"TODAY’S crisis thus emerged from a combination of disasters operating in free markets, but wreaking ruin as they developed. The subprime mortgage mess, the huge leverage throughout the system, the insidious impact of new kinds of derivatives and other financial paper, and, at the roots, the vast underestimation of risk could not have happened in a planned economy. A superjumbo bailout is the inescapable result, but at some point we must confront its more profound implications.
As we move into the future, and as the crisis finally passes into history, how will we deal with this earth-shaking blow to the most basic principle of our economic system? I do not know how to answer that question. But we need to ask it."
I agree, and believe that the answer it to have regulations that keep such disasters from occurring, but don't micromanage businesses and the economy. I don't see that as an impossible goal.
"Right now, at this moment of hysteria, the political class suffers from availability bias. Like Bernstein, they see only the downside of risk and conclude the necessity of the planned economy. A more complex and nuanced view would see both sides of risk and the enduring value of liberty."
I agree here as well, but believe that a more complex and nuanced view would include some minimal and effective regulation in order to keep crises such as these from occurring.
For a libertarian Democrat, it's not an either or choice, either the free market or a planned economy, and I believe that our agenda can provide a balanced , complex, and nuanced view going forward.
I believe in a free society, but I also live in the real world.
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