March 09, 2009

And the truths are the needed seeds for its reconstruction

Sir Martin Wolf gets to set the tone in the series on “The future of capitalism” and titles his opening article “Seeds of its own destruction” March 9. I object that for reasons I cannot explain he leaves out what some of us consider the fundamental causes for this crisis.

Wolf writes about “frenetic financial innovations”, “innovative financial systems” and of “how little banks understood of the risks they were supposed to manage” without even mentioning the fact that the Basel Committee ,with their minimum capital requirements for the banks, innovated to such an extent that banks were duly authorized to leverage their capital for instance in the case of corