Why Rescues Don't Work
by
Paul Tustain
BullionVault
Tuesday, April Fool's Day 2008
"...Just like
natural organisms, the financial system must have death to evolve into a better
form..."
NOW THAT HE'S
wearing some sort of do-good government hat, even Hank Paulson is not thinking
straight.
Regulate in New York
and finance goes to Toronto. Regulate
in London, it goes to Frankfurt
or Paris – and since Toronto,
Frankfurt and Paris
are run by the same nervous bureaucrat-types, we can reckon soon enough that the
entire financial markets will be hosted out of Singapore
and Shanghai.
There they will accept the risks as well as the rewards, to
their very considerable long-term benefit.
You simply cannot enjoy being the financial center of the
world but start bleating for government bailout whenever asset prices dip a few
percent. As Paulson is demonstrating, the regulatory price for being bailed out
is far too high. We must all grow up and take a full measure of punishment. The
banks must take theirs.
Let the shareholders and depositors take theirs too. Just
like natural organisms the financial system must have death to evolve into a
better form.
Paulson's plan is a dressed-up confiscation of the profits
of the cautious, and a transfer of those profits straight back to
unreconstructed gamblers in the worst offending banks. This is very unwise.
In these difficult times, profit (or more accurately the
avoidance of loss) should be benefiting those who troubled to understand the
risks in the system, and avoided them. But Paulson's plan is currency creation,
and a devaluation of the good quality assets owned by the cautious. He fails to
understand that unless the system occasionally rewards caution there is no
reason ever to be cautious again.
The market works better without these rescues. Only by
appropriate economic reward to the cautious, when they are right and everyone
else is wrong, will caution sit well beside risk-taking in the financial
system. The real threat to New York's
and London's continued dominance of
the world's future financial system is government regulation itself.
Mr. Paulson should read Hayek's classic The Road to Serfdom, and he would understand the inevitable failure
of his rescue plans. He would see how these top down rules remove society's
flexibility until one day we all wake up in a paralyzed "command"
economy, where nothing can be done without official sanction.
Instead, he has forgotten what a command economy means. He
should study the history of communism's economic successes. It won't take him
long.
Paul Tustain
BullionVault
Gold
price chart, no delay | Free
Report: 5 Myths of the Gold Market
Editor of www.Galmarley.com
and director of BullionVault, Paul Tustain is
a specialist in computer systems for
financial settlement, regulation and risk measurement.
(c) BullionVault 2008
Please Note: This
article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best
place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk.
Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events –
and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.