Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
John Stossel :: Townhall.com Columnist
Try Free Enterprise
by John Stossel
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


The bailout passed!

Too bad.

When so many politicians speak with one voice in support of the biggest act of government intervention in the economy in generations, I cringe.

Everybody talked about the "freeze" in the credit markets, but why, I wonder, were the cable news programs that repeated the credit-freeze mantra pausing for commercials from companies trying to lend me money? Ditech and LendingTree still hawk mortgages at under 6 percent. Some credit freeze.

Economist Robert Higgs of the Independent Institute looked at the credit numbers kept by the Federal Reserve. He writes: "Although certain financial institutions are undeniably in deep trouble -- difficulties of their own making ... -- credit markets in general have not ceased to operate. Moreover, lenders are extending credit in historically great amounts".

Maybe this is why CNN business reporter Ali Velshi broke ranks when reporting on "dried up" credit and said, "When I say 'dried up,' I don't mean there's no money. But you'd better have good collateral and good credit."

What's wrong with that?

To those who say that without banks nobody can borrow, economist Steven Landsburg offers this response: "Banks don't lend their own money; they lend other people's (their depositors' and their stockholders'). Just because the banks disappear doesn't mean the lenders will. Borrowers will still want to borrow, and lenders will still want to lend. The only question is whether they'll be able to find each other [A]s any user of Match.com can tell you, the technology for finding partners has improved since [the 1930s]. When a firm wants to raise capital, why can't it just sell bonds over the web? Or issue new stock? Or approach one of the hedge funds that seem to be swimming in cash? Or borrow abroad?"

I suspect that the bailout will do more harm than good, like "aiding" an alcoholic by giving him booze. It perpetuates the moral hazard produced by government guarantees that created the problems in the first place (http://tinyurl.com/5yc4fk). It acts as an enabler by giving more money to opportunistic lenders who assumed they'd be bailed out. And of course the politicians made a bad bailout bill worse by adding in tax breaks for stock-car racers, movie producers, "alternative" energy, etc. Then they insisted that all health insurance must cover mental illness, a requirement that will launch an orgy of fraud and make health insurance unaffordable for millions. The conceit of the anointed knows no bounds.

After the bailout passed, the stock market turned lower. Was it because investors then thought harder about how the politicians will misspend our $700 billion? All government can do is move money from one part of the economy to another. What makes anyone assume the government knows best where the money should be?

Steven Horwitz, an economics professor at St. Lawrence University, got it right when he wrote, "There will be short-term pain if we don't bail out these firms, but that is the hangover price we pay for 15 years or more of binge lending. The proposed bailout cannot prevent the pain of the hangover; it can only conceal it by shifting and dispersing it among the taxpayers and an economy weakened by the borrowing, taxing and/or inflation needed to pay for that $700 billion. Better we should take our short-term pain straight up and clean out the mistakes of our binge and then get back to the business of free markets without creating an unchecked executive branch monstrosity trying to 'save' those who profited most from the binge and harming innocent taxpayers in the process".

Sure, without the bailout, there might have been a severe recession. Bubbles must pop. But it's important that we let bubbles pop. Markets would then find a floor and recover.

Now the politicians are blowing some new air into the bubble, but we may have a recession anyway. And with more intervention, regulation and ambiguity about what the real market prices for those government-supported securities are, investors won't know where the real bottom is.

So any recession will last longer. And the moral hazard the bailout perpetuates will lead to new bubbles ... and then demands for another bailout.

Free enterprise sounds nice. We should try it sometime.

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
John Stossel blogs at http://blogs.abcnews.com/johnstossel/ is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 
TOWNHALL DAILY: Be the first to read John Stossel's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com daily lineup delivered each morning to your inbox.
 
©Creators Syndicate
Thanks John
My sense since this started was that there were still lenders and borrowers out there. The problems were created when government decided that lending institutions should be in the affirmative action business.

The twin problems of bad loans, which we all get, and inflated properties follow. Inflated properties are a consequence of Fannie and Freddie lending at a rate lower than is justified by the risk. Why not? Congress (er taxpayers) will bail them out. Home buyers are limited by their monthly payment. So lower interest rate means that sellers can ask a little more for the home.

So a consequence of the low rate loans are inflated property values, which caused a bubble. Then all of these institutions found leveraged financial devices, which are good as they cover risk, but are problematic as they are built upon a housing bubble pushed upwards by Fannie and Freddie. When the housing prices began to correct due to default the leverage went the other way. As real estate is somewhat inflated the reverse leverage will be painful.


Don't hold your breath
waiting for the current bunch in government to try free enterprise. They always know better how to spend our money. If they think this is such a good idea and that the money will be repaid with interest I would like to see them put their money were their mouth is and use their salaries as part of the bailout money.

John, Observation Part II
Now we are in a situation in which markets aren't really clear as to the value of these leveraged assets or the underlying real estate.

The true value is what a free market will pay. I thus think your advice is sound. Let's take the aspirin, endure the pain, and get this over with.

Government meddling can only delay the day of reckoning and can't really fix the underlying problems -- the worth of the underlying assets.

When the headache passes we need to dynamite (perhaps Ayers needs a little work) Freddie and Fannie so that no one is tempted to resurrect them.

h20skier -- holding breath
"Don't hold your breath waiting for the current bunch in government to try free enterprise."

Or any new bunch in the foreseeable future.

What? It Didn't Work?
I'm shocked! Why would the market react negatively to the bailout bill? Maybe they know that it is impossible for government to solve anything.

This country is about free markets, not government sponsored markets. If socialism keeps creeping in to the marketplace watch out as your quality of life will eventually deteriorate. And everything will cost more.

Free Market????
A “free market” hahahahahaha. The socialist Dems are currently blaming “unfettered laissez-faire capitalism” for the market woes that we have going on now. The truth is that we haven’t had a free market in this country since the so-called progressive era when the government started interfering in business and the markets in the name of “do-goodism”. That interference kept getting worse and worse and eventually resulted in the Great Depression.

WWII pulled us out of the depression and the fact that the entire world’s economy was trashed except for ours disguised the fact that the U.S. government socialist meddling was still hurting the economy. As the world economy recovered the U.S. economy has started sliding.

This bailout is just one more nail in the coffin of the U.S.

Original Vic
Would not a possible Obama Presidency also be a factor in the continued slide? Just a thought as I cannot believe that the socialism he espouses would be a good thing for those countries with whom we have financial relationships.

I'm no economist but that's what I've been hearing.

AliveInHim
It would accelerate the slide, however, at this point it would hardly be noticable. And if McCain is elected it will not be much better. Especially based on his responses in the debate last night.

Let's face it, we are doomed. As one of the financial advisors told a call in from CA on the Glenn Beck show when questioned about the impact of the bailout on someone who had saved, played by the rules, and was retired...

you are going to be destroyed by this.

Who's Paying?
Ah, the taxpayers are now going to join American savers, to pay the frieght. Good.

The market for lending my money has been much too low, for the past fifteen years. The good news is that I've stilll got it. I disliked Greenspan very much, thank you. It is a phony economy he and his cohorts created. It's interesting his name has yet to come up.

By the way, if you would like to borrow money at a good deal, the first question to ask the banker is, "How much are you selling money for, today?"

That question immediately lets them know, you know, and you will get a better deal than their "best rate."

Command Economy I
America is quickly heading towards a centralized command economy Aka : Communism!
We haven't had a true capitalist or free enterprise system for decades. Socialism has been imposed on us little by little and now we are practically there. Our kids were brainwashed relentlessly so that today we are led to believe that even more central planning is the "solution"..What's next ? Five year plans? Have we really vbecome that stupid?

Our stock market has been in a free fall mostly due to the perception that Obama might get elected. It's preemptively adjusting itself for that reason. Ironically, the more the market loses the better the polls for more socialist poison.

On Nov 5th, should Obama get elected, we will witness an all time world record of capital flight out of America, both foreign and domestic. This capital is already going towards productive investments in Brazil, India, China and assorted smaller countries like Singapore.

