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comment by kleinbl00
kleinbl00  ·  4332 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Ayn Rand is for children.

Alan Greenspan on Ayn Rand

I had an economics professor state that Alan Greenspan had had more influence on the Western world than George H Bush and Bill Clinton rolled together. To say that Libertarianism is "fringe" is to have slept through 2008.





sphericalvoxel  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

In spite of my other posts, I'm pretty skeptical of the importance of monetary policy. For starters, it seems like a misnomer, since there's no particularly good reason to believe that the money multiplier is reliable. That is, it seems like monetary policy is based on an exogenous theory of money, while in reality it seems more likely that lending is driven by demand at a particular interest rate -- and while the Fed can set the interest rate, it can't set demand, and in that sense the causality of the money multiplier may very well go the other direction.

But even if money is exogenous and monetary policy works, it's presumably even less relevant to asset bubbles, because the interest rate of a loan only matters if you plan on holding it. If the plan is to buy a house and flip it, thus extinguishing the loan quickly, then the rate of the loan doesn't matter.

If there's any way in which Greenspan (or the Fed generally) was important, it was that it's supposed to be a regulator for the banking system, and it totally dropped the ball.

kleinbl00  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    In spite of my other posts, I'm pretty skeptical of the importance of monetary policy

...

    If there's any way in which Greenspan (or the Fed generally) was important, it was that it's supposed to be a regulator for the banking system

You have a uselessly limited definition of 'monetary policy' if your definition doesn't include regulating the banking system.

read up.

sphericalvoxel  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Monetary policy is (allegedly) controlling the size of the money supply as a matter of macroeconomic policy enforcement, but I can see how "..." is a solid refutation of the problems for that viewpoint posed by endogenous theories of money. It turns out, just because something is accepted wisdom, that doesn't make it true.

Regarding your link, I'm immediately turned off by anyone who would use the phrase "the grand illusion called money." Money has value for a very good and very tangible reason. Though the fact that it has a testimonial from Ron Paul just makes it sound like even more of a joke.

kleinbl00  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

The point being that the two statements are directly contradictory.

We're done.

mk  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    But even if money is exogenous and monetary policy works, it's presumably even less relevant to asset bubbles, because the interest rate of a loan only matters if you plan on holding it. If the plan is to buy a house and flip it, thus extinguishing the loan quickly, then the rate of the loan doesn't matter.

But does flipping it really extinguish the loan if the purchaser took out a loan to buy it? If the purchaser was able to get a larger loan based on the lower rates, then the low rate helped create the sale (i.e. the house was now worth more than the original owner payed for it, because someone with an equal income can now get a larger mortgage). Now the original owner has more money, and he goes out and gets a larger mortage too, buying a more-expensive home, whose owner, etc. etc.

sphericalvoxel  ·  4330 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Well, mortgage bubbles in particular tend to be accompanied by mortgage fraud.

One of the biggest factors in the global financial crisis was so-called accounting control fraud: executive compensation was (is) based on quarterly revenue, and executives could fraudulently increase quarterly income by issuing a ton of loans with negative expected returns. The bank might go under in five years, but why does the executive care? Then, on the flip side, brokers are paid on commission, so they have strong incentives to make sure that mortgages make it. I point this out to say that neither morals nor "rational self-interest" represented serious constraints on the growth of lending, because the problem with the argument from self-interest is that it's usually considered with respect to the wrong person's interests.

Anyway, during the later days of the real estate bubble of the '00s, the focus for particularly bad lending shifted to loans in which banks did not actually verify the applicants' stated income. (This is normally reserved for people who the bank has good reason to believe are actually good for it.)

So I suppose the point is, in principle this could represent a higher constraint, but in practice, "where there's a will, there's a way."

mk  ·  4330 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I have no doubt that mortgage fraud played a big role. But what I am suggesting is that monetary policy could fuel an asset bubble simply by increasing available credit by pinning down rates. No doubt, relaxed lending and fraud would only exacerbate this, which I'm sure it did.

sphericalvoxel  ·  4330 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Yes, I suspect that is possible, but then my theory of asset prices is that people have a bias toward the status quo, and the perception of change ("new information") makes people think prices should change, so they proceed to change prices. So there is a question about how much policy rate changes are just due to this sort of circular reasoning ("something should be happening, so let's do something!") versus actual changes to the availability of credit.

That being said, the real skepticism here is whether monetary policy can be used to stop an asset bubble once it's started.

user-inactivated  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Yeah, I've read that book. It's interesting that Greenspan managed to make everyone forget he was an acolyte of Rand's right about the time he shot to fame. I've also heard the claims of Greenspan's massive (negative) influence on the west.

So if your argument is that Rand (and libertarianism) influenced Greenspan, who influenced everything else (especially the bubble, which he partially caused), then I agree with you. But that's an extremely roundabout way to have influence.

kleinbl00  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

In what way is it roundabout? That's like saying Von Mises was only relevant in an extremely roundabout way because he'd been dead 15 years by the time the Austrians really started being prominent.

user-inactivated  ·  4331 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Because Rand was only one of presumably dozens of influences on Greenspan's political makeup, and Greenspan was only one of several causes of the 2008 collapse. And keep in mind that fringe beliefs can cause major occurrences and still be considered fringe.

(Also as I said below to u/sphericalvoxel, fringe to describe libertarians is somewhat hyperbolic.)