Sunday, October 10, 2010

Krugman on the Limits of American Exceptionalism

Paul Krugman compares America's current mortgage morass, associated with the unfolding home ownership and foreclosure fiasco, to that which was encountered during the Asian financial crisis.
After the Asian financial crisis of 1997-1998, it was often said that a key barrier to recovery was the uncertain state of property rights: so much debt had been run up during the boom, and there had been so many defaults in the bust, that it was no longer clear who owned anything. Plus, these countries lacked clear legal procedures, and in general suffered from insufficient rule of law. All this was said, of course, in a tone of superiority: we Americans had solved such problems.
He also states, America's mortgage crisis dwarfs anything that occurred in Thailand and Indonesia by orders of magnitude. 

The crony-capitalists and casino-players on Wall St. have made a mockery of America's international reputation as a safe and secure center of investment.  Gimmickry, sleight of hand agreements, unequivocal fraud, and legislative and regulatory arbitrage were all employed by the MBA ass-clowns in the banking and mortgage industry to secure profits for themselves without taking into account the long-term risk to either their businesses or the nation.  The end result will be a decade of lost growth for America and given that somewhere within that same period another potentially catastrophic economic collapse may occur, based on historic trends and the belief by many economists that an even larger shock lies in wait given the failure of most governments to adequately address the root causes of the great recession, capitalism as we know it today may collapse.

No comments:

Post a Comment