Business, like water and gravity, will choose to flow through the easiest path. In business this means that capital will flow to where the business environment is friendlier, less taxes and regulations.
America has practically killed it's goose of the golden eggs. We do not produce wealth anymore but are led to believe we do by flipping hamburgers and licking each others' wounds.
Regardless of who is elected we live in a tyranny of bureaucrats. Unless we cut our bureaucracy by at least one half, we will never experience collective prosperity again.

Command Economy II
The symptoms are evident all over America. Perhaps as many as half of our states are bankrupt or on the verge. California for example, after decades of liberal/socialistic administrations is bankrupt financially, economically, morally and spiritually. Business encironment there is constricted with some of the world's highest taxes and excessive overregulation, no wonder no businesses are setting up shop over there but existing ones are migrating to friendlier places. This mindset has been adopted in many other states such as MI, OH, PA, MA, NY,IL etc.

With a Dem President and congress we can expect a guaranteed bankrupcy of America in a short 4 years or even less. Corruption, already rampant,will increase considerably and the resuults won't be very nice.
The MSM will, of course, will keep blaming conservatives and Bush for all the future problems problems.

America must get back to producing wealth, and that's goods, not services. There is a good reason why free enterprise hasn't worked in America, we simply abolished it a long time ago.

Good Stossel
For several days whenever me and wifey heard that credit was the problem, I said a number of times that Ditech was still offering refis and mortgages. If that miserable lowly enterprise which holds many sub primes, can lend why say there is a credit crunch? Why is it that so many rely on borrowing to meet a payday, as alleged by the pundits? Are they so thin that credit is the only way to do business? If so, let them sink!

I always find it funny
When people say they don't trust the "free economy" to correct problems because people are corrupt. I then ask who runs the government, who runs congress - are those not people?
Their response is "well, we can vote them out of office". That is when I laugh to keep from crying. First, "I" can not vote Harry Reid out of office because he is not my congressman. If his crazy people like him they will continue to vote him in and there is nothing I can do about it. Secondly, private companies have a much better track record of kicking people out of leadership positions. Those multimillion dollar parachutes look great compared to the $700 billion we just flushed down the toilet.

What free market?
We haven't had one of those in a long time!

Great column.

Good work, John!
As always, a voice of reason in the wilderness of spin. And you're correct, the bailout will not help if the fundamental issues that caused this problem aren't corrected - namely, the government should get out of the home finance business.

My concern is that I don't think anyone in Washington - at least not anyone who is talking - understands what happened here. Their solution is MORE government. I was shocked to hear McCain talking about how the GOVERNMENT needs to prop up housing prices to help people who bought houses they couldn't afford.

The other thing I'm not hearing, and maybe it's because nobody in the media understands it either, is exactly what the government and Paulson plan to DO with the $700 BILLION. Are they going to buy the mortgage pools, weed them out, taking out the defaulted loans and the fraudulent loans then repackage and resell the good stuff? They could actually make money if they did that - but only if they pay current market value for the loan pools.

And BTW, I think all the "credit crunch" laments are not really referring to consumer credit - although standards have tightened for that - as they should. They're talking about corporate credit - companies who need to borrow BILLIONS for short terms in order to shore up the balance sheet because under SOX they have to use these ridiculous accounting methods that can cause them to "lose" BILLIONS of capital overnight.

Not only is Ditech offering loans, but
the loan sharks that want to loan you cash for your car title are all over TV begging to take your car off your hands after you default.

BTW, I sent a link to this article to my congressman and thanked him again for voting to end the USA. I suggest everyone do the same and tell them that the only thing that they should do is undo all the crap they have done to cause and exacerbate the financial problems we are now subjected to by the proletariat.

Damage to Contract Law
Sen. Biden touted, as part of the VP debate, that judges should be able to alter both the interest and the principle of mortgage loans. Afterward, I found that a similar provision was also in the Bailout. It seems to me that this will have the effect of weakening contract law, and such weakening is almost always harmful to an economy - check out economists such as Hernando de Soto. Honest and thoughtful lenders may avoid mortgages altogether. Mr. Stossel's article is a very good one.

