Prof. Antony Davies: College and Housing Bubbles, Explained - YouTube

Channel: Learn Liberty

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ANTONY DAVIES: To understand what's going to be happening with the student loan bubble,
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it's useful to understand first what happened with the housing bubble.
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To understand what happened with the housing bubble, it's necessary to understand first
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how mortgage markets work.
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Let's take commercial banks.
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Commercial banks loan money to borrowers, some of them safe, some of them risky.
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The borrowers, in turn, sign mortgages, which they hand over to the bank, and the mortgages
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are pieces of paper that say that the borrowers promise to pay back this money they have borrowed,
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over time, the interest plus the principle.
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Now, the commercial banks, who now have these mortgages, behind them sits large savers,
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such as pension funds, reinsurance companies, other large entities with large amounts of
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savings.
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These entities save their money with investment banks.
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Investment banks, in turn, turn around and purchase mortgages from commercial banks.
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So the savings goes from the savers to the investment banks, the investment banks purchase
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the mortgages, the investment banks then combine these mortgages into what are called mortgage
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backed securities.
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Mortgage backed securities, roughly speaking, are to mortgages what a sheet of plywood is
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to wood chips; wood chips come in various shapes and sizes, and because they're non-uniform
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you can't do anything with them, but if you glue them together and press them into a uniform
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shape, you now have something that you can actually use to build and to create construction
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plans from.
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So this is what the mortgage backed securities are; they're more uniform financial securities,
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that generate returns to savers, and they're based on, or constructed from, individual
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mortgages.
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These mortgage backed securities are rated by rating agencies, which will bless them
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and say, "This mortgage backed security represents a small amount of risk, or a moderate amount
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of risk, or some large amount of risk."
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And once rated by the rating agencies, they're then turned over to these large savers, who
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now are, over time, going to be earning the interest that the people who took out the
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mortgages originally are now paying.
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What's happened on the backend, is that the commercial banks have now had their coffers
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refilled with cash from these savers.
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They then turn back to mortgage markets and offer this money to borrowers who want to
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borrow the money to buy houses.
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They turn around, again they sell the mortgages to investment banks, which in turn hand them
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over to pension funds, reinsurance companies, and the whole system starts all over again.
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What happens here ultimately, is that people with savings loan to people who buy houses.
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The banks, the commercial banks, the investment banks, are simply middle men in the transaction.
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So if we take away the middle men, what the transaction really looks like is these savers
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have cash, these people want mortgages, and so they exchange the cash for the mortgages,
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these people then turn around, use the cash that they have to buy houses.
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What happens next is that the people who borrowed the money to buy the houses now make monthly
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interest payments, principal interest, to these savers, and over time some of these
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people may go bankrupt and they stop making their payments, but the people who were safe
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borrowers may continue to make the payments.
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So in total, these savers are receiving interest on some of the mortgages that people didn't
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go bankrupt on, they're not making interest on other ones that people did go bankrupt
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on, but on average they're making some reasonable rate of return on their savings.
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Where the interest rate settles, we call the equilibrium.
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The equilibrium interest rate is the interest rate at which the savers are willing to lend
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as much as money as the borrowers are willing to borrow.
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Now, what happened in the housing bubble is that this process of attaining the equilibrium
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interest rate was short circuited, and it was short circuited by two sets of players.
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One, the Federal Reserve, which intervened in markets, pushing interest rates to the
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lowest levels that they have been in this country historically.
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The other group was Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, these are government sponsored entities,
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and they buy mortgages.
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It turns out that they bought mortgages with little regard for the risk that those mortgages
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represented.
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So the first thing that happens is, the Federal Reserve lowers interest rates.
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As it lowers interest rates it attracts more people, both risky and safe, into the market;
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as interest rates are lower it's cheaper to borrow money, and so we get more people looking
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to borrow.
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Then Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac come along, and they start lending money to mortgage markets.
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These two entities were less concerned with the riskiness of the borrowers; they were
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less concerned for two reasons.
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One, is that because they were government entities, they tended not to be as profit
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driven as non-government entities tended to be.
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If Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lost money, implicitly people understood that the federal
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government would come behind and bail them out.
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Consequently, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were not as afraid of lending to risky borrowers
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as private investors were.
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So what happens, as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac enter the industry, we have here regular
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private savers who loan money ultimately to borrowers, but now enter Fannie Mae and Freddie
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Mac, and they start loaning money.
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And as they start loaning money, because they're less concerned with risk than the private
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entities are, what happens is they start attracting more and more risky borrowers into the market.
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What does this do to the housing market?
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And notice there are two distinct markets here we wanna talk about.
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The first is the market for mortgages, the second is the market for housing.
