
Housing, economy still far from recovery
Alan
Greenspan said.
07/31/2008 -
In an exclusive interview with CNBC, former Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan said the US is “nowhere near the bottom” of the housing
slump and is “right on the brink” of a recession.
Greenspan said the US economy is holding up “rather well” considering
the “extraordinary pressures from the financial sector.” But he added
that a recession appears inevitable. “I think we’re right on the
brink,” he said. “I’d be more surprised if we didn’t than if we did,
given the financial state.”
Greenspan's remarks, which
came shortly after 3 pm,
helped accelerate the stock market's slide,
with the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing down over 200
points. Greenspan said the government "had no choice" but to
step in and prevent the failure of Bear Stearns and
mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
.
"You have to do the backstop," he said. "Because once you're at that
particular point, your choices are limited." But he said he was
"uncomfortable" with the idea of the Fed getting involved in what he
called a "fiscal policy situation" that was really the responsibility
of Congress. He also warned that "Fannie and Freddie are a major
accident waiting to happen."
"I think the ultimate solution is a nationalization of both Fannie and
Freddie and I hope a restructuring in that nationalization," he said.
"And then split them up into five or ten separate entities and sell
them back into the market." Greenspan's comments pushed both
stocks lower. He also said that while the priority now is
stabilizing the financial system, he is worried about the long-term
issue of inflation.
"We will come out of this financial crisis," he said. "But we still
have to confront that problem of changing balance between growth and
inflation, or what we like to call 'stagflation.'"
Greenspan, who left the Fed in early 2006 and was succeeded by Ben
Bernanke, has come under increasing criticism for allowing what many
said was easy credit that set up the current financial crisis.
In
the interview, Greenspan called the current crisis a
"once-in-a-century phenomenon" that went beyond a liquidity crisis and
was more what he called a "solvency problem."
"We
haven't gotten closure yet," he said. "And it's going to take a
while."
-source: CNBC-