First allow me to apologize. I did not clearly read what you said. You seem to have a much larger supply of sophistication than I am used to and am not used to actually
trying to understand someone. Usually their position is immediately evident. It was my fault for judging quickly and harshly. I'm sorry.
Seanchaidh said:
You may certainly have wanted me to endorse brutality, but I did no such thing. Observing that something works is not the same as saying that it is right.
Allow me to interject that I agreed that slavery was profitable and that it works. That does not mean it is acceptable. We seem to agree on this point.
What we can learn from the Soviet Union is that the small success it enjoyed for a time was due to government intervention in the market and the substitution of the capitalist incentive to not starve to death if one was unable to obtain a wage with the incentive created by the threat of being placed in a gulag or worse if one didn't cooperate. The Soviet system started to have problems with laziness and inaccurate assessments of production when they relaxed the terror incentive and provided nothing new to replace it. That suggests that intervention through incentives can work and work well, and that the liberal theory of maximal efficiency through letting the market do what it will isn't, well, true. Brutality 'worked' because it had an effect on incentives. But there are other ways to influence incentives that aren't cruel or even punishing. The claim made by those such as Adam Smith is that greed provides the invisible hand that pushes society to produce what everyone needs... the incentives of a liberal (free market) society align with the desires and needs of that society so that production is efficiently handled by the rational reaction of individuals to price, supply, and demand. The system depends on there not being much theft. And it depends on there not being much violence. And it finally depends on there being sufficient, true information. The market alone cannot account for those; it would be foolish to leave military action to the whims of the market. We need a police force to account for theft and fraud, and we need some amount of transparency in business which is often best obtained by regulation.
So brutality can result in economic success. How is that helpful to a society that does not want to endorse barbarism? Aside from a stick, what greater incentive is there to produce than the ability to survive? Moreover, why would you want a system whereby the government punishes you when natural consequences can do the exact same thing? If I may be so bold, why stain your hand with the blood of a dying man? Moreover, why would the violence created by the government not force the people to distrust and fear the government?
Perhaps I am pointing out conclusions that you've already reached.
I agree there must be
some regulation in the areas of fraud, theft, and violence. I would never suggest an anarchy as a model environment for economic success. I don't recall suggesting that a completely unregulated market is an ideal. I just want
minimal intervention. Forcing companies that have publicly traded stock to give accurate and precise details on their company seems absolutely reasonable. Throwing thieves and murders in prison, also acceptable and desirable.
I just don't understand your point.
There are plenty of books with many different interpretations. Many of them disagree with my position. I suggest that you take a more careful look at the ones you wouldn't be inclined to agree with when you look for understanding. There is much truth to the laissez-faire ideology-- I certainly consider myself a capitalist and not a socialist-- but it is easy to take it too far, and very easy to interpret the failure of an inadequate stimulus to cause an economic recovery as the failure of stimulus altogether. It is always possible that, rather than stimulus "not working" that it simply wasn't large enough to account for the full measure of the recession it was meant to counteract. So unemployment is still better than it would have been, but not in a very good position anyway. 1937 is probably the best evidence of that.
I see the idea of a stimulus proposed by the government to be a horrible idea at face value. The only way government can obtain money is through taxation(or borrowing which leads to taxation), meaning that a stimulus would only work as "spreading the wealth" or "distribution of wealth." Not only that, but I have no faith in politicians to accurately predict or even decide the correct placement of the moneys of the people in order to effect an actual economic stimulus. One could argue that a stimulus would be terribly effective and the absolute right course of action, but you would have to, essentially, have a crystal ball which could tell you which sectors of the economy have growth potential enough to be worth investing into. I'd imagine that's why most projects of the Obama stimulus were for construction, clearly needed for the growth of the population. The problem with that is the possibility that supply has exceeded demand, which would mean that the government would be throwing money away(which basically seems to be their job to begin with).
While I think it has the potential to be a good idea, I don't think it could ever realistically live up to what it was intended to be.
Unless you think printing money is a good way to effect a stimulus[cough]Weimar Republic[/cough].
Facts are stubborn things: show where the CRA tells companies to grant mortgages to people who couldn't pay them back. I'm aware that a number of people say this, but it's also true that a number of very prominent experts disagree with them.
http://www.federalreserve.gov/dcca/cra/
Please note the section that says:
Federal Reserve said:
The CRA requires that each depository institution's record in helping meet the credit needs of its entire community be evaluated periodically. That record is taken into account in considering an institution's application for deposit facilities.
Perhaps I read this wrong, but it seems to me that it would be fairly easy to extort the various lending companies. Don't do what we say? We wont do what you want.
The Federal Reserve was helped by groups like ACORN which would, if I have been informed correctly, picket outside of lending institutions that didn't properly "invest in the community" which, as it later states was, essentially, arbitrary.
