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Ben Bernanke: Blame Housing For This Lousy Recovery

Bernanke

The Huffington Post   Mark Gongloff First Posted: 02/10/2012 1:35 pm Updated: 02/10/2012 1:35 pm

Housing, with some help from Wall Street, got us into the Great Recession, and it is housing that has made the recovery from that recession so slow and painful, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said today.

"The state of the housing sector has been a key impediment to a faster recovery," Bernanke said in a speech at the National Association of Homebuilders International Builders' Show in Orlando, Florida on Friday.

"In the typical economic recovery, a resurgent housing sector helps fuel reemployment and rising incomes," he added. "But as you know all too well, that scenario has not played out this time."

Bernanke cited economic studies that suggest the collapse in home prices might be shrinking consumer spending, the largest engine of U.S. economic growth, by between $200 billion and $375 billion a year.

Underwater homeowners are also unable to move to find better, higher-paying work or borrow against home equity to help with emergency expenses, Bernanke observed. So begins the vicious cycle in which clusters of foreclosed homes lower property values throughout entire communities and hurt property tax revenues, which lead to cutbacks in municipal services that push house prices still lower.

Economists have seen evidence lately that the housing market might finally have hit a bottom after a collapse and slump that has lasted more than six years. But home prices and new-home construction are still in a deep pit despite record-low mortgage rates that have made housing theoretically more affordable than ever.

The Fed helped push those interest rates to rock-bottom lows in part to support the housing market. But their efforts have mostly been met with frustration.

Bernanke suggested the still-weak housing market might be making it hard for low rates to do much good. Banks, suffering from losses on bad mortgages are afraid of taking still more losses so tighten lending standards, making borrowing more difficult even at low rates.

"The Federal Reserve, in its supervisory capacity, continues to encourage lenders to find ways to maintain prudent lending standards while serving creditworthy borrowers," Bernanke said. "But the slow recovery of the housing market and the economy" and other factors are keeping lenders cautious.

He also acknowledged that the recovery in housing will continue to be painfully slow, estimating that one million foreclosed homes owned by banks could hit the market each year "for the next few years," keeping downward pressure on prices.

One possible solution, he acknowledged, would be to turn some of these foreclosed properties into rental properties, to help meet rising rental demand. But he also acknowledged there was no silver bullet for housing.

Without it, the recovery could stay slow and painful for a while longer.

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Housing, with some help from Wall Street, got us into the Great Recession, and it is housing that has made the recovery from that recession so slow and painful, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke s...
Housing, with some help from Wall Street, got us into the Great Recession, and it is housing that has made the recovery from that recession so slow and painful, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke s...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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themodernleader 08:09 PM on 02/10/2012
  The words of Ben Bernanke are of little value because he only accepts those sense data that fit his simple economic design of human enterprise and commerce.  He denies that manufacturing has much to do with the wealth,  employment stability and enterprise of  a nation.  Unemployment is a product of the health of construction and nothing more.  Construction and the dowry of  Read More...
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carolgregor
08:53 PM on 04/17/2012
Ben, oh Ben, housing true, banks fraudulent, also true.
SaveRMiddle
An ExConsumer by choice
07:12 PM on 02/23/2012
I'd like Ben to discuss the wealth transfer which has hollowed out the lives of tens of millions who can no longer be considered consumers today or tomorrow. I wonder if that's a factor?
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Siebenstein
Vegan, not a Murderer
08:39 PM on 02/13/2012
Bernanke, partially blame yourself, okay?!
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01:56 PM on 02/13/2012
Bernanke could end the housing slump if he wanted to.
01:56 PM on 02/13/2012
The problem was a housing depression in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and ------------2012. Fix it. The rest of the economy is doing OK despite the housing depression. You don't fix housing by rewarding the financial industry that created it; by rewarding the TBTF banks.
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Scott Moser
10:53 AM on 02/13/2012
How does the housing market recover when a large segment of the population who could get a loan 5 years ago can't qualify for one now. Credit is very tight and self-employed people are SOL in most cases. The banks have also ruined peoples credit scores by reducing their credit lines, thus upping their percentage of credit used.

