"Unfortunately, the recent government bailout makes a bad situation worse. Uncle Sam is giving insolvent institutions — and all those 29-year-olds with the BMWs who made the mistakes — a new lease on life. There's an old saying that "capitalism without bankruptcy is like religion without hell." But now that taxpayers are picking up the tab, the lesson that's being learned is that imprudent risk is OK.
When government nationalizes moral hazard, it undermines personal responsibility. I'm all in favor of people making big piles of money if they make the right choices, but I sure as heck don't want to cushion their fall if they make the wrong ones. That's not a safety net; it's a hammock.
It's time for government to reduce moral hazard, not subsidize it."
I don't agree with Mitchell on what to do in this case, but I agree that his explanation is the ultimate cause of our predicament, i.e., the system of implicit and explicit government guarantees.
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