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The Illusion of Control

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  • The Illusion of Control

    The Illusion of Control

    f ever there was an argument for something between more government and less, James Grant has written it in the Sunday NYT. The Federal Reserve has been controversial since its inception and this has been because different people see different roles for government in the economy. Typically conservatives have seen the role of government to be limited to making things nice for "free" enterprise, thus revealing the essential paradox of their thinking. Liberals, on the other hand, have seen the role of government to be a strong hand curbing the excesses of greed and economic power on the principle, parallel to the founding principles of the country, namely, that power—especially economic power—corrupts without exception. Convert this argument to a discussion of the Federal Reserve System and you have a description of a craftsman with only one tool. So, perhaps James Grant is correct: capitalism without failure is socialism for the rich.
    Th NYT article "The Fed’s Subprime Solution"

    THE subprime mortgage crisis of 2007 is, in fact, a credit crisis — a worldwide disruption in lending and borrowing. It is only the latest in a long succession of such disturbances. Who’s to blame? The human race, first and foremost. Well-intended public policy, second. And Wall Street, third — if only for taking what generations of policy makers have so unwisely handed it
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    Every crackup is the same, yet every one is different. Today’s troubles are unusual not because the losses have been felt so far from the corner of Broad and Wall, or because our lenders are unprecedentedly reckless. The panics of the second half of the 19th century were trans-Atlantic affairs, while the debt abuses of the 1920s anticipated the most dubious lending practices of 2006. Our crisis will go down in history for different reasons.

    One is the sheer size of the debt in which people have belatedly lost faith. The issuance of one kind of mortgage-backed structure — collateralized debt obligations — alone runs to $1 trillion. The shocking fragility of recently issued debt is another singular feature of the 2007 downturn — alarming numbers of defaults despite high employment and reasonably strong economic growth. Hundreds of billions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities would, by now, have had to be recalled if Wall Street did business as Detroit does.
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    What could account for the weakness of our credit markets? Why does the Fed feel the need to intervene at the drop of a market?
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    Understandably, it’s only the selling kind of panic to which the government dispatches its rescue apparatus. Few object to riots on the upside. But bull markets, too, go to extremes. People get carried away, prices go too high and economic resources go where they shouldn’t. Bear markets are nature’s way of returning to the rule of reason.
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    Now comes the bill for that binge and, with it, cries for even greater federal oversight and protection. Ben S. Bernanke, Mr. Greenspan’s successor at the Fed (and his loyal supporter during the antideflation hysteria), is said to be resisting the demand for broadly lower interest rates. Maybe he is seeing the light that capitalism without financial failure is not capitalism at all, but a kind of socialism for the rich.


  • #2
    Re: The Illusion of Control

    Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
    wow. looks like hudson's right. even grant's commentaries are getting political. everyone is posturing for post crash politics.

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