evince
Truthmatters
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/economics/wef/article3220961.ece
How the mess got to this level and who is responsible.
How the mess got to this level and who is responsible.
For the Fed and the Bush Administration, the answer to what they were thinking is easy: they needed the profligate borrowing to keep the economy going, even with Bush’s huge deficit spending. The game was called “kick the ball down the road”.
So you know better than this author?
He is no more biased than you and far better educated and experienced.
He is no more biased than you and far better educated and experienced.
Not arguing, but you base that on what?
Not arguing, but you base that on what?
Borrowers were told not to worry about their mounting debt. With prices going up year after year, the more they borrowed, the more they made. What was true was the more they borrowed, the more the mortgage brokers and the banks made. It was, in a sense, an old-fashioned pyramid scheme: prices simply couldn’t go on rising, especially as the real income of most Americans was actually declining. Low interest rates fed the bubble, but that was not enough: the Chairman of the Fed actually encouraged people to take out variable rate mortgages (where payments would go up as interest rates increased), just when interest rates were at an all-time low. They had only one way to go, and that was up.
I love how some will pretend many of us on the left who were warning that this would not end well were told things like "more millionaires then ever" and the like.
superhack.Many on the left seem to hold a "higher" degree equivalent to "knowing more". They also are under the false assumption that no one on a message board can be as intelligent as a left leaning author.
Are you ignoring hiw experience in the world Bank?
Super it is time for you to realize you are not the top authority on economic analysis.
You can call people stupid and idiot all you want and it does not change the fact that others whos experience and education which eclipse yours differ greatly from your opinions.
Your "intelligence" on these matters is completely self created.
Borrowers were told not to worry about their mounting debt. With prices going up year after year, the more they borrowed, the more they made. What was true was the more they borrowed, the more the mortgage brokers and the banks made. It was, in a sense, an old-fashioned pyramid scheme: prices simply couldn’t go on rising, especially as the real income of most Americans was actually declining. Low interest rates fed the bubble, but that was not enough: the Chairman of the Fed actually encouraged people to take out variable rate mortgages (where payments would go up as interest rates increased), just when interest rates were at an all-time low. They had only one way to go, and that was up.
I love how some will pretend many of us on the left who were warning that this would not end well were told things like "more millionaires then ever" and the like.