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John Stossel
John Stossel
3 Feb 2010
Big Government's Cronies

Many window-making companies struggle because of the recession's effect on home building. But one little … Read More.

27 Jan 2010
A Blow for Free Speech

From the commentary in the mainstream media, I thought there had been a coup d'etat in Washington. The New … Read More.

20 Jan 2010
Who Needs Energy Independence?

When you gas up your car, do you think that you're doing something evil? After all, I'm told that burning … Read More.

What Happened to Market Discipline?

Barack Obama says, "[Today's economic problems are] a stark reminder of the failures of ... an economic philosophy that sees any regulation at all as unwise and unnecessary" (http://tinyurl.com/45ssnp).

What? Does that mean that until last week the Bush administration embraced the free market? Nonsense. Governments at all levels have regulated and subsidized the housing and financial industries for years. Nothing changed under President Bush.

The government-backed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were created precisely to interfere with the housing and mortgage markets. In effect, Freddie and Fannie diverted money to people who wouldn't have qualified for mortgages in a real private market.

Had actual private companies performed these activities, they would have been subject to market checks. But they were not. The results were predictable.

Now that it's all tumbling down, the politicians and pundits blame the free market.

It's not simply misunderstanding. It's demagoguery by people who will never admit that their "progressive" social policies have spawned a taxpayer bill that boggles the mind.

This is a story not of private enterprise but of cynical political opportunism. Moral hazard — the poisonous mix of private profits and taxpayer-covered losses — is what you get when politicians indulge their hubris to redesign society. The bailout of those companies holding bad mortgages — big-business socialism — sets us up for the next crisis.

Maybe the Republican presidential candidate will dissent? Not a chance:

John McCain says, "We are going to fight the greed and irresponsibility on Wall Street. These actions [leading to crisis] stem from failed regulation, reckless management and a casino culture on Wall Street. ... We need strong and effective regulation ... " (http://tinyurl.com/3t7qvh).

He proposes a new bureaucracy, the Mortgage and Financial Institutions Trust (MFI), which he says will "provide troubled institutions with an orderly process to identify bad loans, provide funding and eventually sell them at a profit. ... The MFI will supervise the sale of loan assets at market prices and purchase them as necessary " (emphasis added; http://tinyurl.com/3wcv9q).

A government agency is going buy bad loans and make a profit selling them.

Give me a break!

Irresponsibility induced by government-created perverse incentives is the culprit. For decades politicians of both parties have relieved big companies of the responsibility that market discipline would have imposed. The promise — explicit or implicit — to bail out companies "too big to fail" weakens market discipline. That invites recklessness.

What if the government cut Freddie, Fannie, Bear, AIG and the others loose and let them do what other businesses do on hard times: renegotiate with creditors and revalue assets? Would there be another Great Depression? Not likely. What turned a recession into the Great Depression was the Federal Reserve's contraction of the money supply (http://tinyurl.com/46k766). I doubt they'd make that mistake twice.

Public officials say the big companies must be saved to prevent a devastating credit "lock." Really? Without a federal bailout, lending wouldn't have resumed? The market wouldn't have sorted it out? Prices wouldn't have found a more solid floor? We'll never know.

We do know that the taxpayer will buy — Probably for too much money, because the private sellers will fool the government managers — at least $700 billion in "illiquid" assets. Where will this money come from: taxation, borrowing or the printing press? What will that do to our economic well-being?

Crisis is the friend of the State. The politicians are desperate to be seen as "showing leadership," so we're surely in for a new round of government interventions. Watch for the equivalent of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (http://tinyurl.com/3oeqex). There'll be much posturing about how the new regulations "will keep this from ever happening again," but that's more nonsense because the root problem is not lack of regulation. It's government social engineering of the housing market, which will be unchanged.

This is the path to stagnation and poverty. As Nobel Laureate F.A. Hayek (http://tinyurl.com/dnuye) taught, markets are too complicated for planners to know enough to plan them. The relevant information, scattered unspoken among billions of market participants, is beyond the bureaucrats' reach.

We do need protection from reckless businessmen. But there is only one way to provide that: market discipline. That means: no privileges, and no bailouts.

John Stossel is co-anchor of ABC News' "20/20" and the author of "Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity." To find out more about John Stossel and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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Comments

2 Comments | Post Comment

Very well said and explained. They will pass a bailout, they are too scared not to, and the will of the American people be damned. It will further degrade everything good and fine that was America. What rot it has all become. They are criminal's. Jail them! NO bailout.

Comment: #1
Posted by: liz
Tue Sep 30, 2008 6:11 PM

Jeez, Stossel, you must be smoking some sweet stuff. "It's not simply misunderstanding. It's demagoguery by people who will never admit that their "progressive" social policies have spawned a taxpayer bill that boggles the mind." So let me get this straight: It's welfare cheats and health care reform that got us into this mess, right? You and Palin should get together for a real good time in last gasp fantasyland. .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. Well, Stossel, Bush may not have embraced the "free" market to your taste, but he sure embraced the unregulated, something-for-nothing market that leaders supported by you have steadfastly advocated in their great struggle against the evil governmental monolith. It's not about "free" this time, buddy, it's about "criminal." It's about the tax that hurts the most: the stupidity tax, which ranges from lotteries, to gambling at the casino, to gambling "con cojones" as some Spanish speakers say (i.e., gambling in the stock market) to trickle down economics. .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. Do you really want to perish or survive independent of the government's power to keep us on the path of civilization? You think we should go back to tribal decision-making, rain dances, and witch doctors? ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. The kind of crap idiots like you pawn off on the populace is disturbingly like the fiddling that brought down the Roman Empire.

Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Wed Oct 1, 2008 7:38 PM
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