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Was the "Credit Crunch" a Myth Used to Sell a Trillion-Dollar Scam?

by: Joshua Holland  |  AlterNet

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US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's plan, also known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, has been accused of having little oversight and little effect on the financial meltdown. (Photo: Getty Images)

    Even as the media continue to repeat the claim that credit has frozen up, evidence has emerged suggesting the entire story is wrong.

    There is something approaching a consensus that the Paulson Plan -- also known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP -- was a boondoggle of an intervention that's flailed from one approach to the next, with little oversight and less effect on the financial meltdown.

    But perhaps even more troubling than the ad hoc nature of its implementation is the suspicion that has recently emerged that TARP -- hundreds of billions of dollars worth so far -- was sold to Congress and the public based on a Big Lie.

    President George W. Bush, fabulist-in-chief, articulated the rationale for the program in that trademark way of his -- as if addressing a nation of slow-witted 12-year-olds -- on Sept. 24: "Major financial institutions have teetered on the edge of collapse ... [and] began holding onto their money, and lending dried up, and the gears of the American financial system began grinding to a halt." Bush said that if Congress didn't give Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson the trillion dollars (give or take) for which he was asking, the results would be disastrous: "Even if you have good credit history, it would be more difficult for you to get the loans you need to buy a car or send your children to college. And ultimately, our country could experience a long and painful recession."

    For the most part, the press has continued to echo Bush's central assertion that there's a "credit crunch" preventing even qualified borrowers -- that's the key point -- from getting loans, and it's now part of the conventional wisdom.

    But a number of economists are questionioning the factual basis of the credit crunch narrative. Columnist David Sirota recently looked at those claims and concluded that Americans "had been punk'd" -- that "the major claims about a credit crisis that justified Congress cutting a trillion-dollar blank check to Wall Street were demonstrably false," and the threat of a systemic banking crash was used by the Bush administration to overcome popular resistance to the "bailout."

    It's a reasonable conclusion; this is an administration that used the threat of thousands of al-Qaida sleeper cells in the United States to sell Congress on the Patriot Act, the specter of mushroom clouds rising over American cities to push through the Iraq war resolution and the supposedly imminent crash of the Social Security system to push for privatizing Americans' retirement savings.

    But the question comes down to what they knew and when they knew it. The analyses that suggest the whole credit crunch narrative is false are based on data that lagged behind the numbers that policymakers had available, in real time, back in September. So the question -- probably unanswerable at this point -- comes down to whether or not they looked at the situation and in good faith believed that pumping hundreds of billions of dollars into the banking system would contain the damage and save an economy teetering on the brink of collapse.

    What Else Could Be Happening?

    Of course, no one disputes the fact that as the economy has tanked, the number of new loans being issued to American families and businesses has plummeted. But is because credit has dried up for qualified borrowers?

    Economist Dean Baker doesn't think so. He explains the situation in simple terms: The media, he argues, "are blaming the economic collapse on a 'credit crunch' instead of the more obvious problem that consumers just lost $6 trillion of housing wealth and another $8 trillion of stock wealth." It's a commonsense argument: much of the economic growth of the Bush era existed on paper only, built on the rise of a massive bubble in real estate values rather than growth in productive industries. When all that ephemeral wealth vaporized -- and with the economy shedding jobs like a dog with dermatitis -- consumers stopped buying, and businesses, anticipating a long slowdown, stopped seeking the loans that they might have otherwise tapped to expand their operations.

    Whether good borrowers can't get credit from banks because the latter are hoarding cash or lending has stopped because of a drop-off in demand for new loans is not some wonky academic debate; it's of crucial significance. Because if lending to qualified parties has truly frozen, then even if the specific implementation of the Paulson Plan was deeply flawed, its broad approach -- "recapitalizing" banks in various ways, buying up some of their crappy paper and guaranteeing some of their transactions -- is fundamentally sound.

