French businessman and economist Jean-Baptiste Say is
credited with identifying the fundamental economic principle that
aggregate demand for goods in an economy will equal the aggregate supply
of goods when markets are permitted to operate. Or in Say’s words,
“products are paid for with products.”
English classical economist David Ricardo, among others, more fully developed this principle into what has become known as “Say’s Law.” Say’s
Law, according to Ricardo, leads us to understand that market
equilibrium for goods is constant. This simply means that markets, when
left alone by government planners or other fraudulent actors, inexorably
tend toward an “equilibrium price” which eventually balances supply and
demand for any particular good. Thus markets will clear themselves of any surpluses or shortages in the form of excess supply and demand.
This important corollary of Say’s Law-- that
markets clear-- is critical to understanding the moribund US housing
market. In housing, perhaps more than any other good, we see the
terrible consequences of government and central bank interference with
market forces.
First, the Federal Reserve Bank relentlessly increased the money supply over
the last few decades. Much of this newly created money and credit
flowed from Fed member banks into the residential and commercial real
estate markets, causing prices to rise dramatically prior to the housing
bust of 2007.
At the same time, the Fed systematically suppressed interest rates for decades. This
led to tremendous malinvestment both by homebuilders and individuals,
and encouraged a seedy subprime mortgage industry to make nonviable
loans that would not make economic sense under market interest rates.
Congressional meddling in the mortgage market also
added tremendously to the problem. Inane legislation like The Community
Reinvestment Act literally forced banks to make thousands of loans to
bad credit risks. Similarly, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac put taxpayers
on the hook for millions of mortgages that never would meet market
underwriting criteria. And of course the real estate and homebuilder
lobbies made sure mortgage interest debt (unlike most personal debt)
remains tax-deductible.
The ultimate result of these interventions by our
caring friends in Congress and the Fed has been the biggest housing
bubble and crash in US history, leaving millions of Americans underwater
on their mortgages if they have not already lost their houses
altogether. Congress and the Fed are directly responsible for millions
of shattered lives, and almost unknowable economic damage in the form of
trillions of dollars in mortgage backed securities.
The only solution to this mess is to allow the US
housing market to clear. All of the bad mortgage debt must be
liquidated, whether via foreclosure or bankruptcy. Banks holding
substantial mortgages or mortgage backed assets must face the music and
adjust their balance sheets to reflect today’s reality. Undoubtedly
this will force many banks into immediate insolvency, but such banks
must be allowed to fail without receiving another nickel of taxpayer
money. Banks took the risks and made money during the bubble years;
those who exercised bad judgment must now accept the consequences of
their actions.
Never in American history have we needed to adopt a
policy of laissez faire more desperately; never has government seemed
more determined to artificially prop up an industry. But only by
allowing the housing market to clear can we hope to rebuild our
shattered economy from a stable foundation. Clearly there will be pain
in the short term, but we owe it to younger Americans and future
generations to allow the reemergence of a rational housing market.
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