Online Trolls Call Themselves Experts, but None Match my Expertise in Genocide
Pete Hegseth Says Military Intercepted Six Vessels Trying to Break Blockade
Senate Judiciary Committee Advances Bipartisan Bill Banning AI Chatbots for Minors
The Leftist Brewery Owner Who Promised Free Beer for Trump's Assassination Is Running...
Here's How Many People Stopped Receiving SNAP Benefits So Far
The Left's Attacks on Homeschooling Rear Their Ugly Head Again
Seattle Leftists Seek to Sacrifice Children for Their Own Peace and Quiet
A 77-Year-Old Was Beaten in Seattle. The Mayor's Response Is Infuriating.
The Hill Pushes Laughable Poll on President Trump's Fitness to Serve
Smith College Faces Title IX Investigation for Admitting Trans Women
Here's an Update on Operation Epic Fury and Project Freedom
Randi Weingarten Isn't Worried About Falling Math or Reading Scores. Here's What She's...
The First Voice a Child Hears
Iran Launches Another Strike Against the United Arab Emirates
Nick Shirley Says He 'Was Almost Taken Hostage in Cuba'
OPINION

Monstrous Moral Hybrids

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Monstrous Moral Hybrids

Sunday’s dinner of the Society for Development of Austrian Economics featured a keynote from George Mason University economics professor Richard Wagner. The talk brought back a lot of memories for me. Wagner was chair of my dissertation committee and it was in his graduate public finance class (back in 1992?) that I first gave any thought to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac when I wrote a paper on government sponsored enterprises. Little did I know I’d spend much of the following years working to reform Fannie and Freddie.

Advertisement

During his talk, Wagner invoked a term first used by Jane Jacobs: “monstrous moral hybrids.” I suspect Jacobs used the term to describe how Robert Moses managed to wield unaccountable power over development in New York City (Caro’s account of Moses, Power Broker, still being the single best read on city government). Ms. Jacobs describes two distinct moral syndromes,  commercial and guardian. Obviously commercial pertains to the market, while guardian can pertain to government. The monstrous moral hybrids are when we get the worst of both instincts combined in one entity. For instance, I generally view competition as a good thing; however, competition underwritten by government guarantees will almost always lead to disaster. Its competition without the discipline of failure.

I  repeatedly watched, while working in the Senate, Fannie/Freddie invoke their “private” nature in order to avoid regulation while invoking their “public” nature to gain protection and privilege. The result was little accountability from either the market or the government (our largest banks currently enjoy a smaller version). Of course, one of the primary differences in debates over financial regulation is the degree to which one believes that either the market or government provides accountability. Setting aside those debates, we should all be able to agree that companies should be either private or government. That the mixing of the two, government sponsored enterprises, is a recipe for avoiding accountability and transparency. But then I suspect that might have been the intent all along. Monstrous moral hybrids by design.

Advertisement

Mark Calabria, Cato Institute

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement