S
swestbom
Audioholic Intern
This stuff is very complicated in that the problem has spread like a virus throughout the financial system with a web of entanglements. The funny thing is that any layman understands that this is an issue of extreme leverage (gambling) artfully hidden where risks were passed around to many people (Norwegian municipalities becoming insolvent).Nice post. You realize, of course, that the free market will take the blame, not the gov't meddling. Not the "too big to fail" doctrine. The repeal of a single securities law from the 1930s will be bloated into "look what deregulation got us" nevermind the thousands of laws still on the books controlling the behavior of banks and insurance companies.
The real problems are far above most people's ability or desire to understand, which is why politicians who are at best holders of law degrees (they are not bankers, insurers, actuaries, or economists...) should not have the power to meddle in things above their heads. Politics is the only job where someone can build a resume that states "professional liar and baby kisser" and have the interviewer say "Well, based on this, lets put you in charge of a huge chunk of our GDP!"
The professionals with the hedges with once in a 100 year probabilities of them coming unglued came unglued due to stupid assumptions about risks that they were to inexperienced to fully understand because the calculus worked out mathematically (GIGO applies here). There are a lot of really smart people working in investments (way too many, sort of like lawyers, but unlike lawyers this problem is being solved as I write this because lots of them have or will lose their jobs in the sector). These people have a tendency when they get caught up in the process of investing to forget that the economy's ultimate wealth is based on the sum of goods and services produced (the real economy), not numbers on a balance sheet.
Still, it happened, the markets have to function, it has to be orderly and predictable otherwise we end up with the mattress effect taking over when people pull their money out of the system and the economy stops working. Money has to circulate and be used to have value (money multiplier effect), it has to be trusted, bank deposits have to be safe, investments have to be made based on understandable risks otherwise we are in deep doo doo. Paulson and Bernanke are really good at what they do, neither one caused it, they have integrity and ability and will work with both sides of the aisle to work through it, I trust them much more than the congressmen they have to work with, but the legislative process sometimes works as a crucible and the truth will win out. It isn't going to be pretty, clean and some will benefit who shouldn't but all will lose if this isn't handled quickly and forcibly.
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