The problems escalated for roughly twenty years, and then came crashing down.
Quote from: IcyWind on November 22, 2014, 12:42:34 PMThe problems escalated for roughly twenty years, and then came crashing down.I'm not sold on the whole bubble theses, it's too easy to retroactively say "Oh look, a bubble!" Not to mention, a few countries which did go into recession didn't even see a collapse of the housing market.
The markets were signalling poor performance prior to the crash, but - at least in my opinion - the government failed to respond.
Countries such as? Just curious - their recession likely stemmed from the recession of other countries - not internal problems.
Quote from: IcyWind on November 22, 2014, 12:48:38 PMCountries such as? Just curious - their recession likely stemmed from the recession of other countries - not internal problems.I think Canada and Australia were the notable ones, but I can't find the fucking data at the moment >.>
Why the government, Meta?
Quote from: Meta Cognition on November 22, 2014, 12:55:34 PMQuote from: IcyWind on November 22, 2014, 12:48:38 PMCountries such as? Just curious - their recession likely stemmed from the recession of other countries - not internal problems.I think Canada and Australia were the notable ones, but I can't find the fucking data at the moment >.>Yeah - both of their recessions likely stemmed from the recessions in other countries, especially Australia.
Quote from: IcyWind on November 22, 2014, 12:58:42 PMQuote from: Meta Cognition on November 22, 2014, 12:55:34 PMQuote from: IcyWind on November 22, 2014, 12:48:38 PMCountries such as? Just curious - their recession likely stemmed from the recession of other countries - not internal problems.I think Canada and Australia were the notable ones, but I can't find the fucking data at the moment >.>Yeah - both of their recessions likely stemmed from the recessions in other countries, especially Australia.Actually, if I remember correctly, Australia avoided a recession. But then, that's unsurprising given Australia's usual resilience to shit like this. Canada also fared very well, too, mostly thanks to Mark Carney who was head of the Bank of Canada. SpoilerAnd who is now head of the Bank of England, suck it yanks!
Recessions aren't controllable. They happen... well naturally almost.
It was a housing bubble, and houses are the largest asset for every home-owning individual. Of course it's going to be severe.
When has the US or the UK ever not been in debt?