The Libertarians' Lament

Their heroic view of capitalism makes it difficult for them to accept
that financial systems without vigorous government oversight
constitute a recipe for disaster.
Jacob Weisberg
NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Oct 27, 2008

A source of mild entertainment amid the financial carnage has been
watching libertarians scurry to explain how the financial crisis is
the result of too much government intervention, not too little. One
line of argument casts as villain the Community Reinvestment Act,
which prevents banks from "redlining" minority neighborhoods as not
creditworthy. Another theory blames Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for
subsidizing and securitizing mortgages with an implicit government
guarantee. An alternate thesis is that past bailouts encouraged
investors to behave recklessly in anticipation of a taxpayer rescue.
But libertarian apologists fall wildly short of providing any
convincing explanation for what went wrong. Like all true ideologues,
they interpret mounting evidence of error as proof that they were
right all along.

To which the rest of us can only respond: haven't you people done
enough harm already? We have narrowly avoided a global depression and
are mercifully pointed toward merely the worst recession in a long
while. This is thanks to an economic meltdown made possible by
libertarian ideas. I don't have much patience with the notion that
trying to figure out how we got into this mess is somehow
pointless—Sarah Palin's view of global warming. As with any failure,
inquest is central to improvement. And any competent forensic work has
to put the libertarian theory of self-regulating financial markets at
the scene of the crime.

More specific: In 1997–98, the global economy was rocked by a series
of cascading financial crises in Asia, Latin America and Russia.
Perhaps the most alarming moment was the failure of a giant,
super-leveraged hedge fund called Long-Term Capital Management, which
threatened the solvency of financial institutions that served as
counterparties to its derivative contracts (much like Bear Stearns and
Lehman Brothers this year). After LTCM's collapse, it became clear to
anyone paying attention to this unfortunately esoteric issue that
unregulated credit-market derivatives posed risks to the global
financial system and that supervision was advisable. This was a very
scary problem and a very boring one—a hazardous combination.

Neglecting to prevent the Crash of '08 was a sin of omission—less the
result of deregulation, per se, than of disbelief in financial
regulation as a legitimate mechanism. At any point from 1998 on, Bill
Clinton, George W. Bush, their administrations or congressional
leaders with oversight authority might have stood up and said, "Hey, I
think we're in danger and need some additional rules here." Had the
advocates of prudent regulation been more effective, there's an
excellent chance that the subprime debacle would not have turned into
a raging financial inferno.

This wasn't just a collective failure. Three officials, more than any
others, have been responsible for preventing effective regulatory
action for a period of years: Alan Greenspan, the oracular former Fed
chairman; Phil Gramm, the heartless former chairman of the Senate
Banking Committee; and Christopher Cox, the unapologetic chairman of
the Securities and Exchange Commission. Blame Greenspan for making the
case that the exploding trade in derivatives was a benign way of
hedging against risk. Blame Gramm for making sure derivatives weren't
covered by the Commodity Futures Modernization Act. Blame Cox for
championing Bush's policy of "voluntary" regulation of investment
banks at the SEC.

Cox and Gramm are often accused of being in the pocket of the
securities industry. That's not entirely fair; these men took the
hands-off positions they did because of their political philosophy,
which holds that markets are always right and governments always wrong
to interfere. They share with Greenspan, the only member of the trio
who openly calls himself a libertarian, an aversion to any
infringement of the right to buy and sell. That belief, which George
Soros calls "market fundamentalism," best explains how permissive
lending standards during a boom led to a global calamity that spread
so far and so fast.

The best thing you can say about libertarians is that, because their
views derive from abstract theory, they tend to be principled and
rigorous in their logic. Those outside of government at places like
the CATO Institute and Reason magazine are just as consistent in their
opposition to government bailouts as to the kind of regulation that
might have prevented one from being necessary. "Let failed banks fail"
is the purist line. This approach would deliver a wonderful lesson in
personal responsibility, creating thousands of new jobs in the soup
kitchen and food-pantry industry.

The worst thing you can say about libertarians is that they are
intellectually immature, frozen in the worldview many of them absorbed
from Ayn Rand. Like other ideologues, libertarians react to the world
failing to conform to their model by asking where the world went
wrong. Their heroic view of capitalism makes it difficult for them to
accept that markets can be irrational, misunderstand risk and
misallocate resources—or that financial systems without vigorous
government oversight constitute a recipe for disaster. They are
bankrupt, and this time, there will be no bailout.

Weisberg is editor in chief of the Slate Group and the author of "The
Bush Tragedy." A version of this column also appears on Slate.com.

URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/164502
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