Libertarianism
and deregulation successfully trashed the US economy. Americans lost their
savings, their homes, and their jobs in record numbers unprecedented since the
Great Depression. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan’s libertarian
philosophy that markets know best is responsible for the U.S. financial crisis
that erupted at the end of George W. Bush’s presidency. Greenspan’s acolytes – Treasury
Secretaries Robert Rubin, Larry Summers, and Timothy Geithner – also bear
responsibility for the existing international economic debacle. And it all
began with Ayn Rand.
Rand immigrated
to the United States from Russia in 1926, the year Alan Greenspan was born. The
celebrated fiction author of the novels The
Fountainhead (1943) and Atlas
Shrugged (1957), Rand championed libertarianism. She famously told Mike
Wallace in a 1959 CBS
television interview that she believed in “the separation of state and
economics.” She opposed all regulations of markets. Greenspan became her pupil
and she was present when he was sworn in as President Gerald Ford’s chief
economic advisor. That she came from an oppressive government regime likely
explains her extremist laissez-faire
attitude – something that Republicans love.
By the time
Rand became a Hollywood screenwriter, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the
Banking Act of 1933 (Glass–Steagall
Act). This New Deal legislation established the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) and introduced banking reforms to control speculation. Following
an era of corruption, financial manipulation and "insider trading"
resulted in more than 5,000 bank failures following the 1929 Wall Street crash.
The Glass–Steagall Act also allowed the
Federal Reserve to regulate interest rates in savings accounts.
Deregulation fever
took hold in 1980 with the enactment of the Depository Institutions
Deregulation and Monetary Control Act (DIDMCA) that gave the Federal Reserve
greater control over non-member banks. Among other things DIDMCA allowed banks
to merge, forced all banks to abide by the Fed's rules, and removed the powers
of the Fed under the Glass–Steagall Act to set the interest rates of savings
accounts. Ronald Reagan became president that year, famously saying that
government was not the solution to the country’s problems, “government is the
problem.”
The Alternative
Mortgage Transactions Parity Act of 1982 (AMTPA) removed regulations that barred
banks from making anything but the conventional fixed-rate loans. That gave
birth to the kind of mortgages that put borrowers in default situations; Adjustable-Rate
mortgages (ARM), Balloon-payment mortgages, and Interest-only mortgages crushed
borrowers. The option-ARM allowed borrowers to underpay by as much as they want
during the first few years of the loan so that the unpaid monthly interest got
tacked onto the size of the loan.
A $300,000
mortgage could become a $350,000 loan. Homeowners could find themselves out of
equity, upside down, and into default.
As for Alan
Greenspan, he continued to build upon his libertarian Wall Street-friendly
influence in Washington. On August 11, 1987, the Senate confirmed Greenspan as President
Reagan’s nominee for chairman of the Federal Reserve. Paradoxically, the Ayn
Rand influenced, anti-regulation, free-market economist Greenspan became the
ultimate regulator as the head of the central bank. Two months later, on October
19, the Dow Industrials' plunged 508-points and the New York Stock Exchange crashed.
But as a
disciple of Ayn Rand, Greenspan
presumed that “the self-interests of organizations, specifically
banks and others, were such as that they were best capable of protecting their
own shareholders and their equity in the firms,” as he testified before
Congress. He sought and attracted fellow believers in free-marketeering who
grew in their influence and power during the Clinton administration. Greenspan’s
inner circle included Wall Street financier Robert Rubin, Harvard economist
Larry Summers, and the Treasury Department’s Timothy Geithner. Each of them
became Secretary of the Treasury.
The so-called
go-go ‘90s seemed to confirm Greenspan’s hands-off approach to regulation. But
as a result the financial world suffered a fiscal heart attack
in 1998.
Long Term
Capital Management (LTCM) started to meltdown. The secretive computer model
driven firm made huge leveraged bets on various forms of arbitrage, in
particular securities called over the counter derivatives. Derivatives made up
an unregulated $27 trillion dollar international market. Unfortunately, LTCM’s proprietary
computer models failed when a financial crisis in Russia fractured their virtual
financial world and crashed those models. It took a private bailout, overseen
by the Federal Reserve, to prevent systemic financial catastrophe.
Congress
summoned Fed chairman Greenspan. He again assured them that markets know best.
He told them that he knew of no regulations that could prevent people “from
making dumb mistakes.” So despite the systemic meltdown, Congress took no
regulatory action. The following year Congress sent President Clinton the Financial
Services Modernization Act of 1999 (Gramm–Leach–Bliley
Act) which he signed. The Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act allowed commercial banks,
investment banks, securities firms, and insurance companies to consolidate.
