Run for your life if someone tells you, “We’re from the government and we’re here to help you.” As President Reagan said, government is the problem, not the solution. And the government’s solution to the AIG crisis was apparently unneeded.
Now we learn that the New York Federal Reserve Bank president Timothy Geithner, presently Treasury Secretary, did not believe that bankruptcy of insurance giant AIG would have threatened the entire financial system. Why then a several trillion dollar bailout?
Quote from the Wall Street Journal op-ed article:
But the New York Fed is the regulatory body most familiar with the CDS market. If that agency did not believe AIG’s failure would have actually brought down its counterparties—and ultimately the financial system itself—it raises serious questions about the administration’s credibility, and about the need for its regulatory proposals. If “interconnections” among financial institutions are indeed the source of the financial crisis, the administration should be far more forthcoming than it has been about exactly what these interconnections are, and how exactly a broad new system of regulation and resolution would eliminate or reduce them.
The administration’s unwillingness or inability to clearly define the problem of interconnectedness is not the only weakness in its rationale for imposing a whole new regulatory regime on the financial system. Another example is the claim—made by Mr. Geithner and President Obama himself—that predatory lending by mortgage brokers was one of the causes of the financial crisis.
No doubt some deceptive practices occurred in mortgage origination. But the facts suggest that the government’s own housing policies—and not weak regulation—were the source of these bad loans.
At the end of 2008, there were about 26 million subprime and other nonprime mortgages in our financial system. Two-thirds of these mortgages were on the balance sheets of the Federal Housing Administration, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the four largest U.S. banks. The banks were required to make these loans in order to gain approval from the Fed and other regulators for mergers and expansions.
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