Re: Are banks well-capitalized or insolvent?
Inflation is also a form of jubilee. The bad debt losses are spread proportionally among all dollar holders. In inflation every person storing surplus wealth in dollars takes a haircut proportional to the amount of dollars held and all savers are punished (regardless if they were or not creators of bad debt).
In the end, bad debt has to be written off somehow. It can be hidden only temporary into balance sheet tricks or stuffed into a new bubble but it never goes away. Somebody has to take those losses. That's inescapable.
As long as there is no punishment and no liability for creating bad debt, the financial sector will continue to create bad debt. I'll go tomorrow and lend $100 with %50 daily interest to the first junkie I see in dowtonwn. In one month when I come to collect the debt, of course all money has gone in smoke, so I declare my crack bond as an illiquid troubled asset... eligible for TARP. Once the Treasury pays me ... well, I find another junkie to lend him $100 at 50% daily interest.
Basically the government guarantees the high profits of the financial system at everybody else's expense. And as long we are going to take it, they are going to do it. It is that simple.
Originally posted by nero3
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In the end, bad debt has to be written off somehow. It can be hidden only temporary into balance sheet tricks or stuffed into a new bubble but it never goes away. Somebody has to take those losses. That's inescapable.
As long as there is no punishment and no liability for creating bad debt, the financial sector will continue to create bad debt. I'll go tomorrow and lend $100 with %50 daily interest to the first junkie I see in dowtonwn. In one month when I come to collect the debt, of course all money has gone in smoke, so I declare my crack bond as an illiquid troubled asset... eligible for TARP. Once the Treasury pays me ... well, I find another junkie to lend him $100 at 50% daily interest.
The problem isn’t simply greed, isn’t simply ignorance, isn’t a failure of regulatory diligence, but a systemic flaw in how our economy finances itself. As long as growth in claims on wealth outstrips the economy’s capacity to increase its wealth, market capitalism creates a niche for entrepreneurs who are all too willing to invent instruments of debt that will someday be repudiated. There will always be a Bernard Madoff or a subprime mortgage repackager willing to set us up for catastrophe. To stop them, we must balance claims on future wealth with the economy’s power to produce that wealth.
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