Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Not Buying It

Yves Smith on Naked Capitalism:

"Banks and "Innocent Fraud"

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John Kay, in "Banks got burned by their own ‘innocent fraud’," argues that banks got themselves and the world at large in a heap of trouble via self delusion. Had the bets embodied in their products been presented in simpler terms, they would have recognized that they were bogus and bound to lose money. But the complicated structures blinded them to the fact that they were bound to end in tears.

Kay draws the term "innocent fraud" from John Kenneth Galbraith and describes it as:
the process that systematically benefits one group at the expense of another but generally falls short of outright criminality.

I have trouble with the construct, and am always amazed how activities, if perpetrated by someone outside by the banking classes, are seen in a different light. The damage wrought by the credit crisis is truly colossal, but the fact that the perps (for the most part) thought the products worked and the benefits were shared makes them "innocent?" I don't buy that. Criminality is too low a standard for deeming behavior innocent of not."

I'm not buying this, mainly because I believe that one reason they allowed the high risk was knowing that there would be a government bailout.

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