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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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Katrina for the Rest of Us

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For a while, I had expected to emerge mostly unscathed from the eight years of George W. Bush.

I managed not to be in New Orleans right after Hurricane Katrina awaiting rescue by a blundering federal agency. I had held on to my medical coverage and so was not hurt by the nonexistent national policy regarding the uninsured. Neither a toxic borrower nor a toxic lender be — as I believed and practiced — and so I did not have to petition Washington for a bailout.

Meanwhile, I had saved and invested and did all those prudent things people are told to do: Put the max allowed in your 401(k). Check. Keep your mortgage small and pay it down. Check. Fight off Car Lust and keep the 7-year-old Honda a couple more years. Check.

I knew the Bush era would weigh heavily on my financial future nonetheless. As a payer of the income tax, I face many years of being dunned for the $11 trillion national debt, the $500 billion budget deficit and the Wall Street bailout, currently weighing in at $2 trillion and swelling.

But a big, immediate Bush-sized calamity? That I had avoided. I had made it into October of the president's last year. Only three months to go. So far, so good.

Then the stock market crashed.

As an investor, I had avoided the real estate speculation that once seemed the easy path to riches. My modest portfolio was full of blue chips, the bedrock of the American economy. But even with Monday's Dow bounce, stocks of all kinds are trading a good third below their level of a year ago. Despite my conservative careful approach, a big chunk of the money is gone.

I also have a 401(k) portfolio into which I had industriously put a slice of my paycheck every week. Now look at the wreckage.

To think I passed up a shiny new convertible for this.

Is the crisis really the fault of Bush, and with him, Republican lawmakers who refused to adequately regulate? Largely. Two things are at its core: One, the financial derivatives that no one understood but were sold as insurance against defaults on risky debt. (These greased the craziest lending practices.) Two, the lax rules that let financial institutions hold only $1 of capital to cover $30 of lending.

"But what about Fannie Mae?" my Republican friends passionately interject. They say that Democrats pushed Fannie to help expand lending to lower-income folk (read "minorities") by buying up their iffy loans. In 2005, they stopped Republicans from tightening the oversight of Fannie.

My friends have a point, though a limited one. Granted, Fannie should never have been allowed to traffic in subprime debt, but within that riskier universe, it had relatively high standards for quality. It never bought the worst of the worst, but the real estate bust is such that many homeowners who had made respectable 20 percent down payments find their houses suddenly worth less than the amount of their mortgages.

As for the Republican efforts to better regulate Fannie, why did they fail? After all, Republicans in 2005 controlled the White House and held majorities in both houses of Congress. The answer is that too many of their own backers were making big money off the real estate bubble.

In any case, the subprime meltdown was only the trigger for a far bigger problem involving many kinds of debt. In sum, an executive culture was allowed to get fabulously rich by taking outlandish risks.

Anyhow, the party is over, they say. Well, the party never really began for many of us — but yes, the party is definitely over.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


Comments

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Ma'am; There's nothing wrong with you. You can still support yourself. But I am too scared to steal, too lazy to work and too proud to beg... Okay... The truth is; I am old, beat up, asthmatic and living on a small pension I well deserve, and it is invested in the economy. What choice did my vilified Labor union have? What choice has any of us? We have to put any spare cash in the bank or invest it because the government steals from all with inflation. Who pays for inflation? Everyone. Everyone on a fixed income. Everyone living hand to mouth on minimum wage. Everyone with no choice. The government has a choice. They could tax wealth. They could tax productive property. If they don't tax the people with the money they have to do the next best thing and make the money worthless by making more of it. Now,  this may be the land of the brave, but no one can give the government courage moral or otherwise. For that reason they followed their lazyflair economic ideals into ruin. Did you lose money? You lost numbers. Did the financial system crash? It is all numbers. Did the government bail out the financial system??? They just threw a bunch of numbers at it. As cheaply as these financial wizards have sold America, Property, the true measure of wealth, has been made into a bank of wealth. If property actually supported the country through taxes, then it would produce for profit or go on the block and drive down the price... The price has been held high because its supply could be controlled. Owners could wait on their price. And the high price of property justified the high price of money; but all was dependent upon a society that actually produced enough value to support outrageous profits, interest and prices. Do you think property has fallen below its value??? I DON'T!... Had the government served the people it would have taxed property, and driven the price down. Had the government served the people it would have taxed property which would have driven wages up. Instead they taxed wages which reduced income and left property free to speculate on...Do you think it is over??? Do you think the broke government can prop up the failed economy???... Just remember.... It is only money, and the money is only paper, and the paper is only numbers. The sooner the government and the ruling class show us their worth, the sooner we will be just fine without them. We could stand as a country to be less invested in empire, and for more of us to have cash in hand....Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Thu Oct 16, 2008 6:08 PM
Dear Ms. Harrop:

Regards "Katrina for the Rest of Us," here are some things you may want to consider: First, most of the money banks loaned were loaned to the banks by the Federal Reserve, especially between 2002 and 2004 when Fed Discount Rates dropped to 1%. Without this money, the loans could not have been made, at least not to the gross levels seen. Secondly, the subprime loans were made because it was the law that banks make them (search for Community Investment Act, Wikipedia). This law was passed under Jimmy Carter in 1977, at the objection of banks, and revised and enforced with more vigor under Bill Clinton in 1995. It was not that Fannie May should not have been allowed to make subprime loans: in fact, they were required to make them. Warren Buffet sold his stock in Freddie Mac in 2000 because he believed these loans would eventually default. Lastly, when the loans were made, the leverage was not 30 or 40 to 1. The US mortgage market is about $12 trillion. Per yet another Government edict, banks were required to right down assets according to market value (mark to market). Since home values have fallen at least 15%, the value of bank assets fell marketly. Add to this drop, the loss that banks suffered due to the fall in the stock market from its high in 2007 and you have a 40 to 1 leverage factor. Of course, none of this has to do with the Bush Administration except for the fact he sighed the mark to market legislation. I also suspect that the Reinvestment Act was a failed attempt to end the plight of "Government Housing Units, another ill advised liberal idea from the 1950's. All of this mess is just another big example of unintended consequences of attempts to alleviate the plight of the less well off. My best, Ron
Comment: #2
Posted by: Ron Gore
Mon Oct 20, 2008 6:16 PM
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