Saturday, February 28, 2009

an excellent article about the dangers and advantages of nationalization

From Clusterstock:

"
Faster, Please: Four Lessons From Sweden's Bank Rescue

swedishmodel.jpgMatthew Richardson, who teaches applied economics at NYU's Stern business school, has written an excellent article about the dangers and advantages of nationalization. Most important, he says, are that we learn the four central lessons of the example of Sweden.

What are those? Here you go:

  1. Decisive action in terms of evaluating the solvency of the financial institutions.
  2. Some form of “nationalisation” of the insolvent firms.
  3. Separation of these insolvent firms into good and bad ones with the idea of reprivatising them.
  4. The management of the process was delegated to professionals, as opposed to government regulators.

But go read the whole thing."

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat (URL) said:
The whole point, from the beginning, was to have a modus operandi in place to handle the big banks. In other words, some people saw that:
1) The FDIC couldn't just swoop in and take the big banks over.
2) That meant that we needed a special FDIC entity or a separate entity to take care of the big banks.
3) We needed to begin to work out how to break them apart.
If the FDIC could have handled them, then there would have been no need of a Swedish Plan. By the way, I believe that the Swedish Plan was partly based on the RTC. The only reason the RTC wasn't mentioned is because, at least from my point of view, that's where I first heard the phrase "Too Big To Fail". We didn't need a little bank fix.

Of course, I was assuming that we didn't want to, once again, show by our actions that some banks are too big to fail. Silly me. Also, the idea that these businesses can unwind themselves is belied by the fact that nobody wants to buy anything from them for any real money, because nobody trusts them. Joe Isuzu would be a better bet to sell theses assets.

As for the people who will take losses here, it's in their interest to predict the end of our way of life. We're going to take a big gamble whatever we do. I'd prefer a road that doesn't keep us subservient to these bank's interests, but that's just me.

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