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Understanding the Great Recession 1 Using macro to understand the current recession Let’s analyze the history of the recession to illustrate some of the major macro issues/tools Underlying forces: 1. Increasing leverage with lower perceived risks 2. The housing bubble and …. not “pop” but “hissssssss” 3. A “run on the shadow banks” and the Lehman bankruptcy 4. The crash in asset prices in 2008 5. Huge decline in wealth, leading to declining housing I and C. 6. International transmissions 7. IS-MP curve interpretation 8. Liquidity trap! 9. Governmental response in monetary and fiscal policies 10. The trough in late 2009 11. The long stagnation is still with us …. 2 The bubble economy 3 Trends in volatility of US stock prices Historical lows Note: Implied volatility is a measure of the equity price variability implied by the market prices of call options on equity futures. Historical volatility is calculated as a rolling 100-day annualized standard deviation of equity price changes. Volatilities are expressed in percent rate of change. VIX is CBOE index. 4 Leveraging the US economy 5 Rising leverage of US economy 4 10 8 3 6 2 4 1 2 Total financial assets/K Total financial assets/GDP 0 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 Source: Federal Reserve flow of funds data. 1980 1990 2000 0 2010 5 Leverage for US economy Gelain et al, San Francisco Fed Working Paper. 6 The housing price bubble 1. Rising perceived wealth of households 19952006. 2. Then catastrophic loss of wealth 20062009 3. Stabilized in last four years Case-Shiller housing price index (CPI corrected) 1.2 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 7 Then people wake up from the dream to the nightmare of falling wealth … 8 No one saw it coming: Fed projections, June 2008 9 A disastrous forecast = Fed forecasts = Range of all 19 participants 10 Mortgage delinquencies skyrocket 11 Loss of Household Wealth in Recession (billions of 2005$) 0 -2,000 Housing Wealth loss of $16 trillion ($140,000 per household) Net worth -4,000 -6,000 -8,000 -10,000 -12,000 -14,000 -16,000 -18,000 2007Q1 2008Q1 2009Q1 2010Q1 2011Q1 2012Q1 12 The impact on households and consumption 12,000 500 Dot.com bubble 8,000 Housing burst and financial meltdown 400 4,000 300 0 200 -4,000 100 -8,000 0 -12,000 -100 Change in new worth Change in consumption -16,000 -200 -20,000 -300 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Bank runs Series of bank runs. Different from earlier (Depression era) because was the run by large depositors (run on the repo). Bear Stearns and Lehman were wiped out in a week. 14 Bank losses* * Note that US bank equity was around $1000 billion in 2010. 15 The Lehman Bankruptcy A central event in the crisis. Market fundamentalists worried that continued bailouts would lead to “moral hazard” and worse future problems. So on September 15, 2008, government decided to let Lehman go bankrupt. Catastrophic results: - markets froze up (people could not make transactions) - stock market went down 30 % in a month and US dollar ROSE almost 20 %. - “market fundamentalism lasted only 36 hours” - then bailout of AIG, Citibank, BofA, TARP, GM, etc. “An economy in free fall” in late 2008. 16 Risk on Mature Govt Debt (US, etc.) CDS = risk that security will default. These are US and similar Treasury bonds! 17 A risk measure on commercial paper Source: Federal Reserve page on commercial paper. These are short-term promissory note or unsecured money market obligation, issued by prime rated commercial firms and financial companies. This shows medium-grade (A2/P2) minus top grade (AA). 18 Policymakers respond Panic of 2008: Financial markets hysterical; paranoia everywhere about who was responsible and who should pay. Bush/Paulson: reluctantly saw that financial markets were freezing up (Bernanke key to understanding this). TARP: Started as buying toxic assets, then saw the light and recapitalized banks. 19 Macroeconomic impacts 20 Impact of Credit Crunch on Investment .18 9.5 Credit crisis .17 9.0 .16 8.5 .15 8.0 .14 7.5 .13 7.0 .12 6.5 .11 6.0 .10 5.5 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Investment/Potential GDP Baa bond rate 21 Effect on output Actual/potential industrial production 1.12 1.08 Bear 1.04 1.00 0.96 0.92 Lehman 0.88 0.84 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 22 Macroeconomic impacts Rewrite augmented IS and MP curves as follows: IS: Y = C(Y,W) +I(rb) + G + NX(Y,Yw) Y = C(Y,W) +I(i - π + σ) + G + (X – M) MP: i = f(Y, π) rb = risky real rate = i - π + σ, where σ is the risk premium Have adverse IS shifts to W, σ, and NX from Yw Fed lowers i in standard manner, but real interest rate for businesses goes up! MP = Taylor rule 23 Before crisis MP iff IS(i ff - π + low risk premium) i* 2006 Y After financial crisis MP iff IS(i ff - π + low risk premium) i* IS’(i ff - π + high risk premium) 2008 Y Policy Responses (thanks to Keynes’s theories) Gwendolen Darwin Raverat 26 Financial Market Support Measures 2007-2013 27 Unconventional Fed Measures: the Fed Balance Sheet Treasuries = normal stuff!; CPLF = commercial paper funding facility; MBS = mortgage-backed securities 28 Fed balance sheet before and after the crisis 29 Before Fed expansion MP iff IS’ i* 2008 Y Fed expansion MP iff IS’ i* 2009 Y After TARP and other risk-reducing measures iff IS’’ MP i* 2010 2009 Y Fiscal Policy in the Liquidity Trap: Components of US stimulus legislation Source: CBO, presentation of Elmendorf, June 2009 33 Without stimulus MP iff IS(2008) i* Y With stimulus MP iff IS(2008) IS(2010) i* Y CBO’s estimate of impact of stimulus on economy Source: CBO, presentation of Elmendorf, June 2009. 36 CBO’s estimate of impact of stimulus on economy Actual Source: CBO, presentation of Elmendorf, June 2009. 37 Lessons on the recent financial crisis • Even with modern macro, globalized mature market economies are subject to major risks; business cycles have not disappeared. • We are unlikely to reach full employment before 2016. • Financial systems are inherently fragile because of their maturity and liquidity transformation (K to M). • Markets cannot manage themselves. • The liquidity trap is a particularly nasty outcome because monetary policy weak and fiscal policy hampered by large deficits. • The US benefitted from wise leadership this time. It could have been much worse. 38