04 February 2009

A Modest Proposal from Joe Stiglitz


"..."The government should allow every distressed bank to go bankrupt and set up a fresh banking system under temporary state control rather than cripple the country by propping up a corrupt edifice."

Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist


This is the procedure, that is what we do with insolvent banks. That is what the FDIC is for.

We don't prop up the bad banks. The regulators help them become solvent through a resolution and restructuring of their bad debt, and then either sell them, sell their assets independently, or allow them to re-emerge as good banks once they are solvent

This is precisely what Le Café Américain has had on the menu for the banks over the past seven months, with some detail behind it, including systemic reforms.

We do not burden an entire national economy, we do not cripple an entire banking industry including many regional banks who have done no wrong, in propping up a few insolvent institutions who arrived at that state through outrageous bad management.

There is widespread suspicion that this exercise is designed to protect a handful of large money center banks from realizing their losses - JPM, C, Morgan Stanley, B of A, and Goldman Sachs.

Let the system work. Do not continue to privatize the gains and subsidize the losses.

And then let the criminal and civil investigations of the major actors in this modern tragedy begin, if we ever wish to 'restore confidence' in Wall Street in the public and the rest of the world.