There are all sorts of people today who normally talk about free markets but who have got themselves into a tizzy over the failed bailout. We need to get one thing straight - the bailout was the wrong answer to the wrong question. To begin with, the plan was merely postponing the inevitable, as a letter in the Wall Street Journal pointed out this morning:
The lesson of past financial inflection points is that we must let the markets reallocate capital from less efficient to more efficient uses. The sad fact is that we need to go through a brutal process of resizing down our financial and real-estate industries. Actions to try to recapitalize doomed financial companies only postpone the day of reckoning, which will make matters worse as the Japanese learned in the 1990s.
Secondly, we have to ask how to protect future viable assets and investments, not just what we should do about past failed assets and investments. The bailout plan is exactly the wrong approach. It puts in them in jeopardy because not only does it tread down the policy road that led to the Great Depression, as Martin Hutchinson powerfully argues, but because real capitalism provides strict disciplines that actually provide better protection than government regulation. We will not succeed in protecting our children from a future financial meltdown if we merely put in place the exact parameters for it to happen again.
Markets are all about the efficient allocation of capital. As has been demonstrated on this page repeatedly, government caused the market to misallocate badly. If we go further and have government misallocate the capital by design, then we will have made one of the biggest missteps in economic history, worse than FDR and co, because we will have completely ignored the lessons of the great depression. A market correction is, in a very real sense, necessary. Government cannot bring that about.












“The surface of American society is covered with a layer of democratic paint, but from time to time one can see the old aristocratic colors breaking through.†The great French political philosopher, Alexis de Tocqueville, uttered these words several decades ago. Although this quote is decades old, it’s been ringing nationwide during this election period. In this case, we have elected or support officials who, for some reason or another, at least claim to believe that cash advances are damaging to the American people. Some have even blown the top off by proposing measures that will wipe out the entire industry in certain states. Ohio’s man in power, Governor Ted Strickland, is one of these people whose new law, if passed, will knock out the whole industry and leave about 6,000 of his people unemployed. What’s worse is that both Presidential candidates, Barack Obama and John McCain, supported a bill that ultimately prohibited payday loans to military personnel. Obama, for instance, has come out in support of measures that will make it nearly impossible for short-term lenders to function, as any business should. Let’s just pray those aristocratic colors remain compact as we fight for the good fate of payday loans. Let’s fight for our financial freedom.
Post Courtesy of Personal Money Store
Professional Blogging Team
Feed Back: 1-866-641-3406
Home: http://personalmoneystore.com/NoFaxPaydayLoans….
Blog: http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/