Quote from Daal:
Ok so all the sudden government intervention can work? I'm addressing free market fundamentalists here, they clain it was fed funds who created a bubble. Greenspan presents evidence that is isnt.
But with regards to regulation to prevent bubbles, the greenspan argument is 'I dont know of a single case in history where regulation has defused a bubble, if there was a simple way to do it I would be all for it', he might very well be right since government employees are just as vulnerable to believe a bubble will go on as a private sector participant
Even Warren buffett though housing was sustainable. And market forces are too huge to expect laws to change it(furthermore fraud is very much present in bubbles so the law doesnt matter)
And with regards to bias and political attacks, you couldn't be more wrong. I could careless if the republicans or democrats are right, if the keneysians or monetarists or austrians are right. I attack them when they are wrong, that is all
The only that I care is that *I'm right*, that is my religion and my PL is my god. I will get plenty of things wrong but it will only be after looking at the evidence in the most fair way possible because biases dont pay bills
Ok that is fair enough, but your post came off as saying that anyone criticizing Fed policy was a dogmatic fundamentalist. Many people who take the laissez-faire position on this issue are also doing so with an open-mind and not out of dogmatism. As for the fundamentalists, it is a total waste of time to address them because they won't listen to evidence or change their minds if the facts change.
Back to Greenspan - I find his point of view contradictory. On the one hand he has said easy monetary policy can start bubbles or at least inflate them more than normal monetary policy. He also thinks that easy monetary policy can ease the effects of financial crises and recessions, as shown by his cuts in the early 90s, 98, and after the tech bust. Yet on the boom side, suddenly he thinks central banks are impotent?
Either the central bank is powerless both in booms or busts (in which cash abolish it), or it can make a difference - in which case go countercyclical in both directions, booms as well as busts. What is it about bubbles that makes them impossible to prick, when he believes recessions or depressions can be stopped by Fed policy?
Greenspan is trying to have his cake and eat it.
Alan Greenspan - 'I dont know of a single case in history where regulation has defused a bubble, if there was a simple way to do it I would be all for it'
My corollary would be - I don't know of a single case in history where regulation has stopped a bust. If there was a simple way to do it I would be all for it.
Despite all the clamour in society and on this board for government action, so far I don't see 2008-2009 showing any evidence that the government or central banks have miraculously developed the ability to make busts disappear through regulation and policy actions.