No Light Rail in Vancouver!
Greenspan: Wrong Then, Wrong Now
Some people blame Alan Greenspan’s policy of low interest rates for causing the housing bubble. Why did Greenspan keep interest rates low? “I did not forecast a significant decline” in housing prices, he told Congress yesterday, “because we had never had a significant decline.”
If you fail to look closely at the data, you will come up with the wrong policies. Nationally, we’ve never had a housing bubble. Locally, we had several. But until now, they have been in so few states that they haven’t impacted the national economy.
The above chart shows the ups and downs of two housing bubbles in California, the
first peaking in 1980 and the second in about 1990. Hawaii, Oregon, and Vermont also
had bubbles at about the same time. By an extraordinary coincidence, these are the
only states that had growth-
By 1998, more than a dozen states — including Arizona, Florida, much of New England,
and New Jersey — had growth-
Restrictions on housing created shortages that not only made prices go up, they made them more volatile. As the Antiplanner has previously noted, the fact that prices are falling is not an indication of too much supply, but too little.
Low interest rates did not cause the housing bubble, though higher rates might have
suppressed it somewhat. Unless we understand what did cause the bubble — growth-
Reprinted from The Antiplanner