AndySir wrote:stevecook172001 wrote:Asset bubbles in systems of FRB are formed because people borrow too much money against a given asset. The reason they borrow too much money against a given asset is because of a rapid rise in value of the asset which in turn feeds demand for it. A rapid rise in the monetary value of an asset is fuelled by too much debt based money chasing the asset. Debt based money that comes from, you guessed it, the banks in the form of loans. If the banks did not lend the money into existence excessively against the given asset, then the asset bubble could not exist in the first place.
A description of the mechanics, but doesn't cover why banks would be willing to lend against an asset that is likely to drop in value. Remember your counter to my criticism of the money multiplier was 'What was to stop them making unlimited credit?'. Banks that have done this have gone bust.
Same to you Kenneal - a fair description of the current crisis but notably banks went bust from following this course. The fact that some were considered too big to fail does present a clear moral hazard, but I don't think that counters anything I've said. In fact the fraud you describe might make the moral hazard the cause of this particular bubble - the banks felt they were passing the risk onto someone else. Of course they were not. It's a little odd to call that a solution, since putting yourself on a collision course with bankruptcy isn't a what I'd call a sound strategy.
Banks would be willing to lend against an asset that was at potential risk of collapsing for the same reason lemmings run the risk of running over the cliff when following the crowd.
If any lemming stops and stands back from the fray, they can clearly see that everyone is heading towards the edge of the cliff. However, if they as an individual decide to stop walking they will be trampled underfoot by all of the others. So they keep walking. Game theorists have a name for the above. It's called the "Prisoner's Dilemma". Banks will keep lending in such an environment because if any one of them decides to take the long view and not lend, they will be punished by their shareholders for not obtaining the same profits or better than their competitors. So, they keep walking. Or, to use another metaphor from the thirties; "while the music plays, you are forced to dance"
As to Steve's final, repeated assertion - I've now provided you with peer-reviewed evidence that that is not the case. I've provided you with opinions and model from professors of Economics. Can you please stop treating my opinions and some kind of cognitive dissonance and respect the fact that the issue is not anywhere near as clear cut as you make out.
Remember this is your counter to the point that UK banks don't have reserve requirements, which is not an opinion :
http://www.kansascityfed.org/PUBLICAT/E ... 97wein.pdf
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/statisti ... 20reserves
Again, I see you playing the diversionary game. Whatever the actual reserve requirements of the banks, your point is hardly a refutation of the money multiplier process but is, instead, an admission that can occurs at a far more heinous level than even I was attempting to get you to accept. So, enough with the diversionary bollocks if you please.
As for lending preceding GDP. I have repeatedly asked you to explain how, if lending follows GDP, we get debt fuelled asset bubbles. They would be logically impossible to form under such a scenario. Debt fuelled bubbles can only form if the lending that takes place does so dangerously
ahead of GDP such that, eventually, it proves impossible for GDP to catch up with that debt and honour its promises and so we get the collapse of the debt bubble.
Debt bubbles are definitive proof that debt based money
precedes GDP. You have yet to even attempt to counter that point except to hide behind citations that deal with another issue. Tell us what these names have actually said about the above to counter it or, better still, tell us what
you have to say to counter the above or you will continue to be accused of obfuscation.