Thursday, October 2, 2008

All Bailout Can Do Is Shift The Loss From Some People To Others

Here's David Friedman:

"What is happening is the failure of lots of firms. The failure of a firm doesn't wipe out wealth, except to the extent that the firm itself—its firm culture, web of relationships and such—has some value. When a firm fails, that is at least some evidence that that value was negative, which is why nobody chose to buy out the firm and keep it going. The ordinary assets of the firm—its buildings, land, stocks, bonds, mortgages, and whatever it owns—don't vanish when the firm fails, they get sold to someone else.

The bailout is not a way of preventing the loss of value. The loss (or transfer) of value occurred when people made bad mortgage loans. What happened more recently was the recognition of that loss. All the bailout can do is to shift the loss from some people to others, from the stockholders and creditors have firms that are now effectively bankrupt to the taxpayers.

All of which comes back to confusion over the meaning of "money."

Read the whole post entitled "The Price Of Money And Other Errors".

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