Capitalism at
bay
Oct 16th 2008
>From The Economist print edition
What went wrong
and, rather more importantly for the future, what did not
ONE hundred and sixty five years ago, a
Scottish businessman set out his plans for a newspaper. James Wilson’s starting
point was “a melancholy reflection”: “while wealth and capital have been
rapidly increasing” and science and art “working the most surprising miracles”,
all classes of people were marked “by characters of uncertainty and
insecurity”. Wilson’s solution was freedom. He committed his
venture to the struggle not just against the protectionist corn laws but
against attempts to raise up “barriers to intercourse, jealousies, animosities
and heartburnings between individuals and classes in this country, and again
between this country and all others”. Ever since, The Economist has been on the 
side of economic
liberty.
Now economic liberty is under attack and
capitalism, the system which embodies it, is at bay. This week Britain, the 
birthplace of modern privatisation,
nationalised much of its banking industry; meanwhile, amid talk of the end of
the Thatcher-Reagan era, the American government has promised to put $250
billion into its banks. Other governments are re-regulating their financial
systems. Asians point out that the West appears to be moving towards their more 
dirigiste model: “The
teachers have some problems,” a Chinese leader recently said. Interventionists
are in full cry: “Self-regulation is finished,” claims France’s Nicolas 
Sarkozy. “Laissez-faire is
finished.” Not all criticisms are that unsubtle (the more pointed ones focus on
increasing the state’s role only in finance), but all the signs are pointing in
the same direction: a larger role for the state, and a smaller and more
constrained private sector.
This newspaper hopes profoundly that this
will not happen. Over the past century and a half capitalism has proved its
worth for billions of people. The parts of the world where it has flourished
have prospered; the parts where it has shrivelled have suffered. Capitalism has
always engendered crises, and always will. The world should use the latest one,
devastating though it is, to learn how to manage it better.
Extreme measures in the
defence of liberty
In the short term defending capitalism
means, paradoxically, state intervention. There is a justifiable sense of
outrage among voters and business people (and indeed economic liberals) that
$2.5 trillion of taxpayers' money now has to be spent on a highly rewarded
industry. But the global bail-out is pragmatic, not ideological. When François
Mitterrand nationalised France’s banks in 1981 he did so because he
thought the state would run them better. This time governments are buying banks
(or shares in them) because they believe, rightly, that public capital is
needed to keep credit flowing. 
Intervening to prevent banking crises from
hurting the real economy has a strong pedigree. Wilson’s son-in-law, Walter 
Bagehot, recommended
that the Bank of England lend generously (but at a penalty rate) to illiquid 
banks
(but not to insolvent ones). In modern times governments of every political
stripe have had to step in. Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher oversaw the
rescues of Continental Illinois and Johnson Matthey. In the 1990s the Finns and
Swedes nationalised banks—and privatised them again later. This rescue is on a
different scale. Yet the justification is the same: the costs of not
intervening look larger. If confidence and credit continue to dry up, a
near-certain recession will become a depression, a calamity for everybody.
Even if it staves off disaster, the bail-out
will cause huge problems. It creates moral hazard: such a visible safety net
encourages risky behaviour. It may also politicise lending. 
Governments will need to minimise these
risks. They should avoid rewarding the bosses and shareholders of the rescued
banks. They must not steer loans to politically important sectors. And they
should run the banks on a commercial basis with the explicit aim of getting out
of the banking business as quickly as possible (and at a profit). From the
taxpayer’s point of view, it might make sense to limit dividend payments to
other shareholders until the government’s preference shares have been paid off.
But governments need to avoid populist gestures. Banning bonuses, for instance,
would drive good people out of companies that badly need them. 
The politicians all claim they understand
this. Of course, they have no intention of revisiting Mitterrand’s mistakes, of
trying to run the banks themselves, or of taking stakes elsewhere. Yet already
voices (including Lady Thatcher’s Tory heirs) are pushing to limit executive
pay. It will be a brave president who goes to Detroitand explains why the 
45,000 well-paid folk
at Morgan Stanley should get $10 billion of taxpayers' money, but the 266,000
people at General Motors should not. Brave too would be any politician who
proposed deregulation as a solution to a public-sector problem.
Smoot-Hawley in the rear mirror
Given this, it is inevitable that the line
between governments and markets will in the short term move towards the former.
