The Economy - In English PLEASE!

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I have been doing a lot of reading about this mess, and though I don't claim to fully understand it... I wanted to offer what I've gotten so far, ask for your input and any corrections.

It doesn't matter to me (at this point) who's to blame Clinton or Bush, but clearly those involved in the creation of such instruments, those who failed to regulate it and those who profited from it seem to surround His Obaminous!

The 1990's brought about one stage of de-regulation with regard to obtaining a home mortgage (I think) it was the basic elemination of the 80/20 ratio and PMI requirements. Then the 2000's created ALT-A or liar's loans with no verification required to obtain a mortgage. Banks and Mortgage companies made a ton of money.

Then the MBS (mortgage backed security) instrument was created. A bunch of mortgages bundled together and sold not (in most cases) to a single buyer, but to several buyers. The benefit to the buyer was to shield their risk. The chance that all of the mortgages in the bundle would default were slim and losses/gains were spread evenly to the buyers. Of course they didn't know that within the bundle were sub-prime and liar loans, or maybe they knew a few of them were but the bundle received a AAA rating by a credit rating company which we now find out was corrupt and falsely rating the bundle.

Some of the buyers hedged or leveredged against their investments with CDS (credit default swaps) which act like insurance policies against any or a portion of any loss. Makes sense to me. BUT also people who didn't own of of the bundles, and understood these toxic bundles risk was much higher also bought CDS like betting on the winning horse to loose. When the bundles started to crumble company's like AIG had to pay out holders of the bundles and betters against the bundles. Big losses, while AIG had divisions which not only created bundles, sold and managed the bundles, but sold CDS (I have to double check that,but I think I'm right)

Okay so big deal! They took risks, they took out leveredge against their risk but they invested. Why bail them out? Well it seems one group holds the majority of MBS and didn't have leveredge against it or only had a minimal amount of insurance against it.

Who, I'm sure you'll ask.... The GOVERNMENT. It seems the largest player in this game is Governement Pension Plans (Federal and State), Foreign Governments and (this sent me into a tail spin) GSE's (oh! enough with the ackronyms!) Government Sponsored Enterprises. What the hell is a Government Sponsored Enterprise?

From Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government-owned_corporation

United States
The government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) are a group of financial services corporations created by the United States Congress. Their function is to enhance the flow of credit to targeted sectors of the economy and to make those segments of the capital market more efficient and transparent. The desired effect of the GSEs is to enhance the availability and reduce the cost of credit to the targeted borrowing sectors: agriculture, home finance and education.[citation needed] Congress created the first GSE in 1916 with the creation of the Farm Credit System; it initiated GSEs in the home finance segment of the economy with the creation of the Federal Home Loan Banks in 1932; and it targeted education when it chartered Sallie Mae in 1972 (although Congress allowed Sallie Mae to relinquish its government sponsorship and become a fully private institution via legislation in 1995). The residential mortgage borrowing segment is by far the largest of the borrowing segments in which the GSEs operate. Together, the three mortgage finance GSEs (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks) have several[quantify]trillion dollars of on-balance sheet assets.[citation needed]. The federal government possesses warrants which, if exercised, would allow them to take a 79.9% ownership share in the companies. The federal government has not currently exercised these warrants.

Other corporations owned by the federal government include the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (which does business as Amtrak), the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, American International Group (AIG), and the United States Postal Service. Many states have government owned businesses for operations as well (e.g. North Dakota Mill and Elevator or South Dakota Public Broadcasting). Generally speaking, a statute passed by a legislature specifically sets up a government owned company in order to undertake a specific public purpose with public funds or public property.

So it seems to me that they not only bailed out the bankers, but they bailed out the Government as well!

I know this is long and if you made it this far I thank you! If you are knowledgable with the topic please reply in ENGLISH, swear to god all the reading I have been doing is so difficult to understand.

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Simple English? Paper money bad! Gold good.

Downsizing bad! Manufacturing good. War bad! Peace good. Debt bad! Prosperity good. ( I could go on, but you get the idea.)

In English? Well, okaaaay. How about this?

Black-Scholes: A Potentially Dangerous Assumption?

The Black-Scholes model of the market for an equity makes the following explicit assumptions:

1) It is possible to borrow and lend cash at a known constant risk-free interest rate.

2) The price follows a geometric Brownian motion with constant drift and volatility.

Also, Black and Scholes make the simplifying assumptions that all securities are perfectly divisible, there are no transaction costs or dividends and there are no restrictions on short selling. These are just simplifications that later, more complicated versions, have worked around. So there are really only two essential assumptions made by quantitative analysts - quants.

Let us begin by considering Black and Scholes’ first axiom.

Suzy at Debate Politics writes:

"I am an economist by training and spent 25 years in the banking industry. I have personally sat in loan committee meetings and had bank examiners demand that we 'not discriminate against low and moderate income borrowers.' Never mind that the reason they are low and moderate income in the first place is their inability to make good financial decisions... like establishing a steady work history, paying bills on time, living within their means, obeying the law, buying insurance to guard against catastrophic illness or property loss, (women) having multiple children with multiple men. And on, and on.