From 1999 to
2008 the grateful financial industry spent $2.7 billion on lobbying, while
individuals and committees affiliated with it made more than $1 billion in
campaign contributions. During this time, the banking industry hid its use of off-balance-sheet
derivatives and its excessive use of leverage. That created a shadow
banking system in which the banks
relied heavily on short-term debt. The lobby got what it wanted and Greenspan got
the praise. However, Greenspan's apparent
successes in managing the economy from 1987 to 2006 are a façade. That
management created the largest credit bubble in world history.
President
George W. Bush awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Alan Greenspan
after his 18 years at the Federal Reserve In 2005. Hailed as a financial
wizard, Greenspan retired in 2006. Dr. Ben Bernanke, a Princeton University Economics
Professor, succeeded him. Goldman Sachs Chairman and CEO Henry M. Paulson
became Treasury Secretary. Greenspan’s protégé Timothy Geithner served as the
CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The U.S. housing bubble continued
to swell.
In 2008 a
systemic failure like the LTCM meltdown a decade earlier hit the Wall Street.
The investment house Bear Stearns began to meltdown. It imperiled the interconnected
global financial market, largely because of derivatives that had been created with
toxic mortgage backed securities. Federal intervention in the form of a loan to
J.P. Morgan Chase as an intermediary allowed Bear to be bailed out, but it did
not solve the underlying problems such as secrecy, avarice, and fraud.
Next, the epidemic
mortgage crisis forced the Treasury to nationalize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
putting each of the mortgage giants into conservatorship. Secretary Paulson
said that "that conservatorship was the only form in which I would commit
taxpayer money to the GSEs [Government Sponsored Entities]." The Treasury committed to invest up to $200
billion to keep the GSEs solvent.
Wall Street’s
Lehman Brothers faced bankruptcy next. Secretary Paulson decided to teach Wall
Street a lesson. He told Lehman management that the government would not step
in. Lehman needed a buyer but found none. Forced into bankruptcy, the
government allowed Lehman to fail. With that, the systemic risk plunged Ireland
into trouble. The Bank of England had to start bailing out banks. Iceland went
bankrupt. China faced 0% growth. At home U.S. banks stopped lending. The world
financial system began to meltdown.
Then one of
the world's biggest insurers, American International Group (AIG), fell victim
to the mortgage backed security crisis. This time, however, the government
decided AIG truly was too big to fail
and seized control. The $85 billion deal demonstrated the government’s extreme
concerns about the danger of what such a collapse could pose to the financial
system.
Secretary
Paulson and Fed Chairman Bernanke called congressional leaders to Nancy
Pelosi’s office and bluntly requested $700 billion dollars to save the US
economy. At first rejected by the House, the Emergency Economic Stabilization
Act of 2008 was signed into law by U.S. President George W. Bush on October 3.
It created the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) which allowed the United
States government to purchase assets and equity from financial institutions.
To solve the
lending crisis, Secretary Paulson summoned 9 of the largest banks’ CEOs to the
Treasury. He forced them to accept capital injections that made the United
States a stockholder. To prevent the failure of Wall Street’s Merrill Lynch,
Paulson arranged its buyout by Charlotte based Bank of America. Under TARP some
banks
got bailed out. Other banks were seized by the FDIC and placed into
conservatorship until they could be purchased.
In retrospect,
many analysts and economists now blame weak Fed policies for the 2006–2008 housing
crash, the Wall Street financial crisis, and resulting
recession. Failing to take action to stem the bubble in housing prices,
inadequate oversight of financial firms, and keeping interest rates low for an
extended period are major contributors.
Alan
Greenspan now says, "I made a mistake in presuming that the self-interests
of organizations, specifically banks and others, were such as that they were
best capable of protecting their own shareholders and their equity in the firms."
He testified to congress that he “found a flaw.” Greenspan said the crisis had
shaken his very understanding of how markets work. He also agreed that despite
his former opposition to it, financial derivatives
should be regulated.
The Ayn Rand-inspired
laissez faire libertarianism that Greenspan and his fellow US financial
regulators practiced not only failed on a colossal level but led to phenomenal
government interventionism. Deregulation and the absence of regulating allowed
for massive investment fraud hidden in an opaque and secretive international
monetary system. It also concentrated Wall Street firms and U.S. banking, which
will continue to pour money into opposing past and future regulations. Rand’s
philosophy emanated from a world coming into the 20th century. It failed
the world coming into the 21st.