    If, on the other hand, the primary problem is that people are broke and maxed out on debt, and firms aren't looking for money to expand, then the kind of massive stimulus package being considered by the Obama transition team and congressional Dems -- largely designed to stimulate demand from the bottom up, with public works projects, tax cuts for working families, aid to tapped-out state and municipal governments and new money for unemployment and food stamps -- is obviously the best approach to take.

    Broadly speaking, these are the parameters of the debate in Washington, and that means that properly diagnosing the underlying problem is crucially important.

    Is the Credit Crunch a Big Lie?

    There's plenty of evidence that Baker's right. He points out that even though mortgage rates have plummeted, the number of applications for new loans has dropped to very low levels and argues it's "the most glaring refutation of the claim that people are unable to get credit." If creditworthy applicants were being denied loans by banks unable or unwilling to lend, Baker explains, "then the ratio of mortgage applications to home sales should be soaring" as qualified homebuyers apply to multiple banks for a loan. "Since there is no notable increase in this ratio, access to credit is obviously not an issue."

    Again, this is common sense. Consumer spending drives about 70 percent of the U.S. economy, and in recent years, much of that spending was financed by people taking chunks of home equity out of their properties -- people might have been eating in fancy restaurants, but they were essentially eating their living rooms to do so.

    That the American people don't have the appetite to go deeper into debt than they already are in order to make new purchases is hard to dispute. In November, consumer prices across the board fell at a record rate for the second month in a row. And even with mortgage rates plummeting, so many homeowners are "underwater" -- owing more on their homes than they're worth -- that they're unable to refinance because the equity isn't there. Paul Schuster, a vice president at Marketplace Home Mortgage, told the St. Paul Pioneer Press, "What I'm really concerned about is the job picture ... If (people) don't feel good about their jobs, rates aren't going to matter."

    The National Federal of Independent Business' November survey of small-business owners found no evidence of a credit crunch to date, concluding that if "credit is going untapped, it's largely because company operators are not choosing to pursue the credit. It's not that companies can't get the extra money, it's that they don't want or need it because of the broader slowdown in economic activity."

    The credit crunch narrative -- and the justification for creating Paulson's $700 billion TARP honeypot -- is built on three related assertions: 1) banks, fearing that they'll be unable to meet their own financial obligations, aren't lending money to one another; 2) they're also not lending to the public at large -- neither to firms nor individuals; and 3) businesses are further unable to raise money through ordinary channels because investors aren't eager to buy up corporate debt, including commercial paper issued by companies with decent balance sheets.

    Economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minnesota's research department -- V.V. Chari and Patrick Kehoe of the University of Minnesota, and Northwestern University's Lawrence Christiano -- crunched the Fed's numbers in an examination of these bits of conventional wisdom (PDF), and concluded that all three claims are myths.

    The researchers found that "interbank lending is healthy" and "bank credit has not declined during the financial crisis"; that they've seen "no evidence that the financial crisis has affected lending to non-financial businesses" and that "while commercial paper issued by financial institutions has declined, commercial paper issued by non-financial institutions is essentially unchanged during the financial crisis." The researchers called on lawmakers to "articulate the precise nature of the market failure they see, [and] to present hard evidence that differentiates their view of the data from other views."

    That finding was backed up by a study issued by Celent Financial Services, a consulting firm, again using the Treasury Department's own data. According to a story on the report by Reuters, Celent's researchers concluded that the "data actually suggest world credit markets are functioning remarkably well." Rather than a widespread banking problem, Celent found that the rot was limited to "a few big, vocal banks and industries such as car manufacturing, which would be in difficulty anyway."

    There are also some important caveats. Economists at the Boston Federal Reserve responded to the Minnesota Fed's research (PDF), arguing that the use of aggregate data doesn't fully reflect the dysfunction in specific subsectors of the economy, nor does it adequately reflect the decline in new loans.

    It's also the case that single-cause explanations for complex crises usually fail to hit the mark. Banks, having fueled the housing bubble (and similar bubbles before that) with the creation of ever-shadier "exotic" securities, are probably erring on the side of caution in writing new loans. They're looking at their balance sheets as quarterly reports approach, and the number of foreign investment dollars coming into the U.S. has declined, meaning that some qualified firms may, indeed, have trouble raising cash in the near future.

