A Crisis of Government

The financial crisis is beyond my ken, I freely admit.  When the complexities grow too much for the layman, though, I find it useful to remind myself of the basic realities of government.

The government is not responsible with your money.

Four years ago, privatization of Social Security was scuttled in large part because Congress thought it unfair to toss the average taxpayer into the volatile marketplace with his/her retirement savings.  Now, the government is forcing us all to participate in the financial markets, but only allowing us to invest in the worst assets.  Just great.

Government solutions tend to create new problems, which demand new government solutions, which create new problems to be solved, etc, ad nauseam (i.e., Government solutions tend to create problems so big that only government can solve them).

And with all this current talk of making the bad actors pay for their sins, you'll notice that no one is talking about changing the government's policies that caused this. It's never the government's fault, apparently. They only create the incentives. And hold a gun to the banks head to comply with them. But they don't actually, you know, sign the mortgage papers, so they're in the clear. They can just point at the bankers and say, "It's the greedy capitalists, man!"

Politicians are bipartisan in only one respect: they all act to maximize their own utility (which only partially intersects with that of the public).

Pelosi screwed up royally.  She is the Democratic Tom DeLay.  Newt Gingrich was an ideologue, but Tom DeLay was simply a partisan, most keenly interested in maximizing his party's political power.  Pelosi cut a deal in which, as far as I can tell, every single Republican in a safe seat had to vote yes so that the Democrats could maximize their no votes.  Given that the Republican caucus is pretty much in open revolt, this was beyond moronic.  She then spent a week openly and repeatedly blaming the Republicans and the Bush administration for the current crisis. 

The way she set things up, it was "Heads I win, tails you lose":  vote for the deal and I'll paint you as heartless reactionaries bailing out your fat cat friends. 

If you're going to do that, you'd better make sure you have some goddamn margin for error in your own party.  She didn't.  Then she got up and delivered yet another speech blaming the Republicans for the bailout deal she was about to pass.

If only to make a point, some mischievous politician should suggest an amendment to any eventual bailout legislation:  In order to prevent public money from being entrusted to an entity which has demonstrated poor fiscal and accounting practices, no bailout funds can be administered by any person or entity whose spending has exceeded revenue in each of the past 5 years.

It would never pass, of course.  But it would be interesting to hear politicians explain why. 

While I find the bailout horrendous on a number of levels, people whose opinions I respect say that it's better than the alternative.  If we have but two bad choices, then we should focus on creating mechanisms to prevent this from happening again. 

For starters, we need accounting reform within the federal government.  If the government is going to take over major industries, businesses and assets, then surely the federal government should be forced to abide by accounting standards and disclosure rules at least as rigorous as those it imposes on business.  Our government should not have less responsibility to us than private business has to private shareholders.

Secondly, we need to begin communicating much more effectively.  The storyline desperately needs to be changed from idiotic "the market failed!" to "a lot of things failed, but failing businesses go away; the government gets bigger."  That's not a narrative shift that happens overnight.  It will take years.  We need to start telling a story - in new ways and through new channels - about the failures of the only monopolist the Left seems to trust: government.

Remember, when Wall Street falls hundreds of billions of dollars short, it is called a "massive crisis".  But when Washington, DC falls hundreds of billions of dollars short, it is called "2008".

UPDATE

Cato @ Liberty has more.  Jim Harper says "no bailout".

 

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Comments

This process can't proceed until...

1) Pelosi steps down as speaker. She's too partisan to lead.    2) Paulson must be fired.  Not resign.  You're FIIIIRRRRREEED! 

I simply don't see how this process can proceed until these to items are taken care of. DD

Can you imagine

what the reaction would have been if all the money lost yesterday had been Social Security "privatized" funds?  In fact, a lot of it WAS retirement savings such as 401K plans, exactly the sort of investment we were encouraged to make instead of contributing to Social Security.

I don't know who to thank for not letting the market people play with public money last year, but I know it isn't the president, who lobbied hard for it.  Remember when we were told we could make a lot more on our investment if we let the Big Boys play with our money?  Can we "retire" that theme yet?

I have no investments in the stock market.  All my "investment" money goes to purchase the property I live on, and when that's paid off, I'll consider something else.  The stock market is a place where people with a lot of money clean out people like me, and I ain't falling for it.

I agree that the focus should

I agree that the focus should be on mechanisms to prevent this in the future. I don't know exactly what the answer is, but there has to be some way to force lenders to bear the risk of their loans, rather than package them up in some clever way and sell them on.

Repack Rider: the stock market is not evil, but it is a risk. Ever heard of diversification? Just putting all of your eggs in another basket ("the property you live on") is not wise either.

True to form...

Nice post.

And the use of the work "ken" makes it all the more better.

I've always liked you Henke.  And I know that doesn't do you any favors in some circles.  So... sorry 'bout that.

 

Cheers.

Nancy needs a hug!

 

The failure to pass the bailout package and then watch the stock market crater would be easy to blame on the Republicans. But the truth is this, a gigantic failure of leadership by Nancy Pelosi is the primary reason it went down in flames. She antagonized the Republicans in a pre-vote rant that was unnecessary. The Republicans were in a very tough position to go along with this spending bill in the first place and she knew that. But her biggest failure was she did not get her own people on board as a strong majority. To not vote for such an important bill because the republicans got their feeling hurt and let the economy run into the ditch is stupid, but this was Nancy’s doing and she should own up to it—period!

 

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