5 Years Later, We've Learned Nothing From the Financial Crisis
Why haven't we destroyed the idea that destroyed the world?
James Kwak
Five years ago, Lehman Brothers, AIG, and the global financial system
were not blown up by subprime mortgages, collateralized debt
obligations, or credit default swaps. They were not blown up by greed or
fraud, alone. The financial crisis that left millions of people still
out of work was caused by an idea: the idea that unregulated financial
markets are always good and that we can rely on the self-interest of
bankers to improve all of our lives.
The ideology of free financial markets gained
sway in the 1990s, with Alan Greenspan at the Federal Reserve and Robert
Rubin at Treasury, and was not seriously contested in Washington before
2008. It was a Wall Street-to-Washington consensus that spanned
bankers, lawyers, lobbyists, journalists, college career counselors,
legislators, regulators, and the highest reaches of the Clinton and Bush
administrations. It gave us derivatives non-regulation, consumer
non-protection, the end of Glass-Steagall, creative capital accounting,
regulatory arbitrage, and, ultimately, tens of thousands of empty houses
rotting in the desert. Ultimately it delivered a financial shock from
which the world has still not recovered.
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