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How did the US financial sector get to this point? 1987 – Jan. 1993 – Feb. 1994 – May 1998 – Sept. 1998 – Dec. 1998 – 1999 – Mar. 2000 – May 2000 – 2001-2006.

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Presentation on theme: "How did the US financial sector get to this point? 1987 – Jan. 1993 – Feb. 1994 – May 1998 – Sept. 1998 – Dec. 1998 – 1999 – Mar. 2000 – May 2000 – 2001-2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 How did the US financial sector get to this point? 1987 – Jan. 1993 – Feb. 1994 – May 1998 – Sept. 1998 – Dec. 1998 – 1999 – Mar. 2000 – May 2000 – 2001-2006 – Video is posted at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/warning/cron/

2 Financial Sector Reform Financial reform is complicated –Eight major components. –Evaluate as overall if proposal will prevent new financial crisis  if proposal will NOT prevent new financial crisis Systemic risk ~ interdependence in a market where single failure (or cluster) can cause a cascading series of failures, bringing down entire market. Moral hazard ~ an individual or institution does not bear the full consequences and responsibilities of its doings, and therefore has a tendency to act less carefully

3 Fact on Financial Reform http://politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2010/jul/16/facts- financial-reform/http://politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2010/jul/16/facts- financial-reform/ 1.Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 2.New mortgage rules 3.Size matters 4.Liquidation authority 5.Audit for the Fed 6.Credit card rules 7.Volker Rule 8.Derivatives 9.Hedge funds 10.Credit rating agencies 11.“Say on pay” Criticisms

4 Financial Sector Reform Summary of proposed banking reform –Copy the heading for the proposed change. –Find information 3-5 facts about what it will do. –Evaluate good/bad of proposed change. Give your opinion… –Evaluate proposal…back opinion with FACTS if proposal will prevent new financial crisis  if proposal will NOT prevent new financial crisis

5 Federal Budget & National debt Federal budget = –tax revenues - expenditures Balanced budget: taxes = expenditures Budget deficit: taxes < expenditures Budget surplus: taxes > expenditures Government spending is independent of output (RGDP) while taxes rise/fall with changes in RGDP.

6 FY 2010 budget http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/FYFSD?cid=5

7 Is the Federal Government budget deficit a problem? YESNO Would a law or Constitutional Amendment requiring a balanced budget be a good idea?

8 How does the government eliminate it’s budget deficit? Someone has to pay more, propose 1 tax increase. –Why did you select this tax? –How would the tax increase impact people in different income groups? Someone has to get less, propose 1 spending decrease. –Why did you select this expenditure? –How would this spending decrease impact people? What would be the impact of your proposal?

9 National Debt Will the national debt cause the U.S. government to go bankrupt? Q: How does the government pay for it’s budget deficit? –A: It borrows money (issues bonds, treasury bills) –“Crowding out” means it costs average U.S. citizen & businesses more to take out a loan. How does the U.S. debt compare to other countries?

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12 Budget Deficit = -$1,267 billion

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