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Michael Barone
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Managing Risk in an Unstable World

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How can we reduce risk for individuals? That's a natural question when a financial crisis has vaporized trillions of dollars of personal wealth in residential real estate and financial instruments. The problem is, when you try to reduce risk for individuals too much, you end up making things much more risky.

Case in point: the financial system over the past decade. Our current difficulties arose from "the idea," as Nicole Gelinas describes it in the New York Post, "that any loan, bond or other bank asset could be sliced up and turned into an instantly liquid, priceable and tradeable security, with all its risks engineered away." The securitization of mortgages seemed to reduce risk for everyone — for the lender (who avoided risk of non-payment by selling the mortgage), for the borrower (who got the mortgage at a lower rate than otherwise) and for the purchaser (because all those mortgages couldn't got belly up at once, could they?).

The problem was that the risk models were based on the experience of only the last seven years or so, and that both the Clinton and Bush administrations and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac encouraged the granting of mortgages to borrowers who were, by previous standards, non-creditworthy.

So eliminating risk ended up creating huge risk for everyone — so huge that just about no one, even the Treasury armed with $700 billion — wants to purchase the securitized mortgages in bank portfolios.

Or take another case recently in the news. The United Auto Workers, a forward-thinking union, wanted to eliminate the risk for its members of retiring without comfortable pensions and entirely free medical care. So they negotiated contracts with what we used to call the Big Three U.S. auto companies that guaranteed UAW retirees big pensions and free medical care for life.

But that assumed that the companies could always fund those benefits. If, as now seems possible, the Detroit Three go bankrupt, those pensions will be replaced by limited government pensions and those free retiree health benefits will vanish altogether. Eliminating risk turned out to be very risky.

Which is my answer to those, like Yale Professor Jacob Hacker, who advocate public policies to reduce risk for individuals. In his book "The Great Risk Shift," Hacker argues that the move over the past 25 years from defined-benefit pensions (in which an employer pays into a pension fund) to defined-contribution pensions (in which an employer pays into every employee's personal investment account) makes life unbearably risky for ordinary people.

And to be sure, almost everyone's 401(k) account has shrunk over the last three months.

But are those people worse off than Detroit Three retirees? Their 401(k)s may rise in the years ahead. The Detroit Three pensions are at risk of being permanently slashed.

My own sense is that ordinary Americans are more resilient than some theorists think. They form and act upon what Milton Friedman called the permanent-income theory and Franco Modigliani called the life-cycle theory — that is, they develop a pretty good idea of their long-term earning capacity and their ability to accumulate wealth, and spend accordingly.

They may shift these expectations in a crunch, and may be doing so now, as purportedly risk-free financial products and corporate pensions are revealed as hugely risky. But through thick and thin they're constantly calibrating and recalibrating the amount of risk they should take. And while some people make bad decisions, all those decisions put together seem to have proved less risky than Fannie Mae's securitized mortgages or the UAW's retiree health care benefits.

There are good arguments for safety net programs like Social Security, which eliminate severe downside risk — or at least eliminate it if Social Security has a sound long-range financing scheme, which it may not. Curiously, most current policymakers seem more concerned about the risks of climate change, about which there is much uncertainty, than the risks of Social Security collapse, about which the numbers seem much more certain.

My larger point is that eliminating risk entirely is an impossibility, and mitigating risk intelligently means not only maintaining sensible safety nets but, more importantly, stoking the engines of economic growth.

Happily, President-elect Obama's top economic appointees seem to have a similar understanding. A capitalist economic system, which enables risk-taking through intelligently structured and regulated financial markets, has been proven by history to be, as Winston Churchill might have put it, the most risky system except for all those other economic systems ever devised.

Let's try it again, this time keeping a gimlet eye on those who tell us they have schemes that can eliminate risk altogether.

To read more political analysis by Michael Barone, visit www.usnews.com/baroneblog. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


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Sir;... I have read through your article twice, and no where do I see you finding a problem with a whole society, and in fact, the whole world living on credit which enriched the financial sector in this country to the tune of 90% of the entire profit... Everyone was working for wall street, and wall street was riding every business for higher profits... What do you suppose; that perhaps they sucked too much wealth out of the society too quickly??? Marx may have said, or only quoted another, that high profits were synonymous with glut, which is depression to you... And we have had high profits, but we are not living on gold, and so printing money is an easy matter... But then again, as that poor person said: We don't need more credit...We can't pay the credit we got... So do you think it was only a matter of risk, or of gathering up and exporting so much of our production and demanding such profits that all the available wealth was drawn out of the society??? To me, risk is why interest... But the profit people who have driven down wages across the board, have handed credit to people, and sold it everywhere and advertized it as the key to having what depressed wages would not ... If people had been encouraged to demand their due, there would not have been any extreme profit...Nor would the risk have been unmanageable... But if you look at these exotic sorts of instraments they were all about conserving profit and laying off risk.... People like Greenspan believed in widespread property ownership as necessary to for the political support for property rights...And ultimately, that is the risk you face when great vlaue is lost, because the losers will inevitably realize that their money went some where and not just up in smoke like the value of what they have purchaced...So worry about them going looking for their lives and their futures which the rich and the government have managed to see carted off..If you do not know, sir, i will tell you why property tanked... it tanked because it was inflated as it would never have been if it had been taxed as it once was, to support the whole country... That would have made labor dear and property cheap, and property not supporting itself would have been thrown on the market to lower the price... Leaving property free of taxes for the most part, had the opposite effect of pressing the price of labor for profit and squeezing wages for both interest and taxes, and it is that which raised the price of property and the price of money to pay for it... .Thanks..Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sat Nov 29, 2008 3:49 PM
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