    Dean Baker, while arguing that "the main story is that people don't have money and therefore want to spend," acknowledged that "some banks are undoubtedly anticipating more write-offs from other loans going bad, so they will hang on to their capital now rather than make new loans." And, as Sirota notes, some of the institutions that are relatively healthy are reportedly holding cash in anticipation of picking up weaker banks on the cheap.

    But one thing is clear: the economic crisis may have woken up Washington's political class when it hit the banks, but it remains a product of long-term imbalances in the economy, and the idea that it's primarily a pathology of the banking system in isolation is a misdiagnosis that, if uncorrected, can only result in a longer, deeper and more painful recession than might otherwise be the case.

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    Joshua Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

  

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Comments

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It is not the credit crunch,

It is not the credit crunch, as those of us calling the whole bailout a boondoggle knew from the start. It is that we rely on real estate speculation as the underpinnings of the whole economic credit system, and that the ecological systems that feed us all are collapsing.

I don't know about you Guys

I don't know about you Guys and Gals, but I quit believing anything uttered by George A LONG TIME AGO

The mortgage/equity credit

The mortgage/equity credit crunch is real. Just ask anyone trying to get those loans or look at the reduction in available funds of outstanding unused equity loan funds. Where I think there was a manufactured credit crunch was in union related industries where union busting has been a long fought battle. What better way to indirectly break unions than to deny credit to those industries in which they are present (who will be aware enough to make the connection). There has been no shortage of credit card funds where the interest rates are already very high and small business loans are not unavailable; just very expensive because the interest rates have been raised on them as well. Investment margin funds have not changed on cash in an account, only reduced as share prices have reduced which is SOP. The unavailability of funds has been very selective. I believe the current situation is a combination of both an actual crunch in the mortgage industry and manufactured crunch elsewhere.

Anything else (such as an

Anything else (such as an unplanned, unexpected spontaneous crash) would be REAL cause for surprise. Were you innocent enough to expect anything else from the controlling manipulators and scammers? They won't stop till they own everything. In fact they probably already do and are just rubbing our faces in it.

Paulsen's 'credit crunch' is

Paulsen's 'credit crunch' is the core of the 'new reality' illusion this administration has been leading us in since Reagan.... Does anyone remember, or have a Depression-surviving relative who remembers a time when credit was used so very minimally--only for very large items as a business investment, property,a house or farm, maybe a car[for not more than 3 years] certain medical expenses,etc...Now you go to buy a house or car or furniture, and the salesperson waives the cost aside by asking you 'how much can you afford a month?' Now this is not very intelligent for the buyer, but gives the banks complete control of the citizens lives. Is this not what got us in the 'housing bubble? Wonder why USA cars are always built so big and expensive to run? Does anyone not think it strange so many even buy their groceries and necessities with credit?? Is this maybe why costs will not go down? If there was not such extensive use of credit, then would not the market prices HAVE to go down. This is a form of economic slavery implemented to control the citizenry. Why? one simple answer is this falsely maintain the wealth indexes and gdp high to give illusion that the economy is 'going gangbusters'... As with high energy costs, high banking costs, forced insurance purchases [ no one payer health care] and forced Medicare D insurance premiums on our Seniors are only some of the continually legislated ways to control 'we the people'. All this done jointly through 'private' business.

The Tarp has been a scam. If

The Tarp has been a scam. If the problem was unwillingness to lend, the Government could have offered to purchase control of endangered banks (instead of basically lending them money whether as loans or purchase of preferred shares), and then ensure that the gov't banks DID lend. If the others wanted to stay out of the game, that's their option. The only "problem" with this approach would have been that the shareholders and bank officers who ran their institutions into the ground would bear all the losses of their failure to behave wisely. But then again, were they so unwise? Clearly they are now collecting a return on the investments they have made in political contributions (to both parties).

