The U.S. government is trying to free up credit, by reducing interest rates and other steps. This is probably good for the economy. It also has the effect of reducing the risks faced by banks which made some very bad investment decisions in purchasing unsecured debt. This is a moral hazard: when things go well, the banks keep the money; when things go badly, the government cushions the blow. The effect is to encourage risky behaviour by banks.
We can avoid a lot of this moral hazard by realizing that banks are run by individual people. We can bail out the bank and punish the people, thus getting the best of both worlds and not encouraging future risky behaviour. Certainly it’s true that some bank CEOs have lost their jobs recently, but they walked away with millions of dollars, which is hardly punishment. I don’t think any of them committed a prison offense, but I certainly think some stiff fines coupled with losing their job would be appropriate–whatever it takes so that they are not rich.
Unfortunately this will never happen because the people who make the regulations are also individual people, and they are friends of the people who run the banks.
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