If you keep current lending standards for mortgages, the housing recovery may never happen.
10:08 AM on 02/13/2012
Bernanke's plan was to reinflate housing prices. The government and The Federal Reserve bought the bad mortgages and gave full public support to the financial sector. So much support that the financial sector is now a de facto publicly owned utility - run by Oligarchs.

Without a re-inflation of housing prices, the 'smart' people will have to eventually admit just how hundreds of billions and trillions of dollars each man, woman, and child will owe in America. As the public fully backstops any and all losses in the financial sector. Bernanke is desperate. His entire academic career and standing - as well as the 'smart' people in finance; indeed their entire credibility and wealth rest on the public not knowing. Indeed, their very lives may rest upon re-inflating housing prices.

The bailout is a confluence and intersection of good intentions and corruption at the very top. Looks like corruption won. A situation that was taken advantage of by the few to impoverish the many.
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ronp121
08:46 AM on 02/13/2012
Blame the housing market, blame the union workers, blame the President, blame the banks, blame the Bush administration, blame the Governors, could go on and on. After three years of listening to the deafening screaming from Washington about who is to blame and the only ones I see trying to move ahead are the democrats. As democrats spend their time creating and republicans spend their time trying to dismantle. Makes no sense. then they wonder why they are dysfunctional. Or do they???
06:56 AM on 02/13/2012
NO,we blame YOU Mr.Bernanke !
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keyman125
04:26 PM on 02/12/2012
"The state of the housing sector has been a key impediment to a faster recovery!"

Blame the housing sector?? Excuse me?? So whose to blame? THE 535

The 535 people who stole the power from the 99& and gave it to the 1%.

535 people decide the destinies of 300 million people!! What a country!!

So how do the 99% get the power back? With the most precious right of the democracy the right to vote.

How many of you reading this can say you have voted in every election that you were eligible to vote in?

If you want these 535 people to continue to do what they're are doing and you are happy with the way things are then keep them in office by either voting for them or NOT exercising your right to vote your choice.

Some of you may know that I have retired to and have lived in Ecuador for 2 years.

Here in Ecuador if you have the right to vote you are penalized if you DONT vote. There are certain procedures that if you want to do something you have to show that you voted in the most recent election. Now think about the out cry in the US if you couldnt buy a car or a house or get a driver's license if you didn t vote?

So how important to you is your right to vote??

I rest my case.
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Captain Hindsight
Seeking the truth is my only agenda.
02:51 PM on 02/12/2012
And by keeping interest rates low the FED is once again putting the screws to those working poor that do their best to save what little they can at rates often lower than 1% while the rich who do not need every penny they can get for basic needs gamble away their humongous disposable incomes for high returns and low taxes.
Savings needs to be separated from investment banking if the poor and middle class are to have any chance of getting ahead.
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Leefeller
Occupy Me Own Mind!
11:17 AM on 02/14/2012
No way in the world one can get between an opportunist and his money, so the they fight every inch of the any concept of regulations for they are the job proclaimed the job creators!
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sanfran55
01:39 PM on 02/12/2012
FINALLY someone has come out and said it - the housing crisis is completely linked to recovery. I just don't know how they will sort out this terrific mess...
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ambrecel
12:35 PM on 02/12/2012
The market is on the way to recovery, in my opinion, and here is why, the fall has been for 5 years, there has been an increase in employment, and the encouragement of new small business. The new consumer regulator agency is in place which can stablize credit. So I agree with bernaki that the market has to bottom out, but what goes down will go back up, and vica vera. It took a few years but the Recovery is starting.
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12:01 PM on 02/12/2012
This guy can't get out of the way of his own shaddow. I see big change in November.
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karen1p
12:01 PM on 02/12/2012
Duh......now can you step down?