President George W. is a

President George W. is a consummate student of history and it seems that he may have sat at the feet of Herman Goering. -------------”after all, it's the leaders of the country who determine the policy, and it's always a simple matter to drag the people along.... Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked------------” In this instance the attack was on the economy, but there have been numerous other attacks and we buy into each one. Fool me once-----------? But then we Americans only have a 30 second sound bite memory, don't we?

I'm not suffering from a

I'm not suffering from a credit crunch, I'm suffering from a no-longer-desire-to-be-a-slave-of-financial-overlords crunch. Especially when these days it seems the primary qualification for being a financial overlord is untreated psychopathy.

The financialization of our

The financialization of our economy has been a decades long endeavor. The "leaders" who have facilitated its rise belong to organizations that prey on the intellectually challenged citizens. Think critically about all things and act with a sense of community. We'll either rise or fall as a society. Kevin Phillips observes that societies who squander their economic vitality don't generally get a second chance.

We've just been robbed by

We've just been robbed by the "elite" again (use your brain to figure out exactly who the elite are). Money doesn't disappear. It changes hands. The funds that were in your 401k that you were depending on for your old age CHANGED HANDS. It belongs to someone else now. And it was PLANNED. Can't use your credit card to help your kids pay tuition and buy their books or for a medical or any other emergency because your balance has been lowered to its present balance or down to $100 by the bankers? That's why our founding fathers warned us against private banks and set up our Constitution where Congress would mint money backed by precious metals. Would you like to know who should be hung? Who owns the federal reserve? Who runs the federal reserve? GOT ROPE? "I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of credit is concentrated. The growth of the nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men. We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated Governments in the civilized world no longer a Government by free opinion, no longer a Government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a Government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men." -Woodrow Wilson, Traitor ex-President, after signing the Federal Reserve into existence

Say it ain't so, Joe! We go

Say it ain't so, Joe! We go to bed one night with things a little on the shaky side but, not to worry, the fundamentals are sound. We wake up and there's Dick's Dummy at his best mock serious telling us that we gotta give the banks more than even the Pentagon gets in a year by five o'clock or we'll wake up tomorrow a fourth world country. No time to fiddle about who gives the money out or where it goes or what it is used for. C'mon, now, panic, panic will ya! And we did and they did and nothing has changed but the banks are smiling all the way to fewer banks as well as jobs among the lower orders. Somehow, the Bailout is a fitting Big Lie coda to an administration that gave us Iraq, (more) Star Wars, unPatriot Act I & II, "enhanced interrogations techniques", "illegal enemy combatants", Gush Up economics, No Child Gets Educated, Anti-science, extinct polar bears as oil company poster child, Quainting the Geneva Conventions, "stuff happens" in Baghdad and Dafur and Somalia and…, "benign neglect" for Israel-Palestine, not so benign neglect for New Orleans, Medicare Big Pharma Benefit, enhanced mountain top removal, ethanol from the plates of poor Mexicans, two or three foxes in every chicken coop, removal of politically incorrect US Attorneys, echoingly named Dept of Homeland Security, removing our shoes for prayer oops! airport entrance, shopping and a trip to Disneyland as a fitting response to all ills, a Chicken Little in every pot for Social Security, the neither here nor there Vice Presidency, election by the Supreme Court and by hacked computers, no bid cost plus contracts for cronies and contributors only, “loyal Bushie” as sole job qualification,…Argh, hittin’ the limit. So many lies, so little room.

H O M O , HOMINI, LUPUS

H O M O , HOMINI, LUPUS

Being a simple guy, I still

Being a simple guy, I still think this whole thing is a cover for the bond fraud. The central question is: If those mortgaged (un)backed bonds had not been rated as they were and sold off as pigs in so many pokes, would this have happened the way it has? When the lid was about to be lifted off of these crimes by some very pissed off fund managers, big sub-prime player Goldman Sachs took over the Tres. Dept. to make sure the payoffs to the pissed off took place with the added benefit of transforming the US Tres. into a M&A Division for villains.

