New Morning, I have to ask, given the 
extensiveness of your views on this 
topic - is this your work? A hobby?

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, new.morning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Yes thats a pretty good synopsis -- and adds some good examples. 
> 
> A problem, IMO, is that people think in dichotmous black or white
> terms. This or that. All good or all bad. 
> 
> The crises is not a total regulatory failure -- but neglect in
> carrying out laws on the books (Greenspan) -- and failure to require
> disclosure and transparency for derivatives and hedge funds was a
> colossal legislative failure. The traditional securities markets are
> already heavily regulated. There is not a need for massive new
> regulations there. 
> 
> The rhetoric of the right and left is at times prone to this black or
> white thinking: all regulation is bad on the right, all regulation is
> good on the left.  Or markets are all good, markets are all bad.
> 
> Markets are quite powerful and efficient in setting prices and
> allocating resources in "productive" ways. But they are not sufficient
> by themselves in many cases. They do not always produce, by
> themselves, everything that is needed for smooth functioning. Such as
> information and transparency. They don't handle externalities such as
> pollution well. They aren't as efficient in cases of natural
> monopolies such as electric and gas companies -- primarily their
> distribution systems (its inefficient to have competing distribution
> systems, so they are granted monopoly status and then heavily
> regulated.) However, given the strong merits of regulation is some
> areas -- over-regulation is counter productive. We live in
> mixed-states -- not laissez-faire economies. We have for over 100
> years. The key is correctly fitting sound regulation to specific
> deficiencies in the market. And reassessing and readopting over time.
> Not 100% regulations (aka fascism and authoritarian states) nor
> canning all regulation.
> 
> IMO, the genesis of this crises was the Fed. Though structured to be
> somewwhat buffered from political decisions, and full of bright and
> shiny doctorates (a good thing in most regards) -- they have made
> large errors with devastating effects. The solution is not further
> politicalization of the Fed, a freer reign, or abolishment of the Fed.
>  How to counter their excesses and errors will be a major regulatory
> issue in the coming years.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> And size does matter. Too big to fail is to big to exist. Part of the
> legitimate emerging legislative mandate will be to limit firms size to
> "small enough to fail". There are economies of scale -- and
> competitive advantages to size -- particularly in global markets with
> state-sponsored players. But those efficiencies are overshadowed by
> the costs, direct and indirect, of providing absolute gov't backing to
> private firms that make engage in foolish pattern of errors and
> corporate culture. 
> 
> Limits on size yield more layers -- more diversity. Diversity is
> generally a good thing.   One of the sad outcomes of this crisis is
> that the financial markets are far more concentrated than before. Five
> investment banks gone. B of A -- its scary to think how big they are
> -- given how incompetent they have become at the customer level. The
> assets of Countrywide, AIG Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, Lehmans -- and
> soon Wachovia-- all absorbed by bigger players. More consolidation to
> come as more firms fail. (This "solution" will not stop all insolvency).
> 
> 
> 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Patrick Gillam" <jpgillam@>
> wrote:
> >
> > The New York Times seems to make a 
> > straightforward case in a recent 
> > editorial aimed squarely at the 
> > right's talking points.
> > 
> > http://tinyurl.com/49ndpv
> > 
> > Don't Blame the New Deal
> > 
> > Published: September 27, 2008
> > 
> > "This year's serial bailouts are proof of a colossal regulatory
> > failure. But it is not "the system" that failed, as President Bush,
> > Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and others who are complicit in the
> > calamity would like Americans to believe. People failed."
> > 
> > http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/28/opinion/28sun1.html?hp
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, new.morning wrote:
> > >
> > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend" <jstein@> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Patrick Gillam"
<jpgillam@> 
> > > > wrote:
> > > > >
> > > > > Has anyone read a good discussion of 
> > > > > the debate that's shaping up between 
> > > > > the right and left regarding the causes 
> > > > > of our current credit crisis? The left 
> > > > > is saying the problem is a failure of 
> > > > > the free market. 
> > > 
> > > Not a particularly insightful or focused argument, 
> > > IMO. The repeal of
> > > the Glass-Stegal act in 1999 allowing commercial and investment
banks
> > > to merge was not a particularly good move -- but the reasoning
> > > "reasonable" -- that US C and I banks could not compete with the
> > > global banks that allowed such consolidation.
> > > 
> > > Some on the left claim that the financial markets 
> > > are not-regulated --
> > > that is a laissez-faire love fest. A pipe-dream 
> > > rant -- blows against
> > > the empire mentality. Hardly true.
> >
>


Reply via email to