Oil has contributed. But the real culprit is monetary policy. The Keynesian model, where every dollar in your pocket is someone else's obligation, is a balloon that always grows too big and has to either deflate or pop.
You cannot borrow your way out of debt. If all money is created by debt, then ultimately things like oil, speculative investments, and creative financial instruments can only pop the bubble faster. Even without them, the bubble will continue to grow beyond the breaking point. It will just take longer to get there.
It's simple math. You can argue against the principles of sound currency and the laws of supply and demand about as successfully as you can argue against the law of gravity.
What do you expect to happen, honestly? When you push out cheap money, when you take away risk, when you create a moral hazard which prevents investors from being burned by their own bad choices, they WILL spend and invest recklessly.
Wall Street is not the problem. Oil is not the problem. The man behind the curtain who is setting interest rates at artificially low levels such that the expenditures exceed the available capital in the economy, IS the problem. And that man is called the Fed. This is the fundamental force driving our economy, and it is broken. Until this is addressed, all the focus on oil, investment banks, and Wall Street is just a stage show.
There is no such thing as 'sound money'. Being on a gold standard is not a panacea: you're just exchanging one kind of debt marker for another. The US was on the gold standard in 1929 and other countries were on it much later. Booms and busts will still occur.
As soon as you move away from a barter system and give up trading bullets for beans, then whatever you substitute, whether it's gold, greenbacks, or cowrie shells, is someone's obligation to pay - with a bank or government treasury acting as their proxy. The Dutch Tulip mania in the 17th century is a case in point. No matter how treasury power is configured, it will be open to abuse.
This is not to dispute your valid points about moral hazard. However, the 'sound money' meme is nothing more than a fetish which appeals to people who have trouble dealing with the abstractions of economics. In the simplest possible therms: gold is only valuable because a lot of people believe it to be so. Blaming the Fed for everything is a rabbit-hole down which intelligent analysis goes to die. Countries with an independent central back are almost always more stable than those where the government has direct control of the money supply. Today's outstanding example of that is Zimbabwe.
What caused this bubble is what causes almost every bubble that has ever happened: people see some item that they can buy and sell going up in price over a reasonably long period, they leverage the ever loving crap out of it because it's fairly easy to borrow money to buy something that always goes up, and eventually the damn thing comes down once there's nobody left to speculate on it. Boom! End of story, at least until 10 years later when the economy has picked up again to more or less match where it would have been if the bubble had never happened.
The particulars of any individual bubble are not even worth analyzing or assigning blame over, because the fact is, someone is always going to be willing to lend money out so that someone else can "invest" in a "sure thing." Thus far, I've never heard anyone offer a solution to that fundamental problem short of flat-out illegalizing lending, which would cause a host of other economic woes.
Unless you have some idea to magically smooth out the risks inherent in any market, there will always be leverage, and there will always be bubbles; there may be some reasonable arguments for getting rid of the Fed, but the idea that without them we'd be immune to unpredictable major corrections is just ludicrous (and it doesn't count as a "prediction" if your economic school has always claimed that a crash is imminent because our economic model is too Keynesian).
The Fed is the "fundamental force driving our economy," really? Here I was thinking that what drove our economy was the production and sale of useful goods and services...guess I have a lot to learn.
The magic to "smooth out the risk inherent in any market" is to let the interest rates be set by market forces, which will inevitably (almost magically one might say) through the principle of competition, set the interest rates at the level which the available capital in the market can bear. The speculative investing which you assume as a given is not a given if money is only so cheap as the resources in the economy which support it. However, decouple the market from interest rates, and drive those rates down to a level which the capital in the economy cannot support, and you create a demand glut for resources.
The market, if left to itself, is automatically self regulating, both in regards to the price of consumable goods, and in regards to the ability of speculative investors to obtain cheap money. Such a market punishes speculators who fail with interest rates appropriate to the level of risk. It cannot do this, however, when those rates are set artificially by a central bank. Though the Fed is an independent institution on paper, they serve at the behest of Congress and the President. For all practical purposes they are an arm of the Federal government, exercising power from on high, and dictating to the market how it will run.
Appealing to Zimbabwe as a counter-example, as did the previous commenter, is an example of cognitive dissonance. Zimbabwe is a perfect example of what happens when the government does NOT let the market self-regulate, when, rather, the government sets prices and interest rates, distributes property, and prints massive quantities of fiat money to compensate for its inability to create true wealth. No government, no matter how much control it exercises, can possibly manage an economy better than the economy can manage itself. It is too big a beast, too complex, with too many interlocking parts.