Vote Socialism, Vote McCain
What are you doing on Town Hall supporting Free Markets instead of the Socialist Republican Party of America.

probably too Late, John
I hate to break it to all of you, but this has been a conspiracy (yep, that word) since the 1920s. Control the money and you control the people. Then you can bring about big government control and socialism, which BTW is NOT about helping the downtrodden. It's about a scheme to bring about socialism/communism and is directed by the the wealthy who control the money. If you want to know the truth about how this bailout relates to our being controlled
....read "None Dare Call It Conspiracy" by Gary Allen written in 1978. Sure opened my eyes. You can buy it on Amazon still, I believe.

Try Free Enterprise
Wall Street greed is the major problem even if government was instrumental in getting the "feeding frenzy" of the financial industry going. It will take slow, deliberate action with plenty of light shed in the dark cave that is the financial industry and its sidekick: government. Let the economy convulse but get to the bottom of this!

Try Free Enterprise, Addendum
The financial markets should be allowed to correct itself without government intervention but I suspect Wall Street coerced the politicos into this bailout by pointing to government’s forced intervention in the free market arena starting in the 90’s and its implied backing of Freddie and Fanny loans.

Leilani
LOL, that conspiracy has been around since the late 1800s and the progressive era.

John, you're kidding
John; free enterprise? What the hell is that? That means someone is thinking for himself. The government will not allow anyone that can think for himself. Not while the government can "protect" the "people" from these piratical "entrepeneurs". Why, according to the government, if the idea doesn't start with the government, it must be corrupt. These corrupting influences must be eradicated by taxing them. After all, these people are making too much money and that money belongs to the people, after the government gets their cut, of course.

Barney (the Demosaur) Frank
Responding to increasing revelations about his role in the Fannie/Freddie scandal, Barney Frank said, "They get to take things out on poor people ... Let's be honest: The fact that some of the poor people are black doesn't hurt them either, from their standpoint. This is an effort, I believe, to appeal to a kind of anger in people."
Hey, Barn, if you really want to help poor people have housing, pick up a hammer and join Habitat for Humanity. Don’t wreck our economy by pushing loans to high-risk borrowers and make us all poor. You are a social disease.

Blow Harder!!!
We have an economic balloon that has popped. An all of our political leaders seem to agree that if we can just blow hard enough, we can reinflate it.

Too late Stossel, we've become Communist
Free enterprise and capitalism is dead in this country. Ideas of limited government left with this administration.

Supposedly "conservative" Republicans have inacted communist tactics in this bail-out. Earlier, it was totalitarianism with the Patriot Act. This administration didn't want either action to be subjected to judicial review the the true checks/balances that has kept our country in place.

Today's Republicans are far from conservative. They've skipped right over socialism and went all the way left to communism and totalitarianism.

It's ironic that Democrats can hit Republicans from the right with SOCIALIST policies.

Insane!!!!

socialism
We will go Socialist in November. The only question is to what degree. McCain now wants to reward people for buying homes they couldn't afford. Not simply renegotiate laons, but renegotiate the PRINCIPAL!

Where have the conservatives gone?

The US Govt model is Fascism
I would say that the model is fascism, not socialism. This may be nitpicking but since there with fascism there is govt control of the ecoomy but much of the owership (yeah I know, ownership as long as one does what the govt wants) is still private - in short it is a combination of govt and corporations with nearly all the big corporations glading joining with the govt.

By the way - did I hear McCain right last night. If people stop paying their mortgages, McCain want the govt to renegotiate lower rates and lower principles with them?







As usual
John has hit the nail on the head. Unfortunately, we are not going to see any changes for the better. Even McCain is advocating these socialist views. But Obama is clearly worse for the free market enterprise. Their regulation, minimum wage, forced benefits on employers are weakening this country everyday. They want small businesses to pay higher wages, more benefits and higher taxes. I must be completely ignorant when it comes to economics, because this sounds like a recipe for disaster for any business. We're screwed!

John's reference....
...to an alcoholic and government bailouts is spot-on accurate. People just don't have to have courage, sober up, and grow up.

Like the drunk or junkie who cries about his or her latest "mistakes" like blowing the month's rent, they expect some fool to provide the cash to bail them out. Most find them.