BLAME: the only bit of

BLAME: the only bit of credit junior won't take.

Biggest Ripoff in US

Biggest Ripoff in US History: I have believed that since the first abbreviated request for $700 billion with little oversight was first presented to Congress by Paulson. The hype and "Chicken Little" scenario was obvious, reminiscent of the buildup to the Iraq war. Fool us once, shame on them. Fool us again, seriously, how dumb can we be? In a deeper vein, however, the belief that pumping $700 billion into financial institutions would rescue the tanking US economy reflects the long standing flawed mentality that Republicans have been applying to economic strategy for the past 28 years. Reagonomics: the idea that all economic activity is driven from the top down and if we only take care of the wealthy enough good will trickle down to keep us all happy. What we're seeing now is the final demonstration that it ain't so. TARP is the last hurrah, the ultimate gift to the wealthy financial class, and if we watch carefully I suspect we may see some of that gift trickling down to ex-Bush-administration operatives after group W exits stage right.

Seems pretty obvious to me

Seems pretty obvious to me that when consumers can no longer afford to assume more debt, they will not be applying for more credit. So the credit crunch is not about qualified borrowers requesting and not getting credit, its about lack of people applying for credit. I sure don't see how giving money to banks with no strings attached will solve that problem. But concerted measures can certainly be taken against the root of what caused the current financial crisis. The first and most important move needs to be to abolish the Federal Reserve System, which is the largest Government sponsored organized crime scam in history. Then, the US needs to take over all assets of the failed banks that it is now propping up with TARP, and from this base, create a national bank. This will cut out the under-regulated, criminal private banking institutions from controlling and dictating the US's financial policies and health (acting through such puppets/mouthpieces and Bernanke and Paulson), and hopefully return control of our nation's finances to the American people. I do find it interesting that the two business sectors most negatively affected by this crisis are the housing and the automobile industries, both of which are the most important motors of our national economy. Is this only a co-incidence, or is this part of what seems to be an on-going campaign to destroy America from within?

Well just look at what

Well just look at what happened to poor "Bernie Madoff" for letting the "truth out" he was running a ponzi scheme in a country where the whole economy is one giant ponzi scheme. Poor guy must be looking at guys like "Paulson" "Hali-Cheney" and Bush and wondering to himself "hey where's the equity in all this?"

Sol, the problem is Bernie

Sol, the problem is Bernie was running an illegal Ponzi scheme. The Ponzi scheme Bush and Paulson are running is legal; they went to Congress and got approval. Being as Congress represents all of us, I suppose we should all feel just as stupid as Bernie's investors. I don't imagine this will be any consolation. Plua, our assets on paper still have their (somewhat reduced) value. It's our children who will really pay the price. You see: Illegal Ponzi schemes have contemporary consequences. The legal ones are eternal.

It's not a "credit" crunch

It's not a "credit" crunch but rather a DEBT crisis for everyone in the western world whose countries' balance of payments to the rest of the world is in the red. Money does not exist, it was all created out of nothing i.e. fiat money, and for the misely sum of $200 billion the US government could of created a national bank to generate $2 trillion of new debt for people to tap into and sold share to Wall St. too. But no, lets add more debt to the system (i read it could be as high as over $100 trillion counting future costs such as social security and medicare), to keep the people enslaved for ever and the mega rich banking elite get to keep their controlling lifestyles. No wonder the Japs and Chinese and Saudis are a little upset. Watch "Money Masters" to see the truth about the federal reserve and lots more.

IT is well known George

IT is well known George Bush's grandfather was a banker. Look it up and find out who he financed too. Same game, different era. Take from those who produce and destroy them.

Think of it as W.'s

Think of it as W.'s financial gift to Barak, since Cheney's election hacker was ordered to appear in court the day before the election and was not able to take care of his monkey business. Oh, that's right the poor man died mysteriously in a plane crash a few days ago, didn't he? Now THERE are some dots we don't want to connect, do we? "The rich get richer and the poor get poorer. In the meantime, in between time, ain't we got fun?"