Kaffis Mark V wrote:
They didn't force those loan issuances (though other regulation occasionally does), nor force the purchase of said subprime mortgages, however they *did* create an environment where this was artificially profitable and appeared safer than it was, by creating the artificial demand and artificial price increases.
This is what all the anti-regulation people are constantly saying. Regulation tampers with markets and prevents the best interest of the market from being followed.
Even if I accept that, using your own logic, they still didn't cause the recession! Anyone could have done the research and easily figured out that the house price increases were artificial due to F&F's meddling, and not jumped on that time bomb. The double standard here is incredible. You expect that the average consumer do the research when it comes to a mortgage, something he likely does not understand well, so he doesn't get ****. Yet for some reason the banks are not held to that same standard, despite this being their area of expertise. When they don't do their homework and get ****, no, it's not their fault for not researching enough, it's the government's fault for creating those adverse conditions! It's ridiculous.
Furthermore, as far as "deregulation" goes, if the investment banks were unable to see the obvious incoming disaster caused by F&F inflating, what makes you think that in a deregulated market they'll magically be able to avoid getting screwed by large private entities that probably have much more sinister motives and are much better at hiding them?