Jim Hill wrote:A generial lack of regulations and the idea that the market will take care of things like this are part of the reason we are in this mess.
Au contraire, my friend. I don't see how anyone could read this
http://www.fhfa.gov/webfiles/15105/DeMarcoTestimonySBC100809.pdfand come away thinking that regulation of these industries is a good thing.
It's not exactly rocket science (and it's not ideology, either)... it's just freshman level economics combined with common sense. Markets, unimpeded, always find an equilibrium. Government action always distorts markets. I'm not typically one to use "always" except in the statement: 'anytime you say always you're always wrong.' But, this time I feel fairly secure.
The government has been regulating banking since President Polk's very effective solution was discarded after the Civil War. The robber barons did not do what they did because of lack of regulation... they specifically used the regulation to their advantage. The modern crooks did the same thing.
What happened to the mortgage market was largely caused by the regulation. Mom and Pop went in to get a mortgage and thought the government was watching their backs. So, they didn't do as good a job of watching out for themselves as they should have. That is at the root of the problem... that, plus the government deliberately heating up the housing market with artificially low rates and putting people into houses they could not afford. The people incorrectly valuing default swaps and other esoteric instruments would not have needed to do that, or indeed, even been able to, if it was not for the underlying government regulations and guarantees. Adam Smith said it best that if every person looks out for their own best interests, then an invisible hand guides the economy. When government regulators add levels of bureaucracy and implicit guarantees, it distorts the market. That is exactly what happened to the housing market.
How would you know that freedom to make your own financial decisions will not work? It's never been tried.
Did you ever feel like the world is a tuxedo and you're a pair of brown shoes? - George Gobel