by sniglet » Tue Oct 14, 2008 9:22 am
The repeal of Glass-Steagall really wasn't all that much of a factor in spawning the credit bubble. And neither was lax regulation. In fact, it was government intervention itself which was the primary cause of the bubble.
The GSEs have been subsidizing mortgages, encouraging greater spending on homes. The government even encouraged the GSEs to lend to a greater number of people with poor credit in order to broaden the ranks of home-ownership. The mortgage tax deduction is perhaps the BIGGEST evil, which heavily encourages mal-investment on housing.
Deposit insurance is another of the pillars upon which the bubble rests, by encouraging savers to be irresponsible, only choosing their banks based on service and interest rates rather than prudent risk management.The super-low interest rates maintained by the central banks were just icing on the cake.
The government encouraged mal-investments in real-estate and lulled everyone into thinking that everything was "safe", since the government would bail them out if anything bad happened. I fail to see how even MORE government involvement is going to make things better.