| Government Not Market Failed
by Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson
Issue 117 - October 8, 2008
It's finger-pointing time, folks. Whose fault is the ongoing financial
crack-up that has hurt, angered, and frightened so many people? There is
plenty of blame to go around, and the American people deserve to know
the
culprits. Simple justice, though, demands that the innocent not be
condemned with the guilty. Already there is one innocent that has been
unfairly maligned as a cause of the debacle-the free market.
The current crisis began with a real-estate bubble that morphed
into
a financial house of cards. The real-estate bubble was generated by the
expansionary credit policy of the Federal Reserve System. The Fed,
having
been created by Congress to act as Uncle Sam's banking agent, and the
Fed's policies, are emphatically not free-market phenomena.
Neither are Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Congress gave Fannie and Freddie
a
privileged status that had these effects: first, enriching their top
executives along with key congressional allies (time for some ethics
hearings on Capitol Hill!); second, becoming the dominant player in what
historically had been a private market for home mortgages; and third,
sticking the American taxpayers with hundreds of billions of dollars of
bad mortgage debt. Thanks, Uncle Sam.
That having been said, the Wall Street titans that have headlined the
financial crisis this year (Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, AIG, etc.)
were
not created by government. However, the problems in the financial
industry
have resulted from a political failure, namely, improper regulation.
Liberals repeatedly accuse conservatives of being ideologically opposed
to
regulation. What nonsense! Neither "free markets" nor "deregulation"
mean
"no rules." On the contrary, they assume the rule of law. What they
oppose
is excessive, stifling, and costly overregulation. The Latin root of
"regulation"-regula-means "rule" and also connotes regularity, that is,
predictability and constancy as opposed to arbitrariness and privilege.
No
market can function without clear rules of the game, and no true
defender
of free markets is dogmatically "anti-regulation." That would be absurd.
The crisis today isn't due to an absence of regulation, but the presence
of mistaken regulation. For example, the Clinton administration,
invoking
the Community Reinvestment Act, imposed new regulations that penalized
lending institutions if they didn't lend "enough" money in low-income
neighborhoods, regardless of the credit-worthiness of the borrowers.
This
regulatory regime undermined the traditional, market-based practice of
risk-assessment that is the primary fiduciary duty of lending
institutions. Regulators forced lenders to abandon financial prudence in
subservience to a political goal, and then compounded the risk by
allowing
the proliferation of zero-down and no- or low-documentation mortgages.
These regulatory blunders have come back to haunt us. They are
responsible
for the current wave of mortgage defaults and foreclosures, which in
turn
have torpedoed mortgage-backed securities and the many layers of
financial
derivatives based on them.
Another instance of regulatory failure occurred in 2005, when
Republicans
sought to diminish the risk of an eventual collapse of Fannie and
Freddie
by imposing stricter capital standards on them. That attempt was blocked
on a party-line vote by Democrats.
What kind of rules does a market economy need to function well? In a
society of free people, the primary rule is that one person's freedom
ends
when it intrudes on another person's rights. Thus, the right of free
speech doesn't include the right to yell "Fire!" in a crowded theater.
Similarly, we have a right to seek profit, but not if our actions would
wreck the entire financial system and ruin others.
We need rules against dangerous excesses -- things like giant investment
banks leveraging shaky debt instruments by a factor of over 30-to-1 or
creating hundreds of trillions of dollars' worth of financial
derivatives.
In 1998, the firm Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) shook the
foundations of our financial system when its $1 trillion portfolio of
derivatives started to implode. That was our warning that we needed
rules
to protect innocent people from the fallout of a financial nuclear
explosion. Sadly, we didn't heed that warning. Firms far larger than
LTCM
have created over $100 trillion in derivatives, threatening the
viability
of our country's financial structure. Why was this permitted?
We face a financial cataclysm, not because of market failure, but due to
political failure. Government interference with free markets, combined
with government's failure to perform its primary function of protecting
the people, have brought us to the brink. In the desperate attempt to
postpone the day of reckoning, the only solutions being proposed are
additional government interventions, even partial nationalizations, and
less reliance on markets. When things continue to worsen, please, just
don't blame "free markets." They no longer exist.
Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson is a faculty member, economist, and contributing
scholar with the Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.
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