I’m uncomfortable with where Richard Medley headed – he blames ‘math geeks’ for the financial crisis. It’s uncomfortable, so that is why I share it. Not that I necessarily agree.
Esquire: Richard Medley: Why Is Our Economy in a Recession? – The End of America’s Capitalist Fantasy and the Shape of Banks to Come:
There’s nothing new about greed — when Chuck Prince, who then headed Citigroup, said in 2007, “As long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance,” he was just saying what every person who had any access to capital was thinking — but technology comes in waves, and it made this intersection of tech and the free market particularly toxic.
From time immemorial, we’ve had a financial system run mainly by men in their fifties and sixties that worked like this: Banks made money by loaning capital and making deals and taking the risk that they would not be paid back or that the deal would fall apart. That was simple enough. But then along came the math geeks who convinced many of us that instead of making loans and taking risk, we could make loans, “securitize” them, and then sell those securities to idiots in Europe and China.
When the old guys asked how that would work, they were shown sheets of paper with equations on them, and instead of saying, “I don’t understand one damn thing on this page,” they said, “So you’re sure it’ll work?”
That opened the door to an entirely new concept for banking: Let’s make loans to deadbeats and sell them off in “tranches” to idiots in Europe who don’t even know what a “tranche” is but like the idea that the S&P rates them highly and that they can make 6 percent a year on one with no risk. (Come here, little kitty.) As long as everyone looked the other way and stock prices kept rising, there was no pressure to do anything differently. Once the house of cards collapsed, all they were going to have to do was claim to have been blinded by science and point to the nerds who designed the strategy. (Which is exactly where Congress’s investigation is heading.)
National Press Club: Paul Krugman presentation
Washington Post Editorial: Closing the Gaps – The cautionary tale of AIG’s downfall:
In hindsight, it is clear that government regulation was lacking in the early stages of AIG’s CDS boom. As they were building it, AIG executives regarded their CDS business as virtually risk-free — “like catastrophe insurance for events that would never happen,” according to the Post series. This something-for-nothing aspect of the business should have been a red flag for the government — and for the ratings agencies, too. Yet another lesson of the AIG saga is the sheer difficulty of comprehending the myriad pathways of modern finance. The trick in regulating financial derivatives will be to preserve their efficiency-enhancing attributes while eliminating those factors that tend to concentrate systemic risk where it cannot be easily detected. AIG built up its CDS business in the interstices of governmental authority; those gaps can and should be closed without choking the arteries of capitalism.
Washington Post: The Crash: What Went Wrong – Washington Post series drilling down into where things went wrong – in particular – at AIG
NYTimes: The Reckoning – New York Times series covering the Crash.
ScienceBlogs.com: Corpus Callosum: The Last Christmas of the American Golden Age:
…The percentage of persons on food stamps now, is similar to that seen prior to Clinton’s welfare reforms. In other words, we’ve lost whatever progress we made.
…Personally, I don’t care a whole lot if some executive is sitting in a beach house in the Hamptons, sipping 1979 Krug Clos Du Mesnil, paid for by his or her fellow citizens. What bothers me is the number of food stamps that can’t be printed for the $5,700 that the champagne cost.
No, it isn’t really that. What bothers me is how the collapse of the economic system will lead to unnecessary starvation. Most will occur overseas, but some will occur here. American MDs will have to acquaint themselves with treatment of kwashiorkor.
Yes, economic disparity is inevitable. Economic cycles and crashes may be inevitable. But it was not inevitable that we would waste our last, best chance for sustainability.
Salon: The economy crumbled:
There were warnings along the way. Cassandras who feared that exotic financial innovation, specifically unregulated at the behest of both Democratic and Republican politicians, was setting the stage for a major systemic shock. But their voices were drowned out by a chorus of status quo defenders who told us, again and again, that financial innovation was making the world a safer, less risky place.
By slicing and dicing risk and redistributing it across the world, we were told, the chance that any one shock could destabilize the entire system had diminished. Even better, ran the argument, policymakers had learned the lessons of the Great Depression so well that there was no chance there could be another depression. One of Ben Bernanke’s claims to fame was as the proselytizer of the idea that we live in the age of the Great Moderation, an era in which recessions would be mild, growth stable and financial panics a thing of antiquity.
