yes shes smart, so was Romer and Summers and O something or other, I forgot.....apparently she wasn't smart enough to avoid having to pencil whip her own studies to get the outcome she wanted either.
so the short answer is more gov. from an agency with basically zero oversight? No, I don't think so. Was there not someone who was on the inside who could have fit the bill and at least had experience in the industry? Was Dodd Frank the answer or not?
I am appalled at how the financial industry has co-opted Washington. As far as I'm concerned, after ******* up so bad, Wall Street shouldn't be allowed within the beltway, let alone the corridors of power. The problem is that we've had Wall Street crawling all over Washington the past two decades, knocking down walls that helped create this mess under the guise that they knew best. So the fact that we have an academic with little industry experience is a good thing IMHO. My industry needs to get cleared out but that won't happen.
exactly. I am not arguing that reform doesn't need to occur, I am arguing that this isn't the way to go about it.
I don't know in this present environment can they wind back the clock? did glass- steagall really blow the top off? can it be efficacious to re-enact it? CAN we now,put the genie back in the bottle?
What the governments part in this? One of my critiques as to what I saw in the 20 minute video is not once did she even acknowledge that gov. to had a part to play in this, example- why is their thinking any more evolved now than it was in say 1995? Have they earned more? has this tragedy struck a note and are they willing to look at their own part in this?
As to warren; Her argument in the "2 income trap" was by and large that families were going broke because the bascis, 'homes', education health care ( she wasn't exactly honest on that point) via AND easy credit ( with-pits falls hello aren't there always) is responsible..... and ? hello no kidding and who has enacted medical coverage platforms and manages them? They are ostensibly just as bad delivary and financial vehicles (ala medicaid and medicare) as private care is.
The housing issue? Hey who let the dogz out in a never ending search to put more people you and I both know don't have the risk profile nor the means into one?
For every action there is a reaction, what applies in physics applies in markets too, her ideological bent appears to zealous to me, and it all points one way, she spares no breath in castigating the 'banks', “Those same institutions don’t want to be part of the solution” ala Hamp et al, so how does that square, compared to say to the 75% of the mortgage market that Washington now owns?
At the end of the day there is a contradictory message going on here as well;
Dodd-frank will make it pay for the big boys to go along, The gov. will protect them from failure and excessive competition as long as they go along, great, that sounds like the political corporatist model that exists in say Europe? Where does that leave us?
Do we think that securities firms, insurers, hedge funds, finance companies, put under the warm embrace of nanny gov. will they ever be allowed to fail? Why is 50 Billion the benchmark? why not 45, or 10?
Moral hazard abounds and creating a one off 'protected' agency to make those decisions is not the answer.
Is Dodd Frank the answer? Probably not. Its a confusing mish-mash. Besides, the government doesn't get it. They are fighting the last war. The next crisis will be about something no one is concerned about with now.