The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

300


An agent shows a couple around a
home. In the US housing boom banks
were lending on the expectation of rising
prices. People who could not afford
mortgages were encouraged to buy.

FINANCIAL CRISES


the loan over a period of time.
Minsky called these hedge units,
and they create little risk for
the lender or borrower. If people
felt more confident about the future,
they might buy a larger interest-
only mortgage, where their income
could pay back the interest on the
loan but not the loan itself. The
hope would be that a stable period
of positive economic growth would
increase demand so that the value
of the house would be greater at the
end of the period than at the start.
Minsky called these people
speculative borrowers.
As time passed, if stability and
confidence continued to last, the
desire to take greater risks would
encourage people to buy a house for
which their income could not even
pay the interest, so that the total
level of debt would increase, at
least in the short run. The
expectation would be that house
prices would rise fast enough to
cover the shortfall in the interest
repayments. This third type of
investment would create the


greatest amount of instability
in the future. Minsky named
this third type of investor Ponzi
borrowers after Charles Ponzi, the
Italian immigrant to America who
was one of the first to be caught
running the financial scam that
now bears his name. “Ponzi
schemes” attract funds by offering
very high returns. Initially, the con
men use new investors’ money to
pay the dividends. In this way
they can maintain the illusion that
investment is profitable and attract
new customers. However, soon the
scheme collapses due to its failure

to meet the high level of returns
that were promised. Investors in
such schemes are likely to lose a
large proportion of their money.

Housing bubble
The recent history of the US
housing market is an example of
how an economy that has had a
long period of stability creates
within itself the conditions for
instability. In the 1970s and 80s
the standard mortgage was sold
in a way that made sure that the
interest and the capital could be
paid off, in what Minsky viewed
as hedge units. However, by the
end of the 1990s a sustained
period of growth had pushed
house prices up, persuading an
increasing number of people to
use interest-only mortgages as
they speculated that prices would
continue to rise. The financial
system then began to supply a
whole array of “Ponzi”-style
mortgage deals to borrowers who
had incomes so low that they could
not afford to pay even the interest
on the loan—these were the
“subprime” mortgages. The
monthly shortfall was to be added
to their total debt. As long as house
prices continued to rise, the value
of the property would be worth
more than the debt. As long as new
people kept entering the market,
prices kept rising. At the same time
the finance industry that sold the
mortgages bundled them up and
sold them on to other banks as
assets that would deliver a stream
of income for 30 years.
The end of the game arrived in


  1. As the US economy stalled,


Low-risk
investments

With more time prices
rise too much, then
confidence disappears

As time passes,
asset prices rise

In early years
of stability
asset prices
are reasonable


Low-risk +
high-risk investments

Low-risk + high-risk +
reckless investments

During a period of stability, confidence
in the future grows, which leads people to
make increasingly risky investments. This
causes an asset price bubble, which will
eventually burst.

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