Several difference between the sub-prime student loan crisis and the sub-prime real estate loan crisis.Higgenbotham wrote:
I just want to mention something I saw the other week. Bernake was testifying that the current economic malaise can't be nearly as bad as that of the 1930s because we have "safety nets" like unemployment compensation and food stamps. Reminded me of his earlier statements that "subprime is contained". As far as being right part of the time, "subprime (wa)s contained" for a while and we still have "safety nets", for now. The real action will start if those "safety nets" break.
This has gone viral with over 2 million hits; it had 26,000 hits when I first saw it 2 days ago.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=pl ... pAOwJvTOio
When the sub-Prime loan crisis shut the over night credit system between the banks ( the trust between banks ) down in the 2007-2008 time frame there was a big difference in both perception and reality.
A huge percentage of the sub-prime real estate loans were privately insured by banks, and the banks were generally recognized, or feared to be, bankrupt and unable to meet their obligations because of the sub-prime real estate loans that were privately insured. In addition Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were perceived, in the worse case scenario, to be private entity insurers who could also go bankrupt without paying off the loan guarantees.
We have spent the last five years moving Trillions of dollars worth of sub-Prime real estate risk ( liability ) from the banks to the U.S. Government. The U.S. government assuming the liabilities of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was the first step, but the systematic refinancing of mortgages insured by private banks using mortgages insured by the U.S. federal government has been a huge ongoing part of it.
The sub-prime student loan crisis by contrast, starts out ahead of where the sub-prime real estate crisis is today. Virtually all the sub-prime student loans either already have the U.S. Federal government as the lender, or the Federal Government fully insures the private lenders of the rest of these sub-prime student loans.
Both the sub-prime real estate loans and the sub-prime student loans, or at least a huge portion of them, remain unfunded liabilities of the U.S. government not included in the 16 Trillion Dollar National Debt, but today the sub-prime student loan crisis does not pose the kind of threats ( either the real threats or the perceived threats ) to the banking system that the sub-prime real estate crisis did in 2007-2008.