Business Standard
Saturday, Nov 21, 2009
 
drived banner
drived banner
  Advanced Search
Feedback | RSS
Content Guide
Follow us on  
  Home  ||||||||| 
 BS Headlines | News Now | BS Weekend | The strategist | The Smart Investor | Lunch with BS | Columnists | BS 1000
  Hindi | E-Paper | Motoring  | Live Markets |  Smart Portfolios II  | Blogs | Portfolios >
  Search:

Ajit Balakrishnan: The novelist who is to blame
THE WORLDWIDE FINANCIAL CRISIS: I
Ajit Balakrishnan / New Delhi November 14, 2008, 0:22 IST

If the famous Greenspan ‘put’ is at the heart of the crisis, blame it on the faith in unbridled free enterprise he inherited from Ayn Rand.

 
 
News Now
Paper
Specials
- Sensex makes remarkable recovery, regains 17K
- F&O Outlook: Expect firework in Dec series
- Obama's approval goes below 50% in Gallup Poll
- Tata, Honeywell's David Cote to co-chair Indo-US CEO Forum
- India third largest economy by 2050: Carnegie Endowment
More  

Downstairs from my office in New York around the corner from Wall Street and the New York Stock Exchange is the gigantic 3½ tonne bronze statue of the bull that symbolises Wall Street. On a recent cool October morning, I found myself watching the morning sun bounce off the shoulders of the bull and wondering where to start the search for the meaning of the financial meltdown that has destroyed names like Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns and forced proud and independent institutions like Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Royal Bank of Scotland and countless others to seek solace in the arms of their governments.

Is it just the greed of Wall Street chieftains that brought this catastrophe about? Or is it just a part of a natural business cycle where a boom that is set off by low interest rates winds down only to rise again and for good times to return?

Then it struck me. Perhaps the answer lies in Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand’s 1950’s novel.

Atlas Shrugged follows the fortunes of a woman, Daggny Taggart, as she fights to keep her family’s railway business alive in a futurist America where “looters” and “moochers” run rife. “Looters” are government tax collectors who promptly confiscate other people’s earnings and “moochers” are people who demand other people’s earnings because they are unable to earn money themselves. Looters and moochers hate the talented that have the ability to earn money that they themselves cannot earn. In protest, all the talented people in this society decide to go on strike by withdrawing from it. No longer will they contribute their ideas, their inventions, their scientific research or their business leadership to the rest of the world. In other words, they are like the Greek hero Atlas who has finally decided to shrug off the burden of the world that he has had to carry for so long.

Atlas Shrugged epitomised Ayn Rand’s faith in an unbridled free enterprise system; the belief that the clear separation of the economy and state was as central to human progress as the separation of the church and the state had been in an earlier era. And the belief that any form of state intervention in society is fatally flawed and would lead to stagnation.

Alan Greenspan, who, first as chairman of the Council of Economic Affairs and later as chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of the US, was at the center of economic decision making for two decades right up to 2006 was a great admirer of Ayn Rand and a true believer in the philosophy she espoused in Atlas Shrugged. “I became a regular at the weekly gatherings in her apartment,” he says in his autobiography, The Age of Turbulence, and was captivated by her philosophy that “… individuals have innate nobility and that the highest duty of every individual is to flourish by realising his potential…” When Greenspan took his oath of office at the White House for his first public policy job as the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, he had Ayn Rand standing beside him.

As chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank, when confronted with a seemingly unending series of financial calamities — the bursting of the technology stock bubble, the 9/11 attacks, the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan — Greenspan was steadfast in his belief in this laissez-faire philosophy, cut interest rates to rock bottom levels and kept it low for a long period. His belief was that this low interest rate would ignite entrepreneurial activity in US housing construction which in turn would stimulate other entrepreneurial economic activity and stop the US from sliding into a recession. This happened exactly as Greenspan predicted: housing construction and prices zoomed upwards, thousands of new jobs were created and the US economic growth leapt forward.

A few observers did express concern that a housing bubble was under way and would cause a mess when it burst, but Greenspan waved them away. Speculative selling or buying of houses, he said, is not as easy as speculating in securities. Sellers have to incur substantial transaction costs like brokerage fees and taxes and these costs act as dampeners to speculation. In any event, there is no national market for housing, he said and thus, even if housing bubbles do form and then burst they are likely to be localised to some towns or at worst some regions. Such phenomena cannot affect any other part of the United States, let alone any other part of the world.

