Back
in the U.S.S.A.
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Why
the Meltdown Should Have Surprised No One
Harry Browne,
the former Libertarian Party candidate for president, used to say:
the government is great at breaking your leg, handing you
a crutch, and saying You see, without me you couldnt
walk. That maxim is clearly illustrated by the financial
industry regulatory reforms proposed this week by the Obama Administration.
In seeking
to undo the damage inflicted over the past decade by misguided government
policies, the new regulatory regime would ensure that the problems
underlying our financial system will only get worse. As was the
case with the deeply flawed Sarbanes-Oxley legislation of 2002,
or the misguided provisions of the Patriot Act of 2001, such as
the torturous anti-money laundering requirements, the move will
further burden the financial services industry with unnecessary
regulation that will drive up costs, lower quality, and shelter
the biggest and least innovative companies. Ultimately, the structure
will put the entire U.S. financial industry at a global competitive
disadvantage.
The underlying
problem is that the excessive risk taking which brought about the
crisis was not market-driven, but a direct consequence of government
interference with risk-inhibiting market forces. Rather than learning
from its mistakes and allowing market forces to once again control
risks and efficiently allocate resources, the government is merely
repeating its mistakes on a grander scale thereby sowing
the seeds for an even greater crisis in the future.
As is typical
of government attempts to control economic outcomes, Obamas
plans focuses on the symptoms of the disease and not the cause.
The American financial system imploded for two reasons: cheap money
and moral hazard both of which were supplied by the government.
Under the proposed new regulatory structures, these toxic ingredients
will be combined in ever-increasing quantities.
The proposals
most notably involve extra regulatory oversight of financial entities
that the government deems too big to fail. This implies
that it is desirable to have such entities in the first place, and
that the government will continue to back those large organizations
that fall under its protection. These too big to fail
firms will enjoy a competitive advantage over smaller firms in attracting
capital, as lenders will perceive zero risk in extending them credit.
This will cause these firms to grow even larger, producing even
greater systemic risks and larger losses when the next round of
bailouts arrives. Meanwhile, smaller firms which seek to expand,
and which propose no systemic risks, will face greater challenges
as higher capital costs render them less competitive.
If the government
did not provide these bailouts or guarantees, then the market itself
would ensure organizations did not grow beyond their ability to
attract capital. It is only when market discipline is overcome by
government guarantees that systemic risks arise.
Obama proposes
to entrust the critical job of systemic risk regulator
to the Federal Reserve, the very organization that has proven most
adept at creating systemic risk. This is like making Keith Richards
the head of the DEA.
Given the Federal
Reserves disastrous monetary policy over the past decade,
any attempt to expand the Feds role should be vigorously opposed.
Through decades of short-sighted interest rate decisions, the Fed
has proven time and again that it is only able to close the barn
door after the entire herd has escaped. If setting interest rates
had been left to the free market, none of the excesses we have seen
in the credit market would have been remotely possible.
The perverse
result will be that our government and the Fed gain more power as
a direct result of their own incompetence. Such was also the case
with Freddie and Fannie, which should have been allowed to fail,
but were nationalized instead, leaving them in a position to do
even more damage. The new round of regulations ignores them completely.
Along those lines, ratings agencies such as Standard and Poors
and Moodys that completely missed the mark were also spared.
Perhaps this special treatment is a way of ensuring that Treasury
debt maintains its bogus AAA rating.
Unfortunately,
despite their intent, my guess is that the new regulations will
most severely impact smaller firms, like my own, that never engaged
in reckless behavior. This will further reward those too big
to fail firms, whose economies of scale and cozy relationships
with regulators leave them better positioned than their smaller
rivals to absorb the costs of the added red tape.
With the transition
now fully under way, I propose we end the pretense and rename our
country: The United Socialist States of America. In
fact, given all the czars already in Washington, we might as well
go with the Russian theme completely: appoint a Politburo, move
into dilapidated housing blocks, and parade our missiles in the
streets. On the bright side, theres always the borscht.
June
20, 2009
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.
Copyright
© 2009 Euro Pacific Capital
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