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  • Is This the End of 'Too Big to Fail'? [View article]
    Not sure why Congress likes to make big complicated to police regulatory schemes (and too easily gamed) that will in all likelihood fail to prduce the desired outcome. Unless of course, failure to regulate IS the real desired outcome. Given the current campaign finance structure, it would not take too long to figure out why...

    In any case, if they are too big to fail, it means they are too big, period. Accordingly they would need to be charged a risk premium to be "too big to fail" as right now they are free-riding the risk to the taxpayers. Since the congress is so keen on "progressive" tax schemes, then maybe it can be progressive in leverage ratios (fat chance). in that regard, the risk premium to be paid would be in reigned-in lending ratios. Basically, the bigger you are as a bank, the more conservative the lending ratio you are allowed. So the huge mega-banks are required to be 10-to-1 or something like that, and the smaller regional banks can be allowed a higher ratio, since if they fail, it is not systemically risky as if Citi were to founder. Of course, one might suppose that the big banks might try to make riskier loans to make more money under such a regime. But that would happen anyways, much better bad loans at 10:1 then 30:1. On another note, under such a scheme, maybe the big banks would be "encouraged" to spin-off/sell-off disparate operations/portfolios into different smaller companies in order to shrink themselves and be able to lend at higher ratios again.
    Oct 29 12:03 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Plan Black: How to Really End the Financial Crisis [View article]
    The resemblence of a free market hasn't existed in the last 100 years. When the government keeps giving tax breaks for this, loopholes for that, pork for this, surtax on that, subsidy for this, money manuipulation every now and again, etc... is that what would be called a "free" market? Or as Morpheus in the Matrix would say "You think that's air you're breathing now?"

    I would like to add to Plan Black the scrapping of the tax code and stripping out all loopholes, subsidies, surtaxes, and have a tax regime that doesn't punish or reward certain activities over others. Otherwise, how can a market truly be "free" as opposed to an illusion of choice.

    On Jul 27 07:42 AM Moon Kil Woong wrote:

    > I think plan black is called the return to free market. Has the concept
    > of that really become that unbelievable and unrealistic? How far
    > we have fallen in 2 short years.
    Jul 27 15:40 pm |Rating: +3 0 |Link to Comment
  • The Road to Economic Hell [View article]
    Many of you are saying capitalist but the more proper term would be "cronyist." You rant against the "greedy" capitalists "stealing" and buying off politicians, etc, etc. Since when is that capitalism? If you can't get the definitions right then arguing about socialism vs. communism vs. capitalism vs. anarchy etc. will be pointless. Cronyism exists in all human systems to some degree. When you rant about the policy decisions of the politicians (which are certainly idiotic since they almost never seem to account for the law of unintended consequences) and call that capitalism, you are quite mistaken. When big business rent-seeks (to get tax breaks or subsidies or pork or whatever) congress to make more regulations(which only a team of lawyers can decipher) that install barriers to entry to the usually smaller and more innovative companies, that is anti-capitalist, not capitalist. Sure they are doing it to keep the profits going for themselves, but it doesn't do big business favors in the long run. The decrease in competition as a result of rent-seeking makes them stagnate, atrophy, then grow to depend on the government for help.
    Mar 05 22:39 pm |Rating: +4 0 |Link to Comment
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