If we had enough legislators who would have rejected the bailout, we certainly would have had a recession, but soon after the economy would recover, and that, stronger and more cautious. Or should I say, "more sober"?

A majority of voters elected these self-serving parasites, and I'd bet the house that they'll be elected again on the next cycle. After all, they've shown they'll parent us and provide us with all the legislative booze (handouts) we can handle. And we won't have to grow up!

A sad event for the country.

Fat Farm Animals and the credit god
There are fat farm animals and lean wild game. The U.S. economy, which includes borrowers like us and the lenders who banked on the credit from others, is the fat farm animal stuck in a slovenly pen.

This loss in capital as the markets shrink is literally trimming off the fat - it's not real wealth anymore than fat is real strength. It is excess defined - overabundance and indulgence.

True strength in the economy must be like that lean wild game that is able to survive adversity, not the fat animal that begs for handouts and eats more than he can consume.

This bailout is the mother of all indulgences. To hear these debators last night talking about how people are suffering like never before (WTF?), and Obama mentioning a health "crisis" is so unimaginably irresponsible.

What crisis? Where? Has anyone here seen the soup lines, the dust bowl, or crisis in health? Unless you're talking about chronic obesity (the fattest poor people on the planet) and the inability to borrow lines of credit to buy large flat screen TVs, this is nonsense to the nth degree.

We have voted ourselves the keys to the Treasury and are about to spend ourselves bankrupt. Credit is the new god. Material wealth is our true measure of worth. Principles be damned.

Fat Farm Animals and the credit god
There are fat farm animals and lean wild game. The U.S. economy, which includes borrowers like us and the lenders who banked on the credit from others, is the fat farm animal stuck in a slovenly pen.

This loss in capital as the markets shrink is literally trimming off the fat - it's not real wealth anymore than fat is real strength. It is excess defined - overabundance and indulgence.

True strength in the economy must be like that lean wild game that is able to survive adversity, not the fat animal that begs for handouts and eats more than he can consume.

This bailout is the mother of all indulgences. To hear these debators last night talking about how people are suffering like never before (WTF?), and Obama mentioning a health "crisis" is so unimaginably irresponsible.

What crisis? Where? Has anyone here seen the soup lines, the dust bowl, or crisis in health? Unless you're talking about chronic obesity (the fattest poor people on the planet) and the inability to borrow lines of credit to buy large flat screen TVs, this is nonsense to the nth degree.

We have voted ourselves the keys to the Treasury and are about to spend ourselves bankrupt. Credit is the new god. Material wealth is our true measure of worth. Principles be damned.

WHAT FREE MARKET?
Yes, if we had actually had a free market we wouldn't be in this mess. So now we have a choice between a socialist and a "Democrat-lite."

It isn't going to be pretty. If you have a gun, hide it; if you don't have one, buy one. If you have money, shelter it from the IRS. Work for cash. Pull a John Galt. Screw the parasites.

Get ready to move to Texas or Alaska and secede from the Union of Obama wins. It won't be pretty with Obama, Pelosi, and Reid in charge.

A frightening "Obama Timeline" is at:
http://colony14.net/id41.html

An even more frightening list of "What Obama would do..." is at:
http://colony14.net/id35.html

Free markets
removing regulations on the banking industry brought this crises along with the unbridled greed to sell a house to anybody who was upright and standing. No standards for handing out loans. The banker who originally made those loans are left holding the bag they were bundled up and sold off to other banks. Folks don't even know who really is holding their mortgage. This mess was brought to us by Clinton and his big banker advisor Reich. You turn bankers and markets, for that matter, loose with no oversight this is what you get. We deregulated the savings and loan industry and got a meltdown that cost tax payers billions. You gotta keep an eye on those greedy guys. We are left with bailing out the current mess. If the oversight that Clinton removed had been left in place we would not be in a mess this big. Free Markets, Free Trade, works for the big guys not the man on the street, the tax payer.