The public sector and its debt will take up a bigger portion of the economy in
many countries. But in the longer term a lot depends on how blame for this
catastrophe is allocated. This is where an important intellectual battle could
and should be won. Capitalism’s defenders need to deal with two sorts of
criticism. One has much more substance than the other. 
The weaker, populist argument is that
Anglo-Saxon capitalism has failed. Critics claim that the “Washingtonconsensus” 
of deregulation and
privatisation, preached condescendingly by Americaand Britainto benighted 
governments around the world,
has actually brought the world economy to the brink of disaster. If this notion
continues to gain ground, politicians from Beijingto Berlinwill feel justified 
in resisting moves to
free up the movement of goods and services within and between their economies.
Arguments for market solutions in, for instance, health and education will be
made with less conviction, and dismissed with a reference to Wall Street’s
fate. 
In fact, far from failing, the overall
lowering of “barriers to intercourse” over the past 25 years has delivered
wealth and freedom on a dramatic scale. Hundreds of millions of people have
been dragged out of absolute poverty. Even allowing for the credit crunch, this
decade may well see the fastest growth in global income per person in history.
The free movement of non-financial goods and services should not be dragged
into the argument—as they were, to disastrous effect, in the 1930s.
A second group of critics focuses on
deregulation in finance, rather than the economy as a whole. This case has much
more merit. Finance needs regulation. It has always been prone to panics,
crashes and bubbles (in Victorian times this newspaper was moaning about
railway stocks, not house prices). Because the rest of the economy cannot work
without it, governments have always been heavily involved.
Without doubt, modern finance has been found
seriously wanting. Some banks seemed to assume that markets would be constantly
liquid. Risky behaviour garnered huge rewards; caution was punished. Even the
best bankers took crazy risks. For instance, by the end of last year Goldman
Sachs, by no means the most daring, had $1 trillion of assets teetering atop
$43 billion of equity. Lack of regulation encouraged this gambling (see 
article).
Financial innovation in derivatives soared ahead of the rule-setters. Somehow
the world ended up with $62 trillion-worth of credit-default swaps (CDSs), none
of them traded on exchanges. Not even the most liberal libertarian could
imagine that was sensible.
Yet the failures of modern finance cannot be
blamed on deregulation alone. After all, the American mortgage market is one of
the most regulated parts of finance anywhere: dominated by two government
sponsored agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and guided by congressional
schemes to increase home-ownership. The macro economic condition that set up
the crisis stemmed in part from policy choices: the Federal Reserve ignored the
housing bubble and kept short-term interest rates too low for too long. The
emerging world’s determination to accumulate reserves, especially China’s 
decision to hold down its exchange rate,
sent a wash of capital into America. There was something of a perfect storm in
which policy mistakes combined with Wall Street’s excesses.
Heavy regulation would not inoculate the
world against future crises. Two of the worst in recent times, in Japanand 
South Korea, occurred in highly rule-bound systems.
What’s needed is not more government but better government. In some areas, that
means more rules. Capital requirements need to be revamped so that banks
accumulate more reserves during the good times. More often it simply means
different rules: central banks need to take asset prices more into account in
their decisions. But there are plenty of examples where regulation could be
counter-productive: a permanent ban on short-selling, for instance, would make
markets more volatile.
Indeed, history suggests that a prejudice
against more rules is a good idea. Too often they have unintended consequences,
helping to create the next disaster. And capitalism, eventually, corrects
itself. After a crisis investors (and for that matter regulators) seldom make
exactly the same mistake twice. There are, for instance, already plans for
clearing houses for CDSs.
Turning back the incoming tide
Sadly another lesson of history is that in
politics economic reason does not always prevail—especially when the best-case
scenario for most countries is a short recession. “Barriers to intercourse,
jealousies, animosities and heartburnings” loom. 
But it need not be so. If the bail-outs are
well handled, taxpayers could end up profiting from their reluctant investment
in the banks. If regulators learn from this crisis, they could manage finance
better in the future. If the worst is avoided, the healthy popular hostility to
a strong state that normally pervades democracies should reassert itself.
Capitalism is at bay, but those who believe in it must fight for it. For all
its flaws, it is the best economic system man has invented yet. 

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