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Published bySara Peters Modified over 8 years ago
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Economic crisis in America
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1. Deregulation. 2. Statistics. 3. The reasons for the crisis. 4. Obama’s plan.
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Deregulation „Government institutions and self- regulating organizations must play key roles in ensuring that rules are fair, apply to all, and are enforced...” By John D. Sullivan Executive Director, Center for International Private Enterprise
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Deregulation In the 1970s it turned out that much regulation did not increase competition, but had the opposite effect. That is why government decided to ease controls in some cases.
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Deregulation Transportation Telecommunications Banking
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Transportation Companies were allowed to compete by using any air, road, or rail route they choоse. As a result, new competitors emerged and cheap services appeared. Some large companies, which had grown due the to government that guaranteed they could cover all their costs, found themselves hard- pressed to meet the competition.
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Telecommunications In 1984, a court effectively ended American Telephone & Telegraph 's telephone monopoly. New technologies - including cable television, wireless service, the Internet, and possibly others - offered alternatives to local telephone companies. The competition brought lower prices and improved service.
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Banking Banks are a special case when it comes to regulation, because: 1) banks are private businesses; 2) banks play a central role in the economy and affect everybody, not just their own consumers.
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The government: allows banks to offer long-term home loans (mortgages); does not control banks’ investments; does not control the banks’ interest rate, BUT covers deposit insurance made by insurance companies; protects banks in case of fail; regulates the amount of banks’ capitals. Banking
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Statistics The USA produces about 20% of goods existing in the world, although consumes about 35% of all the goods produced in the world every year. External debt is very big. By the year 2006 the external debt was equal to 66 % of the US economy (13 billion dollars). That means that 66% of all the produce of the country in reality belongs to someone else.
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The reasons for the crisis 1) the movement of industry to developing countries (e.g. China or Vietnam); 2) unbelievably high expenses of Pentagon, including the war in Iraq and Afghanistan costs; 3) the increase of oil prices; 4) the absence of structural changes in the economy and an artificial stimulation of economy (external loans, budget deficiency, the increase of the governmental debt).
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The roots of the crisis can be traced back to 2001-2003 The government started to get loans and invested money in the economy. The result: economic growth, positive changes at the stock exchange and the real estate market.
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An artificial stimulation of economy the market became unstable: the supply at the real estate market became considerably greater than the demand; banks started to offer packages where paying down was made after some time; consequently, the government was forced to increase the credit rates from 1 to 35%.
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Sub-prime lending scheme Sub-prime borrowers are the people who have a bad loan reputation (they haven’t returned the loan back) or the people who, under normal conditions, can’t afford getting a loan. Mortgage lenders decided that it would be, nevertheless, profitable to lend money to such people. This system worked effectively during 1990-s, as the percentage of those people, with no money down, was around 10% of the market, but later the percentage increased up to 20-25%, and the scheme collapsed.
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The consequences People refusing to repay the loans. The crash of subprime system. Banks refusing to give loans to each other. The general recession of the economy.
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Obama’s plan
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