You didn't take it as a compliment??
No, just a distraction.
You didn't take it as a compliment??
One of the possible interpretations of laissez faire is just as you say. A literal translation of laissez faire would be, I suppose, my French is weak, "let do" and a loose, idiomatic translation could be "to do as you please" . Traditionally this has usually meant that businesses were free to operate with a minimum of, or perhaps no, government interference.Wrong.
Laissez faire capitalism is the kind John D Rockefeller used to destroy competition by undercutting them on prices and forcing them out of business unless they sold out to him.
Getting the gov't to regulate your competition out of business in not laissez faire capitalism. Are you kidding me?
I haven't. Is it the article in the July 18th Washington post that you refer to?Condescending.
Good post, piezoe. Have you read the recent article, "the free market is an impossible utopia"?
I haven't. Is it the article in the July 18th Washington post that you refer to?
Indeed... There's more than enough evidence to suggest that there has been a lot of progress.Yes, it's certainly been getting better with all this central bank intervention!
Like I have said many times, this is a false theory that is put forward by the bank lobby.Are you that incapable of being objective? Banks were legally coerced into subprime loans under Fair Housing and when the market goes bust, its their own fault. A free market would have never put that capital at risk in the first place.
But please, tell me again how "free" the markets were as the banks navigated thousands of regulations and directives.
Like I have said many times, this is a false theory that is put forward by the bank lobby.
Indeed... There's more than enough evidence to suggest that there has been a lot of progress.
The contribution of these "binding covenants" to the crisis has been studied extensively. The claims that you're referring to are made by people (e.g. Edward Pinto and Peter Wallison) who are looking to absolve the banks and their leadership of all responsibility for terrible decisions. These claims are so obviously not supported by actual data, it's hard to imagine that the people making such statements don't have an ulterior motive.I don't understand how a legal act with binding covenants in black and white can be a "theory"?