Thursday, November 20, 2008

"For the past decade, the markets, when they've got into trouble, have looked to Washington for help."

Felix Salmon on the government being the only game in town:

"Not since the House Republicans scuppered the first version of the TARP bill has the stock market paid so much attention to the legislative branch of government. I have no idea what's going on on Capitol Hill: the WSJ is reporting that Congress might pass a last-minute bill before Thanksgiving, allowing lawmakers to leave town until January, while the Washington Post is adamant that there's no deal today and that the fate of Detroit will lie in Hank Paulson's hands, unless Congress returns for a rare post-Thanksgiving session.

What's clear is that this is no way to put together a coherent bailout package which carefully balances the interests of all stakeholders. Instead, Washington has descended into unhelpful finger-pointing, with the White House blaming Congress, the Democrats blaming the Republicans, and everybody caring far too much about taking a two-month-long vacation in the middle of a worst economic and financial crisis in living memory.

For the past decade, the markets, when they've got into trouble, have looked to Washington for help. Right now, that seems like just another strategy which works until it doesn't."

There's no Plan B. Period. That's what the market is saying. Scary. Here's my comment:

Posted: Nov 20 2008 5:48pm ET
"For the past decade, the markets, when they've got into trouble, have looked to Washington for help. Right now, that seems like just another strategy which works until it doesn't."

This is the reason that I believe the explicit and implicit guarantees by the government are the main, not only, but main, cause of this crisis. Nobody ever has a Plan B. It becomes obvious that they're depending on the government, at which time the government, whatever it says, actually realizes that, and the lack of Plan B is, in these circumstances, a contagion waiting to break out, if you agree that another main problem that we're dealing with now is fear and aversion to risk.

Willem Buiter has an interesting post on how bad this fear is right now on FT, and Jim Rogers had an interview on video, which I can't find a transcript for, talking about how investors come to rely on government largess, also on FT.

That's why, even though I'm a moral hazard fanatic, I understand the depth of the ditch were in, concerning it.

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