The central tenet is that it is the 1970's all over again. And I've been bleating this for years to my friends (who are sick of hearing it). This is how the story goes:
1) long, expensive and difficult foreign war that becomes increasingly unpopular at home
2) increasing government spending on military adventures means increases in debt and inflationary policies
3) oil producing countries realise the dollars they are being paid with are worth less and less, do their best to manipulate the oil price higher through supply shortages
4) oil and gold prices start to rise precipitously
5) interest in alternative energy starts to rise, and detroit car makers get into serious trouble
6) recession and long bear market for stocks
7) high inflation and low growth
You can (roughly) overlay this pattern on the late '60's, early '70s, with (6) running up until the late 1970's. And you can lay it on 2002-onwards, we're at point (6) at the monent. There were no CDO's in 1970, but I'm sure there was something else. I would classify the CDO/Subprime mortgage problems as a problem magnifier rather than a problem cause. In theory, as long as a person can keep paying a subprime mortgage, or can refinance to a better rate a few years down the track, there's nothing wrong with them. However, too many were given to too many people, and thus what might have been a small slowdown turned into a banking and credit crisis.
Yes precisely, because the similarity is that the US started the process of both times by starting expensive foreign wars and borrowing big to pay for them. Nixon dropped the Gold standard because countries holding USD (notably the French) were starting to get nervous about the massive waste of money in Vietnam and started demanding Gold for their USD. That was the true start to inflation in the 1970's, and very much a US-based event.
I didn't compare it to the Asian financial crisis of 1998 or the LTCM crisis of 1999 because the US didn't start those off.
My main point is the Vietnam ~= Iraq and Oil Crisis 1973/74 ~= Oil Price Spike 2007/8, so therefore hyperinflation 1975-1982 ~= hyperinflation 20009-??
The main difference is how closely linked the world economies are now than they were in the 70s. Additionally, CDOs made it nearly impossible to separate the subprime mortgages from the prime ones or even performing mortgates from non performing ones. Because of the incredibly complex nature of CDOs and the close linkage between financial instruments and world economies, the subprime crisis is (was) not so much a magnifier as the first domino.
I don't really agree with this analysis. I expect that the 2008 oil shock was the Gavrilo Princip of the current financial crisis. The amount of debt was certainly at unsustainable levels, but it seems possible that things could have continued for another year or so before some other trigger, such as higher interest rates, brought the whole thing crashing down.
Saving you the google search: Gavrilo Princip was the assasin of Franz Ferdinand, which started the chain of events that lead to WWI. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavrilo_Princip
In a sense, cheap oil (in the US and other countries) allowed the creation of far-flung suburbs that enabled the rocketship of suburban debt to launch.
Without those suburbs enabled by cheap oil, the housing crisis never would've been so severe, as no one would've thought of driving 50 miles each way to a McMansion every day in the middle of nowhere.
Absolutely not. The financial crisis was an inevitability from September 2007. If anything the oil crisis slowed down or even softened its impact in 3 ways:
a) it vented liquidity from the dreadfully overheated mortgage market
b) it deflected attention onto oil companies even though most of the change in oil prices was driven by merchant bankers looking for somewhere to park cash
c) it created a high degree of demand destruction, slowing the economy down significantly
This didn't drive us (or any other country) into recession, but rather caused us to take a closer look at the drivers of the economy and realize that the real estate bubble had already peaked. My personal opinion is that if it hadn't been for the oil shock the financial crisis would have come 3-6 months earlier and been even more stabilizing.
I did a lot of research into this last year for a documentary, but shelved it due to inertia and changing events. I feel strongly that the oil crisis happened because of the deeper financial crisis, but still can't decide if it was a naturally emergent symptom or a wholly engineered plan B which succeeded in staving off total collapse. Or somewhere in between.
Cheap gasoline from the 1990s into this decade encouraged families to set up their homes farther from the cities where they worked.
Summary: Gas goes up, families can't pay mortgage.
Crude has now dropped to about $50 per gallon - I wonder what Hamilton's model predicts from that? (of course, the drop seems mostly due to reduced demand, so it won't stay there if economic conditions improve)
The article looks like a great example of "correlation implies causation" fallacy. I did not see anywhere in the piece why the current theory (oil prices sank when shown a crack) explains the graph any less.
You cannot borrow your way out of debt. If all money is created by debt, then ultimately things like oil, speculative investments, and creative financial instruments can only pop the bubble faster. Even without them, the bubble will continue to grow beyond the breaking point. It will just take longer to get there.
It's simple math. You can argue against the principles of sound currency and the laws of supply and demand about as successfully as you can argue against the law of gravity.
What do you expect to happen, honestly? When you push out cheap money, when you take away risk, when you create a moral hazard which prevents investors from being burned by their own bad choices, they WILL spend and invest recklessly.
Wall Street is not the problem. Oil is not the problem. The man behind the curtain who is setting interest rates at artificially low levels such that the expenditures exceed the available capital in the economy, IS the problem. And that man is called the Fed. This is the fundamental force driving our economy, and it is broken. Until this is addressed, all the focus on oil, investment banks, and Wall Street is just a stage show.