From Deseret News archives:

Credit: How will the crisis affect Utah consumers?

Published: Thursday, Oct. 2, 2008 12:19 a.m. MDT
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However, Utah Bankers Association President Howard Headlee says local Utah banks are in a good position to come out OK from the financial mess. If you have good credit, you can get a loan.

"That's my biggest complaint right now (in the dialogue). Banks are looking for good loans. They have credit available," he said. "We're not directly affected (by Wall Street). We are directly affected by our local economy," which often is more insulated than others.

However, "the economy had an impact on people's credit-worthiness," Headlee said. Fewer people are credit-worthy for loans, he said. "It's not that our (lending) standards have gone way up," except for real estate loans because there is an oversupply of houses.

Another reason: There's a lot of inventory right now — bank money available for loans, in this case — yet no one knows how far it can stretch if the crisis continues, Schaefer said.

Look at it like gasoline. If a local refinery shuts down for a month, consumers won't notice because a big inventory can cover for it. But it the refinery closes for a year, or many refineries shut down at once, the gasoline inventory can't stretch far enough. Consumers pay more at the pump — if they can even get a gallon to begin with.

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Is it all bad if not everybody can get credit, considering its role in this mess?

"Credit is important, because it's what allows us to buy things," and that's good for the economy, Schaefer said. "The problem is, loans have been too easy to come by. ... We want loans to be appropriately difficult to come by — we don't want them to be impossible to get. The risk we run right now is credit will be too hard to get."

What will happen if the government doesn't step in?

When banks fail, their problems fall in the lap of the FDIC — even when another bank buys them up as quickly as JPMorgan Chase bought Wachovia and Citigroup acquired Washington Mutual in the past week, Schaefer said. The government takes control of failed banks. When a buyer comes along, the government agrees to cover their losses after a certain amount and sells the assets.

"I think a lot of confusion people have is, 'Let's not pay anything' is not an option at all," Schaefer said, referring to a bailout or other government intervention in the situation. "It comes down to 'let's minimize our losses,' because the losses are locked in for the taxpayer."


E-mail: jtcook@desnews.com

Recent comments

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veedub | Oct. 2, 2008 at 9:48 p.m.

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Credit is still available... | Oct. 2, 2008 at 4:33 p.m.

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