Maybe We need to have our memories...
Maybe we need to have our memories refreshed. This is not the first time our economy has hit bottom.
There was a time when men like JP Morgan and men like him bailed this country out. There is a place in this country for big business. They have the resources to wait 10 years for their investments to get a return. People in middle class America do not! They have accountants,lawyers and expertise to handle huge issues.
I watched Obama complain about the bailout.And very glibly slide into how;'When I am President;I will invest 15 billion a YEAR in energy plans FOR THE NEXT TEN YEARS'. We don't have that kind of money. Who watches out for us? Obama. If his ideas, don't work out. Our kids and grandkids pay the bill. He leaves office and writes books about being the first black president,and picks up fees on speaking tours. He made 4 million last year,and he will make more. We get the bill for his ideas. Right, Bill Clinton's brillance gave us NAFTA. We don't need anymore of the Democrats Brillance, thank you very much!

The TRUTH must get out!!
This is an unrelated matter, but if you LOVE THIS COUNTRY, and are concerned about all of our *futures*--

Please post this link, and share it with everyone possible, via your e-mail lists, etc. Please WATCH it, RATE it, too, so more youtube surfers will see it, even if they don't usually read about politics:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jSH-wLVH2Iw

It is very informative about what and who caused this terrible financial crisis, and the MUSIC is great, too---keeps you riveted while you're learning!

Too Bad for McCain
If McCain were a real free-enterprise candidate he could have been against the bailout and taken a commanding lead in the campaign. Instead, he's just a softer socialist. Our only hope is that Obamma will be as bad as Carter was and, by 2012, the country will be ready for a real free-market candidate. Meanwhile, hunker down.

Palin on the bailout
Has anyone seen or read any statements by Sarah Palin on the bailout? All I heard was her making a vague statement supporting McCain's commitment to do right by the American people. I'm hoping that means she is really against the bailout but can't say so because that would undermine McCain.

Anyone heard or read differently?

God bless him but . . .
John McCain needs to either read Stossel and/or this column instead of playing footsie with "Momma" Obama and his lame attempts at conciliation in his "kinder, gentler" squandering of the presidency. Your potential voters want brass ones, sir, not squishy foam ones . . .

WORDS OF CAUTION BY A DEMOCRAT
The following four quotes were made by the first Democratic American president ANDREW JACKSON IN 1826 when he vetoed the charter of of a 2nd State Bank:
1. "it concentrates the Nation's financial strength in a single institution."
2. "It exposes the government to control by foreign interest."
3. "It serves mainly to make the rich richer".
4. "It exercises too much control over members of Congress".
If we don't understand our history we are doomed to repeat it.
The only difference today, 180 years later, is that Ole Hickory did not know that there would be the manipulative hands of men like George Soros who along with Barack Hussein Obama are trying to steal the Oval Office. History will reveal the truth someday just as it did with the revelation of "Deep Throat" over 25 years after the Nixon era.

Free enterprise?
Time for another lesson from Political Realism 101: The 'free market' is a theoretical concept; it bears little relation to modern economies. The alleged "laws" of free market economics, at best, provide a reasonable account of what would happen in a market characterized by lots of producers, no one of which could exercise what economists call "market power." However, in real economies, in the real world, the major actors are gigantic corporations, not Mom-and-Pop widget makers. Government is the ultimate back-stop for these companies if they screw up--and there is no serious way of absolutely preventing this from happening.

The general lesson is: the most powerful economic interests, no matter what type of political and economic system a country has, will be able to get what they need from government. This was true in the ancient world, in the medieval period, and in the modern age as well. This true is conveniently summarized in the saying: "the guy that's got the gold gets to make the rules."

Free enterprise?
Time for another lesson from Political Realism 101: The 'free market' is a theoretical concept; it bears little relation to modern economies. The alleged "laws" of free market economics, at best, provide a reasonable account of what would happen in a market characterized by lots of producers, no one of which could exercise what economists call "market power." However, in real economies, in the real world, the major actors are gigantic corporations, not Mom-and-Pop widget makers. Government is the ultimate back-stop for these companies if they screw up--and there is no serious way of absolutely preventing this from happening.

The general lesson is: the most powerful economic interests, no matter what type of political and economic system a country has, will be able to get what they need from government. This was true in the ancient world, in the medieval period, and in the modern age as well. This true is conveniently summarized in the saying: "the guy that's got the gold gets to make the rules."