But in holding steadfastly to this laissez–faire philosophy, Greenspan was overlooking another development: a financial innovation called “mortgage-backed securities” an example of the new world of “derivatives”. These securities would, when the housing bubble burst, carry “the mess they created” not only to other parts of the United States but also to other parts of the world.

Such destructive power would derivatives wield that Warren Buffett, the man whose financial acumen Americans respect the most, would describe them later as “weapons of mass destruction”, “contracts devised by madmen” and the derivatives business itself as “ like hell…easy to enter and almost impossible to exit.”

But others have described derivatives as a modern invention that ranks up there with the microprocessor and antibiotics in its potential to benefit mankind. In the next part of this three-part series, we’ll try and understand what these derivatives are, how they came to be objects of such veneration and hate.

Also Read: 

THE WORLDWIDE FINANCIAL CRISIS: II

THE WORLDWIDE FINANCIAL CRISIS: III

ajitb@rediff.co.in  

Arrow Other Stories     
- Sensex makes remarkable recovery, regains 17K
- F&O Outlook: Expect firework in Dec series
- Obama's approval goes below 50% in Gallup Poll
- Tata, Honeywell's David Cote to co-chair Indo-US CEO Forum
- India third largest economy by 2050: Carnegie Endowment
More  
  Read Business news in 
  Get financial advisory and solutions for your projects
  Holidays starting at a delightful EMI of Rs 3481
  Switch on and say hello to Monday morning !
  Your dream home can now be a reality.
  Visit Fortis for a preventive health check-up & get a 20% discount.
  Follow the ups and downs of your investments. Try our new Portfolio Tracker
  Kolkata Dock \ Freight contract for the British Gurkhas Nepal
  Find how Midsize Businesses use ERP to gain competitive advantage
  Trading in Forex is now as easy as 1-2-3
  Discover an economical and cost effective way to market your products and services
  Giftwithlove.com: Same day delivery of Flowers and Cakes to India
  Download the E-book on the Future of Business Intelligence
  Learn Best Practices for improving customer satisfaction
  Know your customers better... download the free e-book on CRM
   Discussion Board / User Comments    
Display Name  Email-Id  
Post your comment
Kellard
The economic meltdown in the U.S. was essentially caused by government intervention and regulations, not their lack thereof. For many years now, banking, housing and insurance have been the most regulated areas of the economy. As to Mr. Greenspan, the philosophy he put into practice is the opposite of capitalism. Back in the 1960s, Ayn Rand taught him why capitalism requires that there be a wall of separation between economics and state.
Reply
Genie
It is government intervention, not Ayn Rand nor capitalism, that is to blame for the current financial crisis. The manipulation of interest rates by Greenspan (who rejected Ayn Rand?s ideas decades ago) is government intervention in the free market, not laissez-faire capitalism. Other government intervention responsible for the crisis include the Community Reinvestment Act forcing banks to lend money to those with poor credit, and government-created Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Reply
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- Bharti Airtel slashes roaming rates by 60%
- Govt may allow private sector investment in education
- Suzlon Energy's three promoters pledge 2.8 cr shares
- Patni may host all IT services on 'cloud'
- Bank stocks rise on merger talk
 
 More  
BS Poll
Cast Your Vote
 
   
 
Should rich charitable trusts be brought under the tax net?
  Yes  No
Submit

  Hot Searches  
 
Amitabh Bachchan | N Chandrasekaran | Swine Flu | Mukesh Ambani | Anil Ambani | TCS | Infosys |  Air India |  Duronto |  Pranab Mukherjee | Sonia Gandhi | Congress | Rahul Gandhi |  Bigg Boss |  New Pension Scheme |  Service tax |  Excise duty |  Sebi | Tech Mahindra |  Ramalinga Raju |  Satyam |  Reliance  |  RBI |  GDP |  Gold |  Ratan Tata |  ICICI |  |  B-School | DLF  Sensex |  Tax calculator | Home Loan  | Bollywood | Personal Finance |  inflation | oil prices |  World Bank | Reliance Infratel |  HDFC |  Barack Obama  
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter Portfolio Tracker
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring
FOR HOT PRODUCTS
BS Bazaar.com
Home | Markets & Investing | Companies & Industry | Banking & Finance | Economy & Policy | Opinion
Life & Leisure | Management & Marketing | Tech World
About Us | Partner With Us | Code of Conduct | Careers | Advertise with us| Terms & Conditions | Disclaimer | Site Map | Contact Us | Feedback