"I believe some action is necessary. There's nothing wrong with government regulation provided it fundamentally engenders public trust in financial markets. If we had more of that to begin with, perhaps there wouldn't be any need for this now. After all, regulation can exist with the aim of preventing further regulation."
Absolutely. Once we're in a financial crisis like this, the chances of government over-regulation become a serious concern. We need regulation, minimal and effective, to keep these kinds of crises from occurring.
I agree with Lane here as well:
"Shifting to a purely political focus, admittedly it is difficult to defend Obama from a libertarian standpoint on this matter, other than to say we as libertarian Democrats weren't all that surprised. Our support of Obama has always stemmed primarily from his positions on civil liberties. Once Bill Richardson dropped out, we knew we were settling on many things.
We'll be settling in '12 too, which is increasingly shaping up to be an Obama re-election effort on our side. Even in the ever-more unlikely event McCain pulls this election out of the fire, we'd be extremely hard-pressed to keep Hillary Clinton away from the Democratic nomination again. A defeated Obama - although probably still in the Senate - would be discredited on the national stage. The PUMAs would be out in full force, and there wouldn't be a change movement to stop them. Personally I'd much rather take my chances with a President Obama in '12 and try for someone more to our liking in '16."
Lane also says this:"What I'd like to see is us plug up the holes first and foremost and deal with whatever necessary taxpayer assistance later. Once Wall Street and the credit markets are sufficiently stabilized, get the government out - and no excuses. That's a plan I can support. Hopefully we'll get something vaguely resembling that when this is all over."
And here I need to reiterate my position, which might confuse many people. I can accept a totally free market resolution to this crisis. That's not a problem for me, assuming that we can get some minimal and effective regulation in place to forestall crises like these.
My point about the Swedish Plan is that it is easier to implement, easier to understand, easier to assess, and, ultimately, easier to get out of. For me, the ultimate goal will be for the government to completely exit from these businesses that were acquired. If I didn't believe that, I wouldn't support it. My fear is that hybrid/compromise plans are highly responsive to lobbying from special interests, hard to assess, and therefore harder to get rid of, and ultimately end up costing more because of the complexity involved.
Obviously, I hope that I am wrong.
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