By Matthew Vadum on 4.7.09 @ 6:08AM
It's killing Arianna, but last week's easing of the
mark-to-market rule is giving economic recovery a chance.
Liberal gossip monger Arianna Huffington ought to know by now
that it is better merely to be thought a fool than to open one's
mouth and remove all doubt.
On Sunday's This Week, Huffington provided an
ahistorical account of the so-called mark-to-market or "fair
value" accounting rule that forces businesses to value their
assets at zero or pretty near zero when markets for those assets
temporarily disappear. In a major
bean-counting breakthrough that boosted bourses, the rule was
eased April 2.
This is significant because since the Financial Accounting
Standards Board (FASB) modified its accounting fiat known as Rule
157 (a.k.a. FAS 157) last week, banks are no longer being
forced to value their assets at current market prices if they
believe the market is illiquid and that most recent
transactions are being carried out by distressed sellers
offering fire sale prices.
Right now left-wingers like the rule because it reinforces their
argument that more government intervention in the marketplace is
needed. The rule hurts the capitalist villains in their
anti-market narrative that holds business and the profit motive
responsible for all that is bad in society. It reinforces their
cartoonish claim that the actions of evil money lenders -- as
opposed to misguided government policy makers -- were primarily
responsible for the current recession.
Huffington's know-nothing bloviations about the rule change
illuminate this liberal delusion:
This week, we saw so many concessions to the banks. We saw the
suspension of mark-to-market, which is absolutely tragic.
Japan, by not having mark-to-market, made it much harder for
them to recover...so basically now it's become mark-to-fantasy.
They can put down any number they want and they are basically
perpetuating all these gimmicks that have gotten us where we
are. And the government is going along with that because
basically [Treasury Secretary] Tim Geithner and [Director of
the White House's National Economic Council] Larry Summers and
understand that world, this is their world, and this is really
the world to which they keep making concessions.
Like other liberals who reflexively cheer whatever hurts the big
bad banks, Huffington doesn't seem to understand that easing FAS
157 is not a concession to banks: it's a concession to reality.
The mark-to-market rule is the accounting gimmick, one that
overstates losses and makes things seem worse during a crisis
than they actually are.
The rule is fundamentally unfair to financial institutions and
market participants -- especially long-term investors -- and
directly contributed to the current economic crisis.
In October, former Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC)
chairman William Isaac blamed FAS 157 and an overzealous
Securities and Exchange Commission for destroying "$500 billion
of bank capital by its senseless marking to market of these
assets for which there is no marking to market, and that has
destroyed $5 trillion of bank lending," he said.
Economists Brian S. Wesbury and Robert Stein wrote much the same
thing in
Forbes in February:
By wiping out capital, so-called 'fair value' accounting rules
undermine the banking system, increase the odds of asset fire
sales and make markets even less liquid. As this happened in
2008, investment banks failed, and the government proposed
bailouts. This drove prices down even further, which hurt the
economy. And now as growth suffers, bad loans multiply. It's a
vicious downward spiral.
They insist that in the 1980s and 1990s there were "at least as
many, and probably more" nonperforming loans in the nation's
banking system as a percentage of the overall economy. The
difference was that the mark-to-market rule was not in effect
then. Its absence allowed banks the time they needed to deal with
their problems.
While this was happening in the Reagan-Bush 41-Clinton years,
Wesbury and Stein continued, the federal government slashed
marginal tax rates and raised interest rates, which spurred
economic growth. "Time and growth allowed those major banking
problems to be absorbed, even though roughly 3,000 banks failed,
without creating an economic catastrophe," they wrote.
The two economists note that the late great economist Milton
Friedman also warned of the dangers of pigheaded accounting
rules.
Friedman wrote that mark-to-market accounting was used throughout
the Great Depression and contributed to the death of many
otherwise viable financial institutions. President Franklin
Roosevelt wisely suspended it in 1938. America did without it for
nearly 70 years until, like a vampire, it somehow came back to
life in 2007 after a series of major accounting-related corporate
scandals.
Even in the midst of last year's market meltdown, the obstinate
then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson refused even to consider
suspending mark-to-market to ameliorate the crisis. A few months
before the September stock market crash, Paulson said he believed
in mark-to-market: "I think it's hard to run a financial
institution if you don't have the discipline which requires you
to mark securities to market."
It's also hard to run a financial institution when it's being
knee-capped by ill-considered, anti-growth accounting rules.
The easing of FAS 157 is no panacea, but it's a step in the right
direction. Kicking the nation's lending institutions when they're
down will not bring back America's prosperity.