Debt Tsunami: The Alan Greenspan Legacy

Posted by freedomforall 1 day, 19 hours ago to Economics
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Excerpt:
"In the 1960s, as a young economist influenced by Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Greenspan strongly supported the gold standard. In his 1966 essay “Gold and Economic Freedom,” he argued that gold-backed money was essential for laissez-faire capitalism. It restrained governments from inflating the currency to fund welfare states or deficits, preventing the erosion of savings and the boom-bust cycles caused by fiat money manipulation. He viewed central banking and unbacked currency as tools for hidden wealth confiscation through inflation.

This essay is what endeared him to Rand personally. He became a valued member of her inner circle at a time when such circles of influence dominated the Manhattan scene. He won her confidence while his consulting firm was growing in influence. His clients were among the biggest players on Wall Street. His closeness to Rand and her circle contributed to the sense that they had at the time that Rand’s ideas were in ascendance, as her book sales only grew.

Once in power, however, Greenspan operated within the fiat system that he once criticized. He became known for discretionary, flexible monetary policy that prioritized short-term economic stability and growth over rigid rules.
...
With sound money and a free market, the interest rate was a reflection of the savings rate. Investors would only borrow what was available, while savers were rewarded for their thrift with high interest rates. The rate of return for financial capital would tend toward an equilibrium identical to industrial output levels. That means that you are always better off saving than taking risks unless you have an eye toward entrepreneurial speculation. That was the balance: save, invest, grow.

Greenspan’s efforts turned the table over. The Fed embarked on a new experiment that would reward debt more than saving through one simple trick. He would push down rates to the point that saving paid less than investing in stocks, such that anyone could go into serviceable debt and invest and make more money with financial markets. Thus began what is called financialization. It overthrew the traditional workings of capitalism for a new calculation that stopped rewarding thrift and started rewarding leverage above all else.

Quite the achievement for a man who decades earlier had condemned this very system!"


All Comments

  • Posted by Lucky 20 hours, 31 minutes ago
    One of life's mysteries- Greenspan at the Fed.
    He stated who he was, what he understood, what will work and what will not.
    Then he was appointed to the Federal Reserve. His views and policies changed, radically.
    Why?

    mccannon01 says "Irrational exuberance". Got carried away by the power?
    Corruption? Made more on the side than with the authentic policies?
    Not that we know about.

    Sometimes I think the Fed would work right with a light touch.
    But a light touch appears to be impossible, so- abolish it.
    Reply | Permalink  
  • Posted by mccannon01 21 hours, 11 minutes ago
    "Irrational exuberance" goes down in history as just another Fedspeak "what-did-he-just-say?" utterance of an elite fooling the the rest of us while we're getting screwed. They're piloting a bad system that owns them (and us) and can't fix it.
    Reply | Permalink  

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