{ "id": "R40173", "type": "CRS Report", "typeId": "REPORTS", "number": "R40173", "active": false, "source": "EveryCRSReport.com, University of North Texas Libraries Government Documents Department", "versions": [ { "source": "EveryCRSReport.com", "id": 358904, "date": "2010-04-09", "retrieved": "2016-04-07T01:45:40.863110", "title": "Causes of the Financial Crisis", "summary": "The current financial crisis began in August 2007, when financial stability replaced inflation as the Federal Reserve\u2019s chief concern. The roots of the crisis go back much further, and there are various views on the fundamental causes.\nIt is generally accepted that credit standards in U.S. mortgage lending were relaxed in the early 2000s, and that rising rates of delinquency and foreclosures delivered a sharp shock to a range of U.S. financial institutions. Beyond that point of agreement, however, there are many questions that will be debated by policymakers and academics for decades.\nWhy did the financial shock from the housing market downturn prove so difficult to contain? Why did the tools the Fed used successfully to limit damage to the financial system from previous shocks (the Asian crises of 1997-1998, the stock market crashes of 1987 and 2000-2001, the junk bond debacle in 1989, the savings and loan crisis, 9/11, and so on) fail to work this time? If we accept that the origins are in the United States, why were so many financial systems around the world swept up in the panic?\nTo what extent were long-term developments in financial markets to blame for the instability? Derivatives markets, for example, were long described as a way to spread financial risk more efficiently, so that market participants could bear only those risks they understood. Did derivatives, and other risk management techniques, actually increase risk and instability under crisis conditions? Was there too much reliance on computer models of market performance? Did those models reflect only the post-WWII period, which may now come to be viewed not as a typical 60-year period, suitable for use as a baseline for financial forecasts, but rather as an unusually favorable period that may not recur?\nDid government actions inadvertently create the conditions for crisis? Did regulators fail to use their authority to prevent excessive risk-taking, or was their jurisdiction too limited and/or compartmentalized?\nThe multiple roots of the crisis are mirrored in the policy response. Two bills in the 111th Congress\u2014H.R. 4173, passed by the House on December 11, 2009, and Senator Dodd\u2019s Restoring American Financial Stability Act, as ordered reported by the Senate Banking Committee on March 22, 2010\u2014address many of the purported causal factors across the entire financial system. The bills address systemic risk, too-big-to-fail, prudential supervision, hedge funds, derivatives, payments systems, credit rating agencies, securitization, and consumer financial protection. (For a summary of major provisions, see CRS Report R40975, Financial Regulatory Reform and the 111th Congress, coordinated by Baird Webel.)\nThis report consists of a table that presents very briefly some of the arguments for particular causes, presents equally brief rejoinders, and includes a reference or two for further reading. It will be updated as required by market developments.", "type": "CRS Report", "typeId": "REPORTS", "active": false, "formats": [ { "format": "HTML", "encoding": "utf-8", "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/R40173", "sha1": "d0e35edcd0283df3169dbd13540cdf84b1aca8ad", "filename": "files/20100409_R40173_d0e35edcd0283df3169dbd13540cdf84b1aca8ad.html", "images": null }, { "format": "PDF", "encoding": null, "url": "http://www.crs.gov/Reports/pdf/R40173", "sha1": "7de2aeccf296c2457ae0a2e571c1629c282889f2", "filename": "files/20100409_R40173_7de2aeccf296c2457ae0a2e571c1629c282889f2.pdf", "images": null } ], "topics": [] }, { "source": "University of North Texas Libraries Government Documents Department", "sourceLink": "https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc461964/", "id": "R40173_2009Jan29", "date": "2009-01-29", "retrieved": "2014-12-05T09:57:41", "title": "Causes of the Financial Crisis", "summary": "This report sets out in tabular form a number of the factors that have been identified as causes of the financial crisis that began in 2007. The left column of Table 1 summarizes the causal role of each such factor. The next column presents a brief rejoinder to that argument. The right-hand column contains a reference for further reading. Where text is given in quotation marks, the reference in the right column is the source, unless otherwise specified.", "type": "CRS Report", "typeId": "REPORT", "active": false, "formats": [ { "format": "PDF", "filename": "files/20090129_R40173_b9a511724fe94c76f87c098b2af5243ae0ce6dd5.pdf" }, { "format": "HTML", "filename": "files/20090129_R40173_b9a511724fe94c76f87c098b2af5243ae0ce6dd5.html" } ], "topics": [ { "source": "LIV", "id": "Financial crises", "name": "Financial crises" }, { "source": "LIV", "id": "Business cycles", "name": "Business cycles" }, { "source": "LIV", "id": "Finance", "name": "Finance" }, { "source": "LIV", "id": "Economic conditions", "name": "Economic conditions" } ] } ], "topics": [] }