Re: Matt Taibbi: Our Shredder At Work!
The main relevance of The Great Crash, 1929 to the great crisis of 2008 is surely here. In both cases, the government knew what it should do. Both times, it declined to do it. In the summer of 1929 a few stern words from on high, a rise in the discount rate, a tough investigation into the pyramid schemes of the day, and the house of cards on Wall Street would have tumbled before its fall destroyed the whole economy. In 2004, the FBI warned publicly of "an epidemic of mortgage fraud." But the government did nothing, and less than nothing, delivering instead low interest rates, deregulation and clear signals that laws would not be enforced. The signals were not subtle: on one occasion the director of the Office of Thrift Supervision came to a conference with copies of the Federal Register and a chainsaw. There followed every manner of scheme to fleece the unsuspecting ....
This was fraud, perpetrated in the first instance by the government on the population, and by the rich on the poor.
from Economist James K. Galbraith's introduction to his father, John Kenneth Galbraith's, definitive study of the Great Depression, The Great Crash, 1929.
This was fraud, perpetrated in the first instance by the government on the population, and by the rich on the poor.
from Economist James K. Galbraith's introduction to his father, John Kenneth Galbraith's, definitive study of the Great Depression, The Great Crash, 1929.
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