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The market for mortgages we've seen, as the Federal Reserve pushes interest rates low,
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it attracts more borrowers into the market, and as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac come along
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and provide more loanable funds, they attract more risky borrowers.
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As we get this increase in borrowers in the mortgage market, this translates, in the housing
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market, into an increase in demand.
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So we have more borrowers showing up, particularly not just more borrowers in general but more
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risky borrowers, the demand for housing starts to increase, and as the demand for housing
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rises we get an increase in the price of housing, and we get an increase in the quantity of
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housing being produced.
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Now, what happens when the bubble bursts?
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Everything is fine until the market takes a downturn.
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When the market takes a downturn people's incomes start to fall, and the first people
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who are hit the hardest are those riskier borrowers, who perhaps are living very close
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to the edge, you know, earning just about as much money as they're spending.
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As the economy turns down, they start to get behind on their mortgage payments, eventually
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a lot of them declare bankruptcy, and so what happens is that a bunch of these borrowers
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now disappear.
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But although they disappear, they have ceased making payments on their mortgages, their
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houses still exist.
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So two things happen in the housing market.
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One is, there's a decline in the demand for housing, as these borrowers who used to be
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coming into the market now stop.
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Second, as these existing borrowers, who had already built houses, they go bankrupt, the
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banks confiscate their houses, turn around to sell them on the market, we now have an
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increase in the number of houses being offered for sale.
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So we have this combination of a decline in demand for housing and an increase in the
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supply of housing, as existing houses come back onto the market.
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And the result is, the price of housing declines.
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This is the crash of the housing market.
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So ultimately, what happened here?
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What happened here is that the government broke the link between risk and return.
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If you think about a mortgage, a mortgage represents to a bank two things.
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One is return; over time the people who borrowed this money will pay it back, and with interest.
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But the other is risk; if the people go bankrupt, they walk away, they stop making the payments,
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the bank is left with this house that they don't want, and they're not receiving income
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on the mortgage that they were promised.
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These two things, the desire for return, and the desire to avoid risk, 'cause banks to
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loan prudently; not too much, not too little.
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But when the government comes along and breaks this link between return and risk, what happens
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is, there's now no penalty for loaning too much, there's only a return.
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So the detailed answer goes something like this: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac enter.
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Because they're backed by the government, they effectively force taxpayers to bear the
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risk of loans that they make.
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Second, Congress passes, in 1977, and it persists through 1995, the Community Reinvestment Act.
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In this Community Reinvestment Act, Congress required that banks provide loans to low income,
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to high risk borrowers.
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Despite the Community Reinvestment Act, banks were not loaning enough money to higher risk
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borrowers to satisfy Congress, so Congress then turns around in 1994 and passes the Riegle-Neal
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Act.
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And the Riegle-Neal Act tied something the banks wanted, which is interstate mergers,
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to something they didn't want, which is loaning to high risk borrowers.
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HUD, starting as far as 1996, started required that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loan up to
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40% of their portfolio to low income borrowers.
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The Taxpayer Relief Act, in 1997, exempted profit taxes on home sales up to half a million
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dollars.
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And then finally, from 2000 onward, the Federal Reserve was holding interest rates at historically
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low levels.
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These are major interventions in the mortgage market, that caused the link between risk
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and return to be broken.
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In effect, what the government was doing, principally through Fannie Mae and Freddie
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Mac, was saying to banks, "You go ahead, loan out money, and keep the profits that you earn
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from lending.
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Any risk that goes along with that lending, you can just give to us.
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Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will handle it."
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And by we, what they really meant was, the taxpayers.
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So if we look at the data, what we see is, going back to 1990, this is the fraction of
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all mortgages in the United States that were held by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
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And if you see, round about 2003, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac came to comprise almost 50%
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of the mortgage market.
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As they loaned more and more money, implicitly backed up by taxpayers, more and more risky
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borrowers came into the market looking to borrow.
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So if we look at the mix of risky versus un-risky loans back in 2001, the black bar represents
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conventional mortgages in the United States.
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The lighter bars at the top represent what we would call risky mortgages; these are mortgages
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in which the borrower has not put any money down on the house, or the bank has not confirmed
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what the borrower claims his income and job history is.
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These are risky loans, as of 2001.
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At the height of the housing bubble, 2006, what we see is these risky loans comprise
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almost 50% of all mortgages in the United States.
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This is the effect of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac entering the market and making taxpayer
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money available to risky borrowers.
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And finally, when the housing bubble burst, we end up with the mortgage market going back
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to where it was; most of the mortgages are now considered safe mortgages, and a small
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fraction are still risky.
