http://www.cepr.net/
Tuesday, 21 January 2014 21:21 |
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Eduardo Porter asks how much the housing bubble and its
collapse
cost us in his column
today. (He actually asks about the financial crisis,
but this was secondary. The damage was caused by the loss of
demand
driven by bubble wealth in a context where we had nothing to
replace it.)
Porter throws out some estimates from different sources, but
there are some
fairly
straightforward ways to get some numbers from authoritative sources.
We can use as a starting point the Congressional Budget
Office's
projections for GDP
growth from 2008, before it recognized the
damage from the collapse of the bubble.
We can then compare
these projections with the most recent projections
from last year.
If we just take the dollar losses through 2013 we get $7.6
trillion, in 2013 dollars.
This is just economic losses, it does not include any effort
to quantify the
pain that workers or their families have suffered from being
unemployed
or losing their
homes. This comes to roughly $25,000 for every person in
the country. Alternatively, it is 190 times as much as the
Republicans hoped to
Many folks around
Washington like to talk about 75 year numbers, which is the period over which we
project Social Security a
nd Medicare spending and revenue. If we assume that the economy's growth rate in years after 2018 is not affected by the
collapse of the
bubble, then the cumulative loss in output through 2089 as a result
of the collapse of the Greenspan-Rubin bubble would be $66.3 trillion. This amount is almost seven times the size of the projected Social Security shortfall.
If we really want to have fun, we can sum the shortfall over
the infinite
horizon, an accounting technique that is gaining popularity
among those
advocating cuts to
Social Security and Medicare. The loss over the infinite
horizon due to the
Greenspan-Rubin bubble would be over $140 trillion,
or more than $400,000 for every man, woman, and child in the
country.
Obviously these numbers are very speculative but the basic
story is very simple.
If you want to have a big political battle in Washington,
start yelling about
people freeloading on food stamps, but if you actually care
about where the
real money is, look at the massive wreckage being done by
the Wall Street
boys and incompetent policy makers in Washington
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