Originally posted by SkinBasket
I've given you an example of past lies, so, it isn't a huge leap to guess that it could happen again. People on this forum speculate all the time, yet i dont' see you jumping down their throats...Obama will do this, etc.
Recession: Is the worst over? Are we on the road to recovery? Or has something deeper and more intractable gone wrong?
We have seen attempts to stimulate the economy..tax rebates based on slowdown was short-term and that a "stimulus" package should be "targeted and temporary."
Military spending is up. And, based on Cheney's past..we should expect big run-up in outlays. Like i've said, i'd be shocked if the pentagon isn't up to that trick again.
Ben Bernanke cut interest rates relentlessly from August 2007 through the spring of 2008. I don't accuse Bernanke of playing politics. But it's worth noting that this is what usually happens. In presidential election years when Republicans are in office, the Fed regularly and predictably pursues a more expansionary policy than when Democrats rule.
But much of the ordinary effect of interest cuts on new lending—like a rebound in construction and automobile sales—didn't happen this time. That's because the fall in home prices (and therefore the value of collateral) overwhelmed the benefit of cheaper money to the banks. And the banks barely cut mortgage rates, so consumers saw no benefits at all. Lower interest rates did cut the value of the dollar, however, and that promotes exports and foreign investment.
No matter how effective the stimulus, two enormous clouds remain for whoever becomes president: the housing slump and the banking crisis.
The problem with a housing slump is inventory. Unlike factories and Internet startups, shuttered houses don't go away. No one declares them obsolete. They aren't boxed up and sent to China. They remain, a drag on the market, decaying and pulling down property values for years.
Nationally, the subprime debacle is blowing away the homeownership gains of the last few years. Those abusive mortgages were deliberately targeted at vulnerable, even desperate, people who could be steered into financial death traps. Lenders didn't care, because with the help of fraudulent appraisals, the loans could be off-loaded quickly in packages bought by greedy or gullible investors, including your pension fund.
Incidents of the foreclosed expressing themselves to their lenders by yanking the plumbing and the wires on the way out the door are on the rise, as is arson by desperate homeowners, according to the Los Angeles Times. Will students, small businesses, and other borrowers still be able to get credit when this is over?
The mechanisms of mortgage finance and home-equity drawdown haven't simply been damaged. That well has been poisoned. Having largely outsourced mortgage originations to companies like Countrywide who didn't care whether the borrowers had good credit, the banking system cannot easily go back to its old method of making loans to creditworthy people and contenting itself with the interest paid back over many years.
I'd go into more detail..but, no matter what i write..you'll just pooh pooh it.



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