Remember the old sage advice, "Live beyond your means and you'll pay for it later"? It's come back to roost. Everyone, the banks, credit card companies, the government and you and I have been living off borrowed time and money. The money has run out, there is no credit to be easily had, probably not again in another generation.
One year after the near collapse of the global financial system, this much is clear: The financial world as we knew it is over, and something new is rising from its ashes.
Historians will look to September 2008 as a watershed for the U.S. economy.
On Sept. 7, the government seized mortgage titans Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Eight days later, investment bank Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, sparking a global financial panic that threatened to topple blue-chip financial institutions around the world. In the several months that followed, governments from Washington to Beijing responded with unprecedented intervention into financial markets and across their economies, seeking to stop the wreckage and stem the damage.
One year later, the easy-money system that financed the boom era from the 1980s until a year ago is smashed. Once-ravenous U.S. consumers are saving money and paying down debt. Banks are building reserves and hoarding cash. And governments are fashioning a new global financial order.
Congress and the Obama administration have lost faith in self-regulated markets. Together, they're writing the most sweeping new regulations over finance since the Great Depression. And in this ever-more-connected global economy, Washington is working with its partners through the G-20 group of nations to develop worldwide rules to govern finance.
"Our objective is to design an economic framework where we're going to have a more balanced pattern of growth globally, less reliant on a buildup of unsustainable borrowing . . . and not just here, but around the world," said Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.
The first faint signs that the U.S. economy may be clawing its way back from the worst recession since the Great Depression are only now starting to appear, a year after the panic began. Similar indications are sprouting in Europe, China and Japan.
Still, economists concur that a quarter-century of economic growth fueled by cheap credit is over. Many analysts also think that an extended period of slow job growth and suppressed wage growth will keep consumers — and the businesses that sell to them — in the dumps for years.
More via A year after financial crisis, the consumer economy is dead | McClatchy.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Across three Augusts (economist.com)
- Bernanke: Economy is on cusp of recovery (msnbc.msn.com)
- Fair Game: Too Big to Fail, or Too Big to Handle? (nytimes.com)
- CIT's bailout denial raises bankruptcy threat (msnbc.msn.com)
- Dealbook: A Breakdown on Handling Big Failures (nytimes.com)
- U.S. Economy Gets Lift From Stimulus (huffingtonpost.com)
- Citigroup Is "Queen Of The Zombie Dance Party": Institutional Risk Analyst (huffingtonpost.com)
- WTO Bleeding American Economy Dry (citizengkar.wordpress.com)
1 comment:
[...] A year after financial crisis, the consumer economy is dead (citizengkar.wordpress.com) [...]
Post a Comment