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So this raises the question, what does any of this have to do with college loans?
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Well, it turns out that the government is taking almost the same steps, in almost the
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same order, in the college loan market that it took in the housing market.
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And again, the effect is going to be breaking this link between risk and return.
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So the government institutes Stafford and Perkins loans, these are taxpayer subsidized
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loans, to college students.
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The Taxpayer Relief Act provided tax credit for college debt, much the same way as the
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government provided tax credit for housing loans.
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In the Affordable Care Act, the Department of Education is set up to loan directly to
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students.
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So the Department of Education now is doing in the student loan market the same thing
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that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac did in the housing market.
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The Loan Forgiveness Program allows for student loans to be forgiven, and this is an interesting
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thing, because it sounds quite magnanimous to say that we're going to forgive student
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loans, until we remember that the government doesn't have any money with which to forgive
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those loans unless it first takes it from taxpayers.
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So what the government really means when it talk about loan forgiveness is, let's force
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people who didn't go to college to pay for people who did.
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The Community College Act calls for taxpayers to pay for students to attend community college,
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this was proposed in 2015.
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Debt Forgiveness Act, also proposed in 2015, calls for student loan debt to be dischargeable
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in bankruptcy, which it currently isn't.
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And then finally, we have again the Federal Reserve doing what it has done since 2000,
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which is holding interest rates at historically low levels.
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So what are the consequences of all of this?
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The consequence is that high school students who actually would do better in technical
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schools, are being encouraged to get college educations, because the cost of the college
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education is artificially low.
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College students are being encouraged to major in fields that have little earning power.
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What this results in, is a bubble demand for college education.
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People are being encouraged to take on debt to go to college, who actually would be better
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off not, or people are taking on debt to go to college to study things that actually they'd
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be better off not studying, and so we have the demand for college rising, and college
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tuition commensurately rising as well.
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What happens when the bubble burst?
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First, taxpayers will be tuck with up to $1 trillion in student loan debt.
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This is the amount of money that students have currently borrowed to go to college.
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Second is that millions of low skilled students will find that they wasted years of their
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life obtaining a college degree that does now have the value that they anticipated it
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would have.
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Notice there's an additional problem here, with the college loan market, that did not
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exist in the housing market, and that additional problem is this: In the housing market, when
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I, as a high risk borrower, borrowed $300,000 to build a house, and then I find I can't
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make my monthly mortgage payments, I at least have an asset, this $300,000 house, that I
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can sell to recoup some of the money that I owe the bank.
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But that dynamic doesn't occur in the student loan market.
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If I borrow $80,000 to go to college, and when I'm done with college I find that I can't
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pay off my student loan, I have no commensurate asset that I can sell to turn around and raise
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money to pay off some of this debt.
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College presidents will be decried as greedy profit seekers in the same way that bank presidents
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were decried as greedy profit seekers.
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And I don't mean to defend bank presidents; some of them certainly were greedy profit
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seekers.
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But the banks did exactly what the government encouraged them to do, by breaking the link
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between risk and return.
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When the government said, "You banks go ahead and loan out whatever you want, and keep the
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profit, and I, the government, will bear the risk," banks did what anybody could have anticipated.
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They turned around and they started loaning to everybody in sight.
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Similarly here, college presidents, when the government says to colleges, "Go ahead, admit
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whoever you want.
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I, the government, will subsidize it, I'll provide low interest loans, I'll provide grants
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to these students."
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What do college presidents do?
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The same thing any reasonable person would do; turn around, open the doors, and let anybody
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who wants in to come in.
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The end result its, many small colleges, like many small banks, are going to go bankrupt.
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There will come a point, in the not too distant future, when a large swath of students who
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have gone through college turn around and discover they can't afford to pay for this
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debt that they have incurred.
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And the world will go forth to high school students, "Don't go to college, because all
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that will happen is you'll be saddled with this large debt that you can't repay."
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And so, there'll be a tremendous decline; like the burst of the housing bubble, there'll
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be a tremendous decline in the demand for college education, and many small colleges
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will go bankrupt.
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What's the moral of the story here?
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The moral of the story here is not that banks, or colleges, are somehow blameless in all
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of this.
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The moral is that banks and colleges are made of human beings, and human beings will make
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mistakes, some of them will act selfishly, some of them will act duplicitously.
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But when the government steps in, and removes the penalty for acting like that, as it did
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when it broke the link between risk and return, it takes off the table the punishment that
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the market can dole out for bad behavior.
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And without that punishment, banks, colleges, are going to do what any reasonable person
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would guess they would do.
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They will turn around and give as much of their product to as many people as show up,
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because in the end they believe the government is gonna pay for it.