Tuesday, October 28, 2008

"Having acted, the government will then quickly need to stabilize the rules that enable and encourage private action."

Via Arnold Kling on EconLog, an interesting post by Robert McDonald on Kellog Insight:

"There is an irony and a danger here. At this time, the government is the only agent in a position to intervene, but the government is also part of the problem. No private solution will emerge with the government hovering in the background, making decisions on the fly (will a particular institution be rescued or abandoned?) and essentially commandeering markets. This is not to criticize the Fed and the Treasury, but we must recognize that commitments of private capital will require clear ground rules. At the moment, with the situation fluid and constantly changing, only the government can act. Having acted, the government will then quickly need to stabilize the rules that enable and encourage private action."

Absolutely. We need clear ground rules. TARP doesn't qualify.

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