from the left wing of Obama's economic team:

[Posted By Barry Ritholtz On July 11, 2010]

“There is a certain circularity in all this business. You have a
crisis, followed by some kind of reform, for better or worse, and
things go well for a while, and then you have another crisis . . .
People are nervous about the long-term outlook, and they should be.”
-Paul A. Volcker, senior White House adviser and former chairman of
the Federal Reserve

-Reform legislation doesn’t go far enough in curbing potentially
problematic bank activities; it still gives banks “too much wiggle
room” to repeat their reckless behaviors

-He would have ban FDIC commercial banks from proprietary trading;
Quote: “I did not realize that the speculative trading by commercial
banks had gotten as far out of hand as it had.”

-Reagan replaced Volcker in large part due to his “reluctance to
deregulate;” most deregulation came after he left the Fed.

-Alan Greenspan, openly campaigned to repeal Glass-Steagall; Volcker
opposed the repeal, but he didn’t go public with his concerns.

-He regrets “failing to speak out more forcefully about the dangers”
of financial deregulation;

- He blames the too rapid deregulation of rate ceilings for the
creation of Subprime loans:
“In the wake of those changes, banks were suddenly free to charge more
for risky loans, and that encouraged risky lending. The subprime
mortgage market grew out of this dynamic, as did the panoply of
complex, mortgage-backed securities, credit-default swaps and
heart-stopping leverage that finally produced the 2008 crisis.”
(emphasis added)
Fascinating stuff, well worth your time this Sunday morning . . .

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/11/business/11volcker.html


-- 
Jim Devine
"All science would be superfluous if the form of appearance of things
directly coincided with their essence." -- KM
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