Mortgage Bubble
A frightening piece on the economy and the housing market in the Washington Monthly can best be summarized by:
I'm not usually a big reader of articles on the economy, but this seems like one worth wading through.
Greenspan knows, perhaps better than anyone, that this economy is perched nervously on top of a wobbly, Dr. Seuss-like tower. Our recovery is propped up by consumer spending, which is in turn propped up by mortgage refinancing, and if that refinancing dries up before more props can be put in, the whole edifice could fall...
Because if you think Greenspan's being cagey on refinancing, the truth he's really avoiding talking about is that we're in the midst of a huge housing bubble, on a scale only seen once before since the Depression. Worse, the inflated housing market is now in an historically unique position, as the motor of the rest of the economy. Within the next year or two, that bubble is likely to burst, and when it does, it very well may take the American economy down with it.
I'm not usually a big reader of articles on the economy, but this seems like one worth wading through.
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