New York TIMES / January 25, 2011

Financial Crisis Was Avoidable, Inquiry Finds

By SEWELL CHAN

WASHINGTON — The 2008 financial crisis was an “avoidable” disaster
caused by widespread failures in government regulation, corporate
mismanagement and heedless risk-taking by Wall Street, according to
the conclusions of a federal inquiry.

The commission that investigated the crisis casts a wide net of blame,
faulting two administrations, the Federal Reserve and other regulators
for permitting a calamitous concoction: shoddy mortgage lending, the
excessive packaging and sale of loans to investors and risky bets on
securities backed by the loans.

“The greatest tragedy would be to accept the refrain that no one could
have seen this coming and thus nothing could have been done,” the
panel wrote in the report’s conclusions, which were read by The New
York Times. “If we accept this notion, it will happen again.”

While the panel, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, accuses
several financial institutions of greed, ineptitude or both, some of
its gravest conclusions concern government failings, with embarrassing
implications for both parties. But the panel was itself divided along
partisan lines, which could blunt the impact of its findings.

... Of the 10 commission members, the six appointed by Democrats
endorsed the final report. Three Republican members have prepared a
dissent focusing on a narrower set of causes; a fourth Republican,
Peter J. Wallison, has his own dissent, calling policies to promote
homeownership the major culprit. The panel was hobbled repeatedly by
internal divisions and staff turnover.

The majority report finds fault with two Fed chairmen: Alan Greenspan,
who led the central bank as the housing bubble expanded, and his
successor, Ben S. Bernanke, who did not foresee the crisis but played
a crucial role in the response. It criticizes Mr. Greenspan for
advocating deregulation and cites a “pivotal failure to stem the flow
of toxic mortgages” under his leadership as a “prime example” of
negligence.

It also criticizes the Bush administration’s “inconsistent response”
to the crisis — allowing Lehman Brothers to collapse in September 2008
after earlier bailing out another bank, Bear Stearns, with Fed help —
as having “added to the uncertainty and panic in the financial
markets.”

Like Mr. Bernanke, Mr. Bush’s Treasury secretary, Henry M. Paulson
Jr., predicted in 2007 — wrongly, it turned out — that the subprime
collapse would be contained, the report notes.

Democrats also come under fire. The decision in 2000 to shield the
exotic financial instruments known as over-the-counter derivatives
from regulation, made during the last year of President Bill Clinton’s
term, is called “a key turning point in the march toward the financial
crisis.”

Timothy F. Geithner, who was president of the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York during the crisis and is now the Treasury secretary, was not
unscathed; the report finds that the New York Fed missed signs of
trouble at Citigroup and Lehman, though it did not have the main
responsibility for overseeing them.

more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/26/business/economy/26inquiry.html

-- 
Jim Devine / "Some mornings it just doesn't seem worth it to gnaw
through the leather straps."  -- Emo Phillips
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to