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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA Potential Foreclosure Crisis Looms Over America
http://www.alternet.org/economy/potential-foreclosure-crisis-looms-over-americaFormer Assistant Treasury Secretary Paul Craig Roberts wrote on June 25th that real US GDP growth for the first quarter of 2014 was a negative 2.9%, off by 5.5% from the positive 2.6% predicted by economists. If the second quarter also shows a decline, the US will officially be in recession. That means not only fiscal policy (government deficit spending) but monetary policy (unprecedented quantitative easing) will have failed. The Federal Reserve is out of bullets.
Or is it? Perhaps it is just aiming at the wrong target.
The Feds massive quantitative easing program was ostensibly designed to lower mortgage interest rates, stimulating the economy. And rates have indeed been lowered for banks. But the form of QE the Fed has engaged in creating money on a computer screen and trading it for assets on bank balance sheets has not delivered money where it needs to go: into the pockets of consumers, who create the demand that drives productivity.
Some ways the Fed could get money into consumer pockets with QE, discussed in earlier articles, include very-low-interest loans for students and very-low-interest loans to state and local governments. Both options would stimulate demand. But the biggest brake on the economy remains the languishing housing market. The Fed has been buying up new issues of mortgage-backed securities so fast that it now owns 12% of the mortgage market; yet housing continues to sputter, largely because of the huge inventory of underwater mortgages.
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A Potential Foreclosure Crisis Looms Over America (Original Post)
xchrom
Jul 2014
OP
Any time anyone suggests that our species needs to review and revise our economic behaviors,
chervilant
Aug 2014
#3
chervilant
(8,267 posts)1. I keep telling peeps,
the deepest doo-doo has yet to hit the fan...
pat_k
(9,313 posts)2. Don't forget all those Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs) coming due....
According to Lender Processing Services http://www.lpsvcs.com/LPSCorporateInformation/NewsRoom/Pages/20131209.aspx 48% of outstaning HELOCs were originated in 2004-2006... typically interest only for 10 years... so principle is starting to come due.
chervilant
(8,267 posts)3. Any time anyone suggests that our species needs to review and revise our economic behaviors,
the powerfully wealthy megalomaniacs cry "Socialism!" and "Communism!" -- because fear-mongering has worked so well for them thus far.
When poor humans become, collectively, a desperate bunch -- being well-armed here in the US, to boot -- I think the uber wealthy will have to think of egalitarian ways to insure that we ALL can eat and have adequate shelter. Their alternative will be less than palatable...