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jueves, 10 de julio de 2014

Remember the S&L crisis? Nobody else does either. And we'll soon forget about 2008 too.


Our financial crisis amnesia



Viewing financial crises over several centuries, the great economic historian Charles Kindleberger concluded that they occur on average about once a decade. Similarly, former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker wittily observed that "about every 10 years, we have the biggest crisis in 50 years." What is it about a decade or so? It seems that is long enough for memories to fade in the human group mind. Based on the historical average, 2009 + 10 = 2019. Five more years is plenty of time for forgetting.

It is now five years since the end of the most recent U.S. financial crisis of 2007-09. Stocks have made record highs, junk bonds and leveraged loans have boomed, house prices have risen, and already there are cries for lower credit standards on mortgages to "increase access."

Meanwhile, in vivid contrast to the Swiss central bank, which marks its investments to market, the Federal Reserve has designed its own regulatory accounting so that it will never have to recognize any losses on its $4 trillion portfolio of long-term bonds and mortgage securities.

Who remembers that such "special" accounting is exactly what the Federal Home Loan Bank Board designed in the 1980s to hide losses in savings and loans? Who remembers that there even was a Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which for its manifold financial sins was abolished in 1989?

This article is available by subscription to The Wall Street Journal. The full text will be posted to AEI.org on Monday, July 14.
Source: www.aei.org

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