Free Enterprise?
John, why would Congress try something that works? What would they have to do 4 years from now?

Financial Crisis: By Government
This is a financial crisis produced by the Government, as prepresented by Rep. Barney Frank (D, MA).

The Government removed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from market discipline with a guarantee, then told it what to do through its own, special regulator OFHEO and by legislation. Fan and Fred were staffed with government elite.

The center of the current financial disaster is a runaway government guarantee placed in service of Government affilliated corporations, under the direction of Barney Frank, and the cooperation of most of Congress. Any opposition came from some Republicans and the Bush administration.

How could two companies ruin the US and the worlds financial markets? With the power and credit to buy up 90% of all prime mortgages and 20% of all subprime. Fannie and Freddie together guaranteed $5.4 trillion of housing debt (that is $5,400 billion, or $5,400 thousand million). Compare that to the previous $5.5 trillion budget debt of the US.

The market value of subprime loans fell in half when Fannie and Freddie collapsed and could not support that market with its increasing borrowing and purchases. That caused massive losses for institutions worldwide holding the other 80% of subprime mortgage bonds.

Congress ran Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into the ground, plucking presents along the way. Congress set up Fannie and Freddie, () took full responsibility by effectively (but unofficially) guaranteeing repayment of its debts, () removed it from private market discipline, () funded it through massive private borrowing outside of Government budget accounts, () commanded it to do risky business outside usual standards, () restricted its regulation to a special office set up by Congress (OFHEO), and () then ignored that regulator.

Blaming Bush is misguided; blaming the free market is idiotic. Blame the corruption of Congress, mostly the Democrats.

(continued at http://easyopinions.blogspot.com/2008/10/we-guarantee-it.h tml)

Financial Crisis: By Government (2)

Mr. Stossel wrote:
"Bubbles must pop. But it's important that we let bubbles pop. Markets would then find a floor and recover.
Now the politicians are blowing some new air into the bubble, but we may have a recession anyway."

Why should taxpayers bailout the opportunistic lenders, their facilitators in Congress, and the home buyers who took on more debt than they could afford?

McCain's quixotic plan to blow air into deflating home values will only postpone the inevitable. Homes that are worth $100K-- the "floor"--are simply not worth $300K. (Recall what Palin said?) To pretend that they are and to expect taxpayers to cheerfully participate in the fantasy is, well, too much.

Let the easy-credit monster die.

Stop giving CPR!



Wealth Creation
John,
I've been asking people a fundamental question for some time: Can government create wealth? Your answer to that will decide quite a bit (and probably shed light on your understanding).
As you've rightly said, the truth is, government cannot create wealth, it can only transfer it. When it comes to the transfer of wealth, there is no more efficient system than a free market - a market will by definition choose the lowest possible price for the highest possible quantity. Only individuals and companies can take raw materials, ideas, or services and "add value" (thereby creating wealth). The key is to let the markets run freely and give people their money back, knowing they'll create the wealth needed to get us through.

America is good at fixing itself
It is time for Washington to downsize, not increase. Members of Congress need to try free enterprise, it works for the rest of the country. Wells Fargo and Wachovia had a deal that did not involve any public funding, if Citibank is in trouble getting accounts of disgruntle depositors is not going to stop it from needing a helping hand. This was a political move to get the bailout passed. Prohibit any CEO and board member from receiving funding and ever holding another position of public trust without paying back whatever was loaned. Eliminate the musical chairs of board of directors and their buyout plans tax the second one at eighty percent include all perks.

What's free enterprise?
Free enterprise is dead. Hayek is saying "I told you so" from the grave.

the last resort ...

Freedom is the abolute last resort of the political class.

Politicians faced with an approach guaranteed to work, that would diminish their power and not offer them to take credit for the result, will fight like cornered rats to avoid any consideration of such an alternative.

There are two kinds of people: those who think people should be controlled, and those who don't. Those in the former category find politics an agreeable calling, since they hold the leash. Inevitably, the 'solutions' they find agreeable exude an authoritarian stench.

v/r,

-- Bud
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.