Sunday, October 12, 2008

Buiter With A Beaut

Willem Buiter has a beaut this morning posted on the Financial Times:

"If by the time the markets open on Monday morning, this vague list of pious intentions has not been complemented with a rather longer list, by each of the G-7 and preferably by each of the G-20 nations, of specific actions and measures to suppport their key financial markets and institutions, including essential cooperative measures to stabilise border-crossing markets and institutions, then stocks will continue to plummet as they did last week. Some suggestions on what to do can be found in my previous posting on this blog. Even sitting alone in front of my laptop in my dressing gown, I came up with eight rather specific actions."

Even in my dressing gown in front of my PC, I agree with him. Please read his proposals.

And feature this:

“The temporary nationalisation of the bulk of the G-7 banking sectors may by now have become unavoidable and indeed necessary, but I would hope that we can avoid the introduction of the other trappings of comprehensive state ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange. Should economists begin to dust off their manuals on central planning?”

Here's my comment:

So does the British plan this morning envision the government selling these shares in the future? I’m for this temporary plan, but I’d like to see the government eventually get out and the role of government guarantees, implicit or explicit, in facilitating the events leading up to this crisis and crisis be examined. Surely that makes sense. Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | October 12th, 2008 at 4:34 pm

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