"The CRA was well intentioned, and lawmakers from both sides of the aisle rightly noted the positive effects that homeownership can have on a society. The problem was, these middle and upper class lawmakers made the erroneous assumption that if you put poor people in houses, they would suddenly start behaving like financially responsible middle class people. All of a sudden lawnmowers would replace lottery tickets and backyard barbeques would take the place of drive by shootings. Alas, these hopes for change were empty promises as they always are, and borrowers who had to get their down payments from “third party non-profit agencies” (by the way, someone always makes a profit, otherwise why are they in it) had nothing to fall back on when the hot water heater broke or the roof leaked. The houses fell into disrepair and by the time the foreclosure papers were posted, the occupants and hopes of any recovery by the lender long gone. But the originating lender didn't care... the loan had been sold, not their problem any more!

"There is more blame to go around...mortgage companies and builders soon realized there was money being printed and there sprung up companies that specialized in getting subprime borrowers into low cost (and low quality) housing. You probably heard them advertising on the radio and saw the ads in the Sunday paper. Did you ever wonder what kind of people would need a no-doc loan? And who would be stupid enough to make such a loan? I think we all know the answer to that now... the ultimate lender was of course Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, the original loan having long since been sold by the originating bank. All that bad paper, and Franklin Raines out the back door with his suitcase full of money..."

Here, Suzy is referring to the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) that was passed in 1977, four years after Black and Scholes introduced their groundbreaking axiomatic system.

Clearly, the CRA flies in the face of Black and Scholes’ first axiom by systematically discriminating against segments of the population in the distribution of credit. Contra Black and Scholes, it is NOT possible to borrow and lend cash at a known constant risk-free interest rate. Instead, loans are made on the basis of ethnicity and other non-economic factors, in spite of their known risks.

I argue that the failure of Black and Scholes to anticipate that the CRA would up-end their first axiom is the principle cause of our current financial crisis. Who among you would deny this?

Contra Milton Friedman, assumptions DO matter!

Instead of Black-Scholes, I recommend the following axiomatic system. Notice that this system does NOT make any ridiculous assumptions about credit being distributed in a fair and even-handed manner. Also, notice that my third axiom is compatible with Black and Scholes' second axiom, that price follows a geometric Brownian motion with constant drift and volatility. I have no argument with Black and Scholes’ second axiom.

My assumptions are three:

1) One's value scale is totally (linearly) ordered:

i) Transitive; p ≤ q and q ≤ r imply p ≤ r

ii) Reflexive; p ≤ p

iii) Anti-Symmetric; p ≤ q and q ≤ p imply p = q

iv) Total; p ≤ q or q ≤ p

2) Marginal (diminishing) utility, u(s), is such that:

i) It is independent of first-unit demand.

ii) It is negative monotonic; that is, u'(s) < 0.

iii) The integral of u(s) from zero to infinity is finite.

3) First-unit demand conforms to proportionate effect:

i) Value changes each day by a proportion (called 1+εj, with j denoting
the day), of the previous day's value.

ii) In the long run, the εj's may be considered random as they are not
directly related to each other nor are they uniquely a function of
value.

iii) The εj's are taken from an unspecified distribution with a finite
mean and a non-zero, finite variance.

Read my Simplified Exposition of Axiomatic Economics for a more detailed, but still undergraduate-level, discussion of my economic theory. This paper requires knowledge of multi-variable calculus, but omits the real analysis that plagues readers of my 1999 book.

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Shaka, you so crazy! www.sniperflashcards.com

____________________________________

Shaka, you so crazy! www.axiomaticeconomics.com

OK, Hope....

This is perhaps, the most all-inclusive article I have ever seen on this topic; it names names, names dates and places, and pulls no punches!! It explains the whole scheme in plain, simple English.
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/26793903/the_big_...

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BC
"The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money."
Alexis DeTocqueville (1805 - 1859)

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BC
Silence isn't always golden....sometimes it's yellow.

"The liberties of a people never were, nor ever will be, secure, when the transactions of their rulers may be concealed from them." - Patrick Henry

Meltdown

Go pick up Meltdown by Thomas Woods.

After reading it, it will ALL be clear, even the revisionist history that is confusing so many.

Wood's book as an important a book on our woes as Revolution is.

Guess what you get it.....you just need the context

Hey Hope,

Here’s the thing, you have to understand the expansion of credit in the context of feit currency and our fractional reserve system. You are getting bogged down in the details but guess what you have done a good job of describing the end of the bubble. You get it!

Go to Edward G Griffin’s site and order “The Creature from Jekyll Island”.
Or read Murray Rothbard’s "History of Banking and Money. In order to understand the problem you have to understand the system.

Here is a site youu can go to and watch a video on called “Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve.

http://community.paulslist.us/

All the credit excesses you described were nothing more then the extension of the fractional reserve system of the Federal Reserve. History is littered with such schemes, Goggle John Law and the Mississippi Bubble.

Good luck....you are about to go on the adventure of a lifetime!

Goldspan

Do not use Wikipedia..

..they are owned by the same vermin who got us into this mess!
www.iamthewitness.com/

Cows think they are free, this is no bull, the beast must be Fed, with pitchfork instead

Cows think they are free, this is no bull, the beast must be Fed, with pitchfork instead

Wiki is a mishmash of

Wiki is a mishmash of information, some correct, some incorrect and much of it misleading in many ways.

I agree, don't use Wiki for valid information!

goto: www.mises.org

http://www.1776solution.blogspot.com

“There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with power to endanger the public liberty.”-Adams

http://militantjeffersonian.com

"Men do not willingly read unpalatable truths of themselves. The People like those best who fool them most, by pandering to their vices and flattering their foibles" Raphael Semmes

I think we know which country benefited the most from GSE...n|t

*** The state that starts with "I" ***