Tuesday, September 23, 2008

What's With Exonerating The Lenders?

On Reason, Damon W. Root quotes Sheldon Richman as saying the following:

"The issue hasn't been lack of oversight, but intervention designed to countervail the market process in order to promote home ownership among people who couldn't otherwise have afforded it. Not coincidentally, this brought great profits to the financial, homebuilding, and real-estate industries. Nothing short of blocking Fannie's and Freddie's path to the taxpayers' wallets could have turned things around."

See, I'm having a hard time understanding this. How did people, business people, get buffaloed into making bad loans? Wouldn't regulation have kept them from doing this?

I'm having a hard time understanding what a free market is according to Richman. A free market means that businesses are free to lose money, as long as it's their own. Surely the implicit guarantee by the government to bail out these businesses was the problem.

I'm not saying that I'm for regulation, but, in all fairness, regulation might have kept these businesses from making these bad loans. I don't know for sure. I do know that these were bad loans, which the people who made them and their shareholders should be held responsible for. Period.

I'm sensing some kind of odd agenda here , which seems to exonerate businesses from stupidity. And, if they were in some sense buffaloed by the government, then maybe the government should pay the tab, or at least regulate their business practices. Otherwise, they are responsible for their own stupidity.

What am I missing?

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