources". Let's say a family wants to buy a $500k house, a new $25k Honda Accord, and go on a $12k Disney Cruise. But they only have $250k in the bank. That money serves as an indicator of the resources they have "saved" over the years, and now they must figure out what they should do with it. They need to decide whether borrowing money for a new house or car is a good use of their resources (and future resources), and whether a vacation is what they want to do. The current government interference in the economy is nothing more than an attempt to try and make people think that they can do more with their limited resources/money than they actually can or should, with current and future tax payers making up the difference through national debt and inflation. This isn't a good thing for an economy; it's nothing more than smoke an mirrors.
In other words, we are trying to have "too much" stuff, and 50 years from now our children's children will be paying for the mortgages, college and health care that we're trying to pay for today with the government's help. The government is distorting the value of our money, and eventually someone is going to have to make up the difference. There aren't enough rich people in the country to do it, so it's either going to fall to the rest of the existing tax-payers through higher taxes, everybody through inflation, or future generations through debt.
Take your pick, but I don't see how any of those are preferable to living in reality now.