The subprime mess is generally treated as a crisis, a catastrophe, one of those unpredictable pathologies that happen in our economy because the ingenuity of corporate and financial types outpaces regulatory understanding and control. Sure, innovative self-interest will always be out ahead of regulation, as it was here. But what the subprime mess isn't is unpredictable or pathological.
I guess a lot depends on the level of confidence that holders of debt have--and they tend to react like a flighty herd of herbivores sometimes, ready to run for other parts when they sniff the odor of debt repudiation on the breeze.
We measure "consumer confidence." Why not measure "creditor confidence"? Just to offer another project that this paradigm implies. Industrial society is not sustainable. Unsustainable systems change--or disappear.
I'm just pointing out the important difference between prediction and expectation. Chaotic systems are deterministic yet unpredictable. That doesn't mean their statistical properties cannot be studied in detail. It'd be nice if the battle were only against the right wingers, not half of the left on top of that — François in Paris