23 September 2008
Last week, Senator McCain created a stir when he stated the fundamentals of our economy are strong. The ensuing sniping and damage control were predictable but were either warranted?
If so, then what specifically is broken? If not, then why do investments banks hold billions in bad loans? Are the captains of Wall Street inept, criminals, or both? The answer hinges on our understanding of basic economics and ability to connect the dots over time.
Our economic foundation consists of several components.
1. The Executive & Legislative branches of our federal government establish fiscal policy to regulate commerce (Article I), establish a tax system and federal budget, direct government spending, and provide for regulatory oversight.
2. The Federal Open Market Committee (aka The Fed) establishes monetary policy to manage the supply of money, set interest rates, buy and sell government securities, designate deposit reserve levels, and establish the discount rate for loans from the Federal Reserve.
Fiscal and monetary policies balance each other to help provide stability in a dynamic economy managed and often driven by emotional humans.
3. The United States embraces a free market economy based on the socio-economic construct called capitalism wherein trade, industry production, and investments are privately controlled. Our economy often reflects the inverse and complex relationships between interest rates, bond yields, the value of the dollar on international markets, and the size of the federal deficit.
4. The American worker operates within this free market possessed with an entrepreneurial spirit and an understanding of hard work, risk and reward. At least, that’s the intent. A strong work ethic and a desire to invest, save, and spend is the norm and it is anathema to most white- and blue-collar American workers to expect a handout.
At their core, each of the financial crises since 1980 has not been caused by greed on Wall Street or in corporate boardrooms, although behavioral and regulatory improvement is needed. The proximate cause remains liberal social policies that have been allowed to morph into politically correct regulations that were then foisted upon our financial system by Congress and special interests. Specifically in this case, the federal government is responsible for mandates that banks provide home mortgage loans to those unqualified to receive them. And yet now many in Congress are attempting to displace blame to the President and Wall Street.
Senator McCain said this morning that we need more accountability and transparency. I agree. Only the emphasis should be on Congress, not Wall Street.
Stu McLennan
Harker Heights