They were wrong. If there is one lesson to take from 2008 it is that the majority of analysts, economists and Wall Street financiers were flat-out wrong. Instead of redistributing risk to make us safer, they tied the whole world up into such a tightly wound ball of interconnections that when one piece of the system broke, the repercussions spread everywhere, immediately.
As a consequence, the self-satisfaction bequeathed to Americans by their victory in the Cold War and their unchallenged status as superpower has been irretrievably punctured and replaced by fear. The world seems far more fragile than it did a year ago. It baffles comprehension that so much could go so wrong so fast.
Previously here at paradox1x.org
Karl –
I wish you’d have wrote what you thought of the whole situation.
I don’t have enough space up here to write where this problem really started and go through the list of those that should be in jail right now; let alone get bailed out on the backs of the US Taxpayer. And what all these people forget to name is one of the main culprits in this hole mess. THE FEDERAL RESERVE. Those lovely people that just keep printing money until Hyper-Inflation destroys what’s left of the US Economy. Those brilliant people that are lock and stock Europeans Bankers (behind the scenes) and have no allegiance to America. Since 1913, you don’t have to look back too far from their inception to find the first great depression.
Again, you’d have to google a bit to get the straight story on the Federal Reserve.
But in the latest line of BS courtesy of those down in DC, and their 850 BILLION Dollar scam. How many people do YOU know that agreed to that? I can’t name one person.
Yet, the elected officials pushed it through. (remember their 9% approval rating)
Not only will the banks not disclose WHO has received this money, and WHAT they did with it, they in fact won’t tell you anything at all. Their quote is “We’d rather not discuss this.”
And somehow all these people stay out of jail.
But notice Martha Stewart did time for how much money? Less than quarter of a million?
And the CEO’s take their EXEC’s to resorts and the US Taxpayer gets the bills.
Next up the Newspapers will be begging for money (AND GETTING IT), then comes Healthcare.
It’s all in their plan. Something you and I both saw back in the early 90’s on a pamphlet that we stared at around 3am in the morning.
They haven’t forgotten….. Will you?
Peace,
– Neo
I haven’t forgotten neo. But as I’ve grown older, I’ve come to realize human nature and straight up incompetence are far more likely the cause of crisis then conspiracy.
Want to know the roots of this crisis?
Watch this:
http://www.iousathemovie.com/
Karl,
Watched your clip. One of the first things they need to do is get rid of the Federal Reserve system. (Something they really didn’t touch on in this video) Fractional banking and the ilk are a massive part of the problem. Imagine spending a quarter of a trillion dollars each year to pay the Fed for interest on printing currency? I’m sure you are well aware of what Dr. Ron Paul has to say in that aspect.
And the lack of common knowledge of most citizens over finance issues in America is staggering.
Kennedy tried to get away from the Federal Reserve by dissolving the Federal Reserve. As a matter of fact there is a Directive on the books that is a matter of Law, (see Executive Directive 11110 more info here: http://www.john-f-kennedy.net/executiveorder11110.htm ) this directive was and IS on the books to this day. Nobody will dare try to enforce it. Why? Well I’m not going to get into that, I’m sure you know why if you know about how the Fed came into play back in 1913.
Yes, it’s a sorry situation, and I doubt very much there will be any leadership to rise up and take the needed steps to prevent America from dying…. All the greedy will have taken the last pieces of our heritage and moved on.
Peace,
– Neo
Sorry to just getting around to this, but I have to break in.
There are so many fingers pointing the blame in so many directions when the reality is being ignored – perhaps capitalism as we want it to and a free market system simply doesn’t work. I mean everything has a cieling for growth. I always thought the value of the Dow was over inflated since the mid 90’s when all of a sudden, everything thing shot right up making nearly a vertical line on the charts. Is 8000 simply about the highest we can go and anything higher, the foundation starts to buckle? And when does the value of something simply not hold anymore? Or ar we seeing the blossoming of the seed of offshoring by making all of these wonderful products nobody can afford? All of these aspects are symptoms of free market system and wild west capitalism. I mean with both we may as well bank our future on a craps table in Vegas because that is all our wonderful economy is really based on.
So all of those flag wavers and heralds of this government hands off syetem when it comes to business are now seeing how great free market is when you allow it to go unchecked and unwatched.
Too bad.
Let me say the same thing to both of you..
Number Six: Who is Number One?
Number Two: You, are Number Six.
Think about the comma and its placement.
And be seeing you 🙂