Thursday, October 9, 2008

Is The Free Market Dead?

An article by Anthony Faiola which echoes an earlier post from me:

When investors see a concerted effort by governments to deal with this crisis in a global, and guaranteed government manner,i.e, with governments pledging whatever resources are necessary to deal with this crisis, the situation will stabilize and improve. What that means for free market economics is going to be a huge issue going forward, since it isn’t clear that investors actually believe in it.
Here's Faiola:

"The worst financial crisis since the Great Depression is claiming another casualty: American-style capitalism.

Since the 1930s, U.S. banks were the flagships of American economic might, and emulation by other nations of the fiercely free-market financial system in the United States was expected and encouraged. But the market turmoil that is draining the nation's wealth and has up-ended Wall Street now threatens to put the banks at the heart of the U.S. financial system at least partly in the hands of the government.

The Bush administration is considering a partial nationalization of some banks, buying up a portion of their shares to shore them up and restore confidence as part of the $700 billion government bailout. The notion of government ownership in the financial sector, even as a minority stakeholder, goes against what market purists say they see as the foundation of the American system.

Yet the administration may feel it has no choice. Credit, the lifeblood of capitalism, ceased to flow. An economy based on the free market cannot function that way."

Read on.

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