2008 Financial Crisis

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2008 Financial Crisis[edit]

The 2008 financial crisis was a global economic collapse triggered by the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble, failures in financial regulation, excessive risk-taking by banks, and the widespread use of complex mortgage-backed securities.

Remembering (Knowledge / Recall) ๐Ÿง [edit]

Key facts, entities, and terminology.

Core terminology & definitions[edit]

Key components / actors / elements[edit]

  • Financial institutions โ€” Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, AIG, major commercial banks.
  • Regulatory bodies โ€” Federal Reserve, U.S. Treasury, SEC.
  • Households & borrowers โ€” Many with subprime or adjustable-rate mortgages.
  • Global markets โ€” Interbank lending, credit markets, international trade flows.

Canonical models, tools, or artifacts[edit]

Typical recall-level facts[edit]

  • Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008.
  • Triggered the Great Recession, the worst downturn since the 1930s.
  • Housing prices fell sharply as adjustable-rate mortgages reset.

Understanding (Comprehension) ๐Ÿ“–[edit]

Conceptual relationships, mechanisms, and systemic context.

Conceptual relationships & contrasts[edit]

  • Linked to the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble and credit expansion.
  • Similar to earlier banking crises but amplified by complex financial products.
  • Contrasts with the 1929 crash: modern, globally interconnected finance.

Core principles & paradigms[edit]

  • Leverage and risk concentration magnified small shocks.
  • Moral hazard shaped behavior under expectations of bailouts.
  • Shadow banking increased systemic fragility outside traditional regulation.

How it works (high-level)[edit]

  • Inputs โ€” Cheap credit, relaxed lending standards, rising home prices.
  • Processes โ€” Securitization โ†’ risk mispricing โ†’ borrower defaults โ†’ asset collapse.
  • Outputs โ€” Liquidity freeze, bank failures, recession, global contagion.

Roles & perspectives[edit]

  • Regulators โ€” Attempted stabilization via liquidity injections.
  • Banks โ€” Sought profit through high-risk mortgage products.
  • Consumers โ€” Faced foreclosures, job losses, and wealth decline.
  • Global partners โ€” Experienced spillover through multinational finance.

Applying (Use / Application) ๐Ÿ› ๏ธ[edit]

Modern uses of crisis lessons in finance, policy, and regulation.

"Hello, World" example[edit]

Analyzing a bank balance sheet for exposure to high-risk mortgage assets using simple ratios such as leverage or capital adequacy.

Core task loops / workflows[edit]

  • Stress-testing financial institutions.
  • Monitoring housing-market indicators (prices, delinquencies).
  • Evaluating bank liquidity under adverse scenarios.
  • Applying regulatory frameworks such as Basel III.

Frequently used actions / methods / techniques[edit]

  • Scenario analysis of mortgage portfolios.
  • Credit-risk modeling and default probability estimation.
  • Liquidity coverage ratio assessment.
  • Policy evaluation of monetary interventions.

Real-world use cases[edit]

  • Central banks using quantitative easing during economic stress.
  • Governments designing foreclosure-prevention programs.
  • Financial firms improving risk-management practices.
  • Economists modeling contagion effects in global markets.

Analyzing (Break Down / Analysis) ๐Ÿ”ฌ[edit]

Structural insights, comparisons, and root-cause investigation.

Comparative analysis[edit]

  • Compared with the S&L crisis (1980s): far larger global impact.
  • Differences from the COVID-19 recession: financial vs. real-economy trigger.
  • When securitization works well vs. when risk becomes opaque.

Structural insights[edit]

  • Securitization chains obscured who bore final risk.
  • Rating agenciesโ€™ incentives created misaligned assessments.
  • Shadow banking lacked capital buffers of traditional banks.

Failure modes & root causes[edit]

  • Over-leveraging by banks and investment firms.
  • Flawed rating models assigning AAA to risky assets.
  • Rapid rise in adjustable-rate mortgage defaults.
  • Systemic interconnectedness amplifying localized shocks.

Troubleshooting & observability[edit]

  • Indicators: rising delinquency rates, liquidity freezes, credit-spread spikes.
  • Tools: stress-test results, housing-price indices, interbank lending rates (e.g., LIBORโ€“OIS spread).
  • Questions: Where does risk reside? How correlated are asset classes?

Creating (Synthesis / Create) ๐Ÿ—๏ธ[edit]

Designing improved financial systems, regulations, and crisis-prevention tools.

Design patterns & best practices[edit]

  • Transparent securitization structures with clearer risk mapping.
  • Strong capital requirements and liquidity buffers.
  • Better borrower vetting and mortgage-underwriting standards.
  • Clearer communication from central banks to reduce panic.

Integration & extension strategies[edit]

  • Integrating macroprudential policies into national regulatory systems.
  • Coordinating cross-border supervision for multinational banks.
  • Enhancing data-sharing between regulators and institutions.

Security, governance, or ethical considerations[edit]

  • Conflicts of interest in rating agencies.
  • Fairness in bailout decisions and moral-hazard concerns.
  • Protections for vulnerable borrowers.
  • Governance reforms for large, systemically important institutions.

Lifecycle management strategies[edit]

  • Periodic review of financial regulations (e.g., Doddโ€“Frank provisions).
  • Updating stress-test scenarios based on emerging risks.
  • Monitoring climate-related financial risk and new asset classes.

Evaluating (Judgment / Evaluation) โš–๏ธ[edit]

Assessing impacts, trade-offs, and long-term implications.

Evaluation frameworks & tools[edit]

  • Financial-stability metrics: capital ratios, liquidity indicators.
  • Macroeconomic indicators: GDP recovery, unemployment, housing markets.
  • Systemic-risk models evaluating contagion likelihood.

Maturity & adoption models[edit]

  • Post-crisis reforms institutionalized (Basel III, stress tests).
  • Debate continues on the adequacy and burden of regulations.
  • Global adoption varies by country and political landscape.

Key benefits & limitations[edit]

  • Benefits: stronger banking oversight, increased resilience.
  • Limitations: uneven enforcement, persistent shadow-banking risks.

Strategic decision criteria[edit]

  • Use strict regulation when systemic risk is high.
  • Consider market flexibility when innovation is needed.
  • Balance consumer protection with credit accessibility.

Holistic impact analysis[edit]

  • Economic: deep recession, slow global recovery.
  • Social: unemployment spikes, foreclosures, wealth inequality.
  • Political: shifts toward financial reform and populist movements.
  • Long-term: improved oversight but ongoing vulnerabilities in global finance.