Sunday, October 19, 2008

"It's all very Rube Goldberg-esque,"

A great post by Peter Whoriskey and Zachary A. Goldfarb in the Washington Post called "Financial Rescues Can Set Off New Problems":

"Every action the government takes has cascading effects on the market, and they're not always easy to predict," said Jim Vogel, an analyst at FTN Financial. "The government has to have time to catch up."

Follow the bouncing ball of unintended consequences.

"Further into the future, some economists predict even more profound consequences from today's interventions.

By fostering the belief the government will rush to the rescue whenever a major financial institution begins to falter, federal officials may be creating what many economists call a "moral hazard." That is, those institutions may be more willing to undertake risky investments.

"It's all very Rube Goldberg-esque," said William O'Donnell, the head of U.S. interest rate strategy at UBS, referring to the cartoonist famed for devices that work in indirect and convoluted means. "You're never quite sure what any one action will do."

Really. Who'd of thought it?

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