By Philip Klein on 3.18.08 @ 12:52AM
Its Bear Stearns bailout was indefensible -- and hazardous to the future of the free market.
The extraordinary intrusion into the free market over the past
several days by the Federal Reserve Board under Chairman Ben
Bernanke should send shudders down the spines of conservatives
everywhere.
While some so-called free marketers were lauding the Fed's bailout of Bear Stearns as a
necessary rescue of a banking institution that was too connected
with the rest of the financial system to be allowed to fail,
government should not protect Wall Street firms from the inherent
risks of investing.
As a result of the deal, American taxpayers could be on the hook
for billions of dollars in troubled mortgage assets so that Bear
Stearns can avert bankruptcy.
J.P. Morgan Chase is the main beneficiary of the Fed's corporate
welfare. If Bear Stearns's shareholders approve the deal, J.P.
Morgan will have purchased the bank for $2 per share in stock, even
though shares closed at $30 just last Friday -- a bargain given
that the Fed will absorb the risk.
No wonder J.P. Morgan shares jumped more than 10 percent
yesterday, even though traditionally when acquisitions are
announced the stock of the purchaser declines because its shares
are being diluted.
ON TOP OF BAILING OUT Bear Stearns, the Fed cut a key interest rate
(more rate cuts could come today), and extended lower borrowing
rates to securities dealers for the first time since the 1930s.
Taken together, all of the actions represent the Fed's attempt to
shield the market from the consequences of costly mistakes for
which it should bear responsibility.
Such a policy is potentially dangerous. In the 1990s and into
this decade, the Japanese economy stagnated in the wake of the
bursting of the nation's real estate bubble. Part of the problem in
that crisis was that the government would not allow big banks to
fail, and thus inadvertently caused them to make riskier loans.
The Fed's actions will also give advocates of big government
another argument to use against free marketers. If taxpayers end up
footing the bill when Wall Street banks get into trouble, they will
ask, why shouldn't the government be able to impose more
regulations on them preemptively?
And if we'll spend billions of dollars to save wealthy bankers,
why can't we afford to take care of average families?
Writing in the New York Times on Monday, Paul Krugman
acted like like the parent of a child who
disobeyed instructions to wear a coat on a cold winter day, only to
return to mommy and daddy sick and in need of care. "Between 2002
and 2007, false beliefs in the private sector... led to an epidemic
of bad lending," Krugman explained.
Speaking at the liberal "Take Back America" conference in
Washington, D.C. on Monday, Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) seized on
the news of the Fed rescue plan as part of a call for socialized
medicine.
Conyers mocked the idea that the government had just bailed out
Bear Stearns, "the worst single predator in the financial system,"
and yet still expected the 47 million Americans who don't have
health insurance to take more responsibility.
LOST IN ALL OF THIS is that the Federal Reserve Board itself is
partially to blame for the current crisis. In the aftermath of the
Sept. 11 attacks, then Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan was eager to
avoid a recession. While at first it may have been prudent to cut
interest rates, Greenspan went on one of the most aggressive
rate-cutting campaigns in the history of the Fed, and mortgage
rates tumbled to historic lows.
The lowering of rates is what triggered the housing boom that
helped spur economic growth for several years, but that later
became the source of many of the nation's current economic
problems.
This, of course, is not to take blame away from mortgage lenders
who were so eager to maintain their staggering growth rates that
they lowered their lending standards, banks such as Bear Stearns
that invested in derivatives of these subprime loans, or borrowers
who purchased homes they clearly couldn't afford.
(Fraud is one thing, but for the life of me, I still cannot
figure out how anybody could agree to take out an adjustable rate
mortgage during a period when interest rates were at the lowest
levels since the Eisenhower era and claim to be surprised when
their rate goes up.)
What should most concern conservatives about the Fed's actions
under Bernanke is that they represent another stage in the
development of a society that does not ask anybody to take
responsibility for its actions.
It no longer matters what anybody or any business did to find
themselves in their current predicament. All that matters is that
they have a grievance big enough or pervasive enough to move the
government to action. Eventually, something has got to give.
topics:
Business