housing bubble

Downturn in the Gobi

A Mongolian herder at work. The drop in demand for cashmere made from the soft fibers of Mongolian goats is putting many herders out of work. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/dersmee/213525073/in/set-72157594344690942/">Smee (flickr)</a>
A Mongolian herder at work. The drop in demand for cashmere made from the soft fibers of Mongolian goats is putting many herders out of work. Photo: Smee (flickr)

The global economic downturn seems to be hitting every corner of the world — including the Gobi desert in Mongolia. A steep drop in demand for cashmere and wool made from the soft fibers of Mongolian goats are putting the country's nomadic herders out of work, according to a Wall Street Journal article.

The implications of the drop in demand for cashmere are very real in Mongolia. The Wall Street Journal reports that about a quarter of the population earns a living off of raising animals. Borrowing more than they could afford, many herders were living off credit from banks, who themselves put too much faith in the price for cashmere. Over-leveraged herders are now being forced to sell their tents or livestock to pay off their debts.

Purevdelger Budkhuu, a 38-year-old widow, sold all of her 128 goats to pay back her $1,270 loan to the bank. Budkhuu moved to the city with her two children in hopes of finding other work but has yet to find a job.

”I don’t know what to do. I can’t go back to the countryside because I have no animals...and I can’t stay here because I can’t find a job.”

China's Tea Boom and Bust

Topics: Economic Development, Trade
Countries: China
A woman selling tea in one of China's rural counties where the crash of the tea market is leaving many struggling to survive. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/inopaap/466436088/in/photostream/">Ino Paap (flickr)</a>
A woman selling tea in one of China's rural counties where the crash of the tea market is leaving many struggling to survive. Photo: Ino Paap (flickr)

Tea has been one of China's main cash crops for the last decade. About 23,000 tons of Pu'er tea was produced in 2007. With the advantages of being a cholesterol reducer and its overall beneficial health effects, Pu’er tea became one of the greatest investment frenzies in China's economy since 1999, according to the New York Times.

During the boom, prices rose to record levels — allowing rural farmers to buy cars, build homes and send their children to school. Chinese citizens who put most of their savings into this "liquid gold" made millions of dollars during the boom era. Wholesalers started paying up to 30 percent more than they did the previous year — while production doubled to 100,000 tons from 2006 to 2007. We posted about the rise of Pu'er tea and its impact on tea workers last April, during the height of the boom in Fortune in the Tea Leaves. About 9 months later, it's a very different story.

By mid 2008, wealthy Chinese started to feel the pinch of the global economic crisis and the tea traders that used to buy up the cash crop in mass simply stopped coming. As the tea bubble popped, there was a devastating drop in prices. The going rate for Pu'er is now $3 a pound — a tenth of its peak price. More than a third of the 3,000 tea manufacturers and merchants have left the tea trade, according to the New York Times. The worst affected have been the farmers, many of whom have switched from tea to more lucrative crops like rice and corn.

Experts are comparing China's tea market to the U.S. housing bubble — where house prices rapidly increased to unsustainable levels, followed by a rapid decline in prices, which left many homeowners owing more on their mortgage than the market value of their homes.

Yet Chen Li, a former trader in the tea market believes that prices will eventually rebound and finds optimism in the mounds of unsold tea held by farmers and manufacturers. In an interview with the New York Times he says, "The best thing about Pu’er is that the longer you keep it, the more valuable it gets.” Yet if the "tea bubble" is anything like the housing bubble in the U.S., we may not see a rebound for a long time to come.

Move on in!

Topics: Economic Development
Countries: United States
Moving day. Photo: <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/rooreynolds/286201368/">Roo Reynolds (flickr)</a>
Moving day. Photo: Roo Reynolds (flickr)

USA Today reports that more families are moving in together as they try and tough out the housing crisis.

The weak economy — which has brought surging foreclosures, sinking property values, vanishing home equity and mounting job losses — is playing a major role in family dynamics, pulling relatives under the same roof to pool their resources and aid relatives who've lost their homes.


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The Guardian's Poverty Matters - Mon, 02/06/2012 - 01:41
The UK government's dismay at not being granted the contract for Typhoon fighter jets in India is an indication that its controversial aid for trade policy is still very much alive.

Liberia's battle to put the lights back on

The Guardian's Poverty Matters - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 23:00
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has set ambitious targets to restore the country's electricity supply. But will it meet them by 2015?

As Africa's consumers rise, so does inequality

Yale Global Online - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 10:17
Kenya struggles to spread the wealth from rapid growth.

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