Bush's speech on Wall Street today is a most peculiar thing -- a mixture of free-market platitudes, cryptic code, and outright weirdness. For instance, what does this mean?
One vital principle of reform is that our nations must make our financial markets more transparent. For example, we should consider improving accounting rules for securities, so that investors around the world can understand the true value of the assets they purchase.
"Accounting rules for securities" -- that sounds like mark-to-market, right? But even the people who want to abolish mark-to-market accounting don't go so far as to say that doing so will improve transparency or make "the true value of assets" more obvious. This statement is the kind of thing which would be made by someone urging a move to mark-to-market accounting, not a move away from it. Does Bush think there isn't enough mark-to-market accounting?
Bush then continues:
We should move forward with other significant reforms to make the IMF and World Bank more transparent, accountable, and effective. For example, the IMF should agree to work more closely with member countries to ensure that exchange rate policies are market-oriented and fair.
Is this a reference to China? Is Bush really trying to outsource to the International Monetary Fund responsibility for getting China to play nice with its exchange rate?
After that, Bush gets downright disingenuous:
We must recognize that government intervention is not a cure-all. For example, some blame the crisis on insufficient regulation of the American mortgage market. But many European countries had much more extensive regulations and still experienced problems almost identical to our own.
Yes, George -- because they bought American mortgages! But he's not done with this theme:
History has shown that the greater threat to economic prosperity is not too little government involvement in the market - but too much. We saw this in the case of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Because these firms were chartered by Congress, many believed they were backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government. Investors put huge amounts of money in Fannie and Freddie, which they used to build up irresponsibly large portfolios of mortgage-backed securities. When the housing market declined, these securities plummeted in value. And it took a taxpayer-funded rescue to keep Fannie and Freddie from collapsing in a way that would have devastated the global financial system. There is a clear lesson: Our aim should not be more government - it should be smarter government.
Oh, come on. The problem with Frannie wasn't "government involvement in the market" -- it was government deliberately exempting Fannie (FNM) and Freddie (FRE) from the capital-adequacy rules which applied to everybody else, and thereby encouraging them to maximize the amount of leverage they took on -- all in the name of "encouraging homeownership". What we needed was precisely more government: a Frannie regulator with teeth, and a government which refused to let nominally-private corporations lever up to obviously-dangerous levels. The implicit government guarantee wouldn't have been a problem if it wasn't for the amount of leverage involved.
But even if you concede Bush's point about Frannie, it's still weird how contentious and cryptic he's being elsewhere in the speech. What's the signal he's trying to send, and who is he trying to send it to? Does he really think that the G20 summit is going to be full of people lauding the merits of the economic system in Cuba? I'm rather puzzled by the whole thing.
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This article has 19 comments:
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Tony Petroski
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102 Comments
Nov 13 01:03 PM-
Warm_Paw
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24 Comments
Nov 13 01:14 PMThe banks are running the show. They shut Wall St. down when they don't get their way.
Now they promise not to use the bail out for bonuses.
The heck with a promise, make it criminal to do so.
Hank Paulson's learning how deep and nasty this situation is and realizes trillions won't bail out what happens to FRE and FNM on November 17.
They were supposed to report Nov 4 but notice how the earnings date has moved to the 17th, two days after the cut off for selling for this years tax loss.
I think FNM is looking at a minnimum -$7 a share.
Hank's going to have to decide if they live or die and death means a 7 trillion dollar hit until the dust clears.
That much loss will self perpetuate the downward spiral of housing prices and it's going to take a long time to get this situation out of vapor lock.
When Hank only realizes this days from ground zero - there's no wonder Bush doesn't know what he's talking about.
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Elaine Supkis
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60 Comments
My Website
Nov 13 01:16 PM-
gabe borenstein
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193 Comments
My Website
Nov 13 03:38 PMThe implemented policies and the global cooperation in addressing the perceived debacles will work effective andwill create a dynamic economic/market rebound .
Thwe warnings ? should have been issued a year ago -I did .
Now the nonsense from the peanut gallery will not stop unprecedented rebound in the period ahead .
Now ,let's hear another end of the iniverse story from the author.
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gabe borenstein
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193 Comments
My Website
Nov 13 03:40 PM-
panocha man
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10 Comments
Nov 13 04:00 PM-
Rokjok777
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68 Comments
Nov 13 04:31 PM-
sr9web
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182 Comments
Nov 13 06:33 PMthe wonderful wonderful cad
you'll laugh so hard your sides will ache
when you realize you've be had
reading Felix, the anti-bush cad
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Smarty_Pants
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1123 Comments
My Website
Nov 13 08:33 PMWhat W knows about economics or the market wouldn't fill a thimble halfway. It's pathetic really, and I'm a lifelong Republican saying that.
We have let our government, Republican and Democrat alike, lead us to ruin over the past 4 decades. What we have sown we are now about to reap.
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The hand
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772 Comments
My Website
Nov 14 12:52 AMsmarty is right. neither political party has the balls to properly nurture capitalism. they are creating a mess that my grandchildren will still be dealing with when they are my age.
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joepublic
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49 Comments
Nov 14 02:08 AMThe Red menace is still alive.
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leh
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165 Comments
Nov 14 08:26 AM-
pansyed
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21 Comments
Nov 14 09:03 AMIts easy to blame Bush but I think Franks and Waxman are both do nothings until it hits the fan. Then they, along with many others, go into political gear. Its time the country evolved by working on long term policy for economic, energy and other issues to dovetail into good public policy. To of ten there is an emergency of the day or week etc
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me3tv
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19 Comments
My Website
Nov 14 09:10 AMThe speech was an attempt to boost confidence for investors. Lots of platitudes. Bush has never been a great communicator - perhaps his biggest fault along with his unrelenting staff loyalty (also Nixon's undoing). In most cases when Bush appears to talk in recent times - the market goes DOWN. It is interesting his talk helped it go UP this day.
Free market capitalism took near fatal blow in Sept 2001 because that event turned even die-hard conservative adam-smith worshipers into Keynesian dietary dependents to help resolve the worldwide financial disaster. It opened the gates wider for free money out of Frannie with NO oversight thanks to and even more Keynesian dependent Democrat leadership. The current mess then is merely the final wave of the 2001 attack aftershocks.
Bush - who cannot successfully talk his way out of a paper bag - was an easy target for eight years of Democrat abuse. Any blame due to Democrats was easily deflected to Bush. Now - the very people who refused oversight of their financial domain of Frannies are in charge of the cure. American politics is so funny it should be syndicated.
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Historyman
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1 Comment
Nov 14 09:34 AM-
tginomorebush
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100 Comments
Nov 14 09:43 AM-
notsosmart
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1251 Comments
Nov 14 10:54 AM-
ironpants
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29 Comments
Nov 14 11:08 AMThat cowboy is all hat, no cattle.
Put him out to pasture, please!
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closed
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27 Comments
Nov 14 03:40 PM"History has shown that the greater threat to economic prosperity is not too little government involvement in the market, but too much. Our aim should not be more government, it should be smarter government. The answer is not to try to reinvent that system. It is to fix the problems we face, make the reforms we need, and move forward with the free market system."
Bush is an idiot! We all know it. Being an idiot is the highest rank he has been able to achieve. He has done more to destroy the U.S. than any recent avowed enemy. We're getting rid of him as President, so why doesn't he just shut up? People voted for Obama to get rid of him. If he had any brains he would shut up. The fact that he does not shut up, proves that he has no brains.