Monday, February 16, 2009

It is time to take strong capitalist action — and that requires wiping out the existing owners of the insolvent banks

From Freakonomics:

"
Time for the Government to Stop Subsidizing Shareholders of Insolvent Banks

That is what Andrew Rosenfield argues for in this extremely cogently argued piece, and I agree with him. He makes a number of points about the bailout that I hadn’t heard before.

Rosenfield ends the article with the following sage words:

The present practice of subsidizing shareholders and debt holders of large insolvent bank holding companies is unprecedented, improper, and unwise. It is time to take strong capitalist action — and that requires wiping out the existing owners of the insolvent banks and giving the system much needed new equity capital, which, at this time, can come only from the government.

Me:

The only real moral hazard the banks and shareholders fear is nationalization. As well, the current arrangement merely continues the relationship between the financial sector and government that got us into this mess. Since that’s what’s been going on since September, I’m a little worried that people are just figuring this out. It indicates a serious misunderstanding of how our system works.

— Don the libertarian Democrat

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