Federal Reserve said:
Neither the CRA nor its implementing regulation gives specific criteria for rating the performance of depository institutions. Rather, the law indicates that the evaluation process should accommodate an institution's individual circumstances.
Not exactly a smoking gun, I understand. Still, I have less faith in a group who have nothing personally invested to make the decision of who should and should not obtain a loan than the people whose life is literally on the line. An uninterested third party should not make those decisions.
The experience of Jamaica's free zones is a stark contrast with your assessment of men "getting rich based on their own clever ideas and hard work."
That's not really what I'm talking about, but that does point to some of what I meant. Yes, the exploitation of the Jamaican's is decidedly horrible, but does show that people will exploit whatever system they have available to them. You can't have two sets of rules and expect that people wont abuse them to their fullest.
If that's not what you mean, please explain further.
Substituting arbitrary market pressures for arbitrary taxation and regulation doesn't sound like tyranny. Charity is irrational behavior in a capitalist system.
Irrational though it may be, it seems to be a rather dependable behavior. Not only that, but it seems much more ethical as the people donating to charity do so for their own personal desires to whomever they want. Instead of forcing the people to pay for people they don't care about, it allows people to investigate the people they want to help and make sure the money is used as well as it can be.
Also, might I add: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/09/AR2009060903233.html http://engram-backtalk.blogspot.com/2007/06/charitable-giving-by-americans.html
It seems rather reliable to believe that the people who have wish to give to the people who have not or the people in need. At the very least, it seems when people have the most ability to give to others(as in, not being taxed in order to pay for socialized programs) they will do so. This is shown by the graph of "National Giving Levels Shown as a Percentage of GDP" in the second article.
As an after thought, please do not suggest that my mother does not feel ashamed for needing help. My mother is very proud, having raised 6 children on her own after my father died 19 years ago. It's an unfortunate truth that sometimes you don't get what you need, but sometimes good people will step forward to give to those that need. I would ask that you do not disparage her name or the names of the good people that have helped us.
I did a little research since your "factual" conclusions seemed overbroad. And... No. Wrong. Subprime loans were mostly granted by people and institutions who thought they would make money with them. It makes very little sense to suggest otherwise.
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_Reinvestment_Act
Some legal and financial experts note that CRA regulated loans tend to be safe and profitable, and that subprime excesses came mainly from institutions not regulated by the CRA. In the February 2008 House hearing, law professor Michael S. Barr, a Treasury Department official under President Clinton,[64][108] stated that a Federal Reserve survey showed that affected institutions considered CRA loans profitable and not overly risky. He noted that approximately 50% of the subprime loans were made by independent mortgage companies that were not regulated by the CRA, and another 25% to 30% came from only partially CRA regulated bank subsidiaries and affiliates. Barr noted that institutions fully regulated by CRA made "perhaps one in four" sub-prime loans, and that "the worst and most widespread abuses occurred in the institutions with the least federal oversight".[109] According to Janet L. Yellen, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, independent mortgage companies made risky "high-priced loans" at more than twice the rate of the banks and thrifts; most CRA loans were responsibly made, and were not the higher-priced loans that have contributed to the current crisis.[110] A 2008 study by Traiger & Hinckley LLP, a law firm that counsels financial institutions on CRA compliance, found that CRA regulated institutions were less likely to make subprime loans, and when they did the interest rates were lower. CRA banks were also half as likely to resell the loans.[111] Emre Ergungor of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland found that there was no statistical difference in foreclosure rates between regulated and less-regulated banks, although a local bank presence resulted in fewer foreclosures.
No correlation between foreclosure rates of regulated and less-regulated banks. Say it with me...
http://www.lewrockwell.com/dilorenzo/dilorenzo125.html
Now, I don't know
everything that is said in that article and cannot vouch for it or how well read the author is. However the man seems to understand the situation better than I do. Still, if this is going to become a battle of the experts, we're going to have to just agree to disagree.
You seem to think that "hard work" and "ingenuity" is the only resource needed to make money. It isn't. Realize this. Sure, people are generally the best at making decisions for themselves; in general, liberty is a very good thing for the economy because it usually provides the best outcome as people tend to know what's best for themselves in self-regarding matters.
So...what other resources are necessary? I mean, you can deny all you want, but you didn't really provide me with anything else that's needed.
But not all economic matters are purely self-regarding, and regulation that prevents massive meltdowns and liquidity crises is quite certainly worth the tradeoffs with regard to personal liberty. No one is making you run a bank, no one is making you buy stock in a bank, it's fine. There is no gun.
If the government nationalizes the banks, then the government is forcing me to buy stock in a bank at gun point. In fact, the government has already forced the citizens of the United States of America to buy stock in GM as well as bailing out banking institutions. The government does everything at the point of a gun, they don't make suggestions.