"Not quite. Sure, the boom looks like the right time to worry about moral hazard and to create the right legal and regulatory incentives to encourage appropriate risk taking. The problem with this recommendation is that it ignores the reality of the political economy of legal and regulatory reform of the financial sector. During financial boom years, the financial sector is rolling in resources and flush with influence. It can buy off, stop or sabotage all attempts at serious reform. The only time the authorities have both the means and the incentives to pursue far-reaching reform of the financial sector is when the financial sector is on its uppers - down and all but out. That means now, when the furies of financial crisis are howling around us.
As regards the two central objectives of establishing the correct incentives for appropriate risk taking (moral hazard, in the loose way in which this phrase is used in the debate) and mitigating the immediate recession, it makes no sense to have a lexicographic preference ordering. Houses on fire provide cute images, but they don’t capture the reality of the choices that have to be made. So the preference ordering between addressing the immediate crisis and moral hazard should not be lexicographic, with the immediate crisis in pole position. A little deeper or longer crisis can be acceptable in exchange for a material improvement in moral hazard.
In addition, Charles Goodhart, Martin Wolf and countless others overstate the extent to which the two objectives of immediate crisis mitigation and addressing moral hazard are in conflict with each other in practice. Often the same quantum of solace can be given to the crisis-hit economy in a number of different ways, some of which are vastly superior as regards their impact on long-term incentives. I will illustrate this with ten examples of what to do and what not to do."
Read the whole post, as he's infinitely more knowledgeable than me. But here's my intrepid comment:
“I hope these ten examples make it clear that we can fight moral hazard and the creation of bad incentives for future excessive risk taking by financial institutions and by all participants in the financial intermediation process, without undermining the effectiveness of efforts to prevent the recurrence of the Great Depression of the 1930s. A crisis is the best time, indeed the only time, to address moral hazard and other perverse incentives in the financial intermediation system.
The time to deal with moral hazard is now, in every action, every policy measure and every initiative taken to address the immediate crisis.”
Your one of my favorite commentators,and you can hope all you want.But with 1,3,4,5,8,9, and 10, you’ve shown that the moral hazard was ignored in practice. At this point, moral hazard means nothing. If the moral hazard were upheld, no one would think it was because of moral hazard. They would simply think that the government had made a fickle and stupid decision to draw the line here and now. Besides, actions matter, and people are now making decisions on those actions, so that moral hazard will be seen not as principled, but arbitrary.
For moral hazard to work, you need to nip the problem in the bud, otherwise it gains its own momentum. It’s too late this time, and stemming government intervention in a crisis is nearly impossible. That’s when voters demand action.
The time to deal with moral hazard is during calmer times, by putting out a clear set of tripwires and actually fulfilling them.
Again, it’s like value investing. The place that you should really be scared and focus on regulations and moral hazard is during the good times. It must work for some, because value investing has worked well for a lot of serious investors who manage to survive crises and even make money during them.
Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | November 3rd, 2008 at 3:11 am
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