"This gets at, in a way, what the George Mason professor David Schleicher said in an e-mail to Felix Salmon a few weeks ago:
A lack of a Lehman bailout only reduces moral hazard if investors think it is a preview of future actions. But the failure to bail out Lehman has been blamed throughout the world press and by world leaders (see, e.g., Lagarde in France) as the cause of the world-wide credit crisis. The cost of the Lehman failure made clear to world leaders the cost of allowing a major broker-dealer bank to go under. Because it is widely considered a mistake (whether or not it actually was one), the Lehman non-bailout makes a bailout for the next major financial institution more likely. Hence, moral hazard was increased, not decreased by the decision not to bailout Lehman.
Schleicher might not extend his argument to a non-financial institution like G.M. But I think it’s clear that the failure to save Lehman now makes it seem more important—to policymakers and to market participants—to save the automakers. The Lehman collapse: it is the gift that just keeps giving."
Absolutely ( One of Tyler Cowen's Irritating Words ) .
Here's my comment on Felix's blog:
That's my position,and I believe that moral hazard, or immoral hazard, is the main, although not only, culprit, that has led us to this point. The problem of implicit and explicit government guarantees and other problems like transparency and collateral were already apparent, we didn't need this awful mess to make the obvious cataclysmic.
Also, given the worldwide repercussions and ripples going forward, we surely didn't need so many people who can hardly afford it paying for this awful lesson.
Here's my reply on John Carney's blog:
It's just the opposite. Since we've seen the avalanche caused by Lehman, it won't be allowed to happen again. As for Paulson, he's engaging in CYA, not serious analysis. Besides, in the end, what matters is the cost to the taxpayer. You need to show that intervening after Lehman will be less expensive than intervening at Lehman. Surely the amount spent by the government matters in the end.