Sunday, October 19, 2008

The Goose Is Not Severly Wounded

Gary Becker has a good post on whether or not the current crisis will lead to over-regulation:

"Will this financial crisis mark a substantial retreat from the world's movement during the past several decades toward a competitive market system?"

I don't believe so, but read his analysis.

Here's my comment on his blog:

"Although there may be other regulations and controls, I would not expect the US federal government to hold on for long to its preferred stock interest in various investment banks. I have not supported such government equity interests, and it would be a grave mistake if the govern continued to maintain such ownership."

My disagreement with you is that a Swedish type plan, although more intrusive initially, would actually prove easier to get out of for various reasons.

"Indeed, the government's influence over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac contributed in a significant way to the housing bust by encouraging these institutions to make many worthless sub prime loans, although clearly other important forces were also at work in the housing bust."

I'm not sympathetic to this analysis. Whether they were encouraged or not, there is no excuse to make foolish loans. The real problem was that there was an implicit government guarantee to intervene if these investments went bad, thus encouraging these businesses to ignore the obvious risk. That guarantee seems to me a better explanation than encouragement.

Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat at October 19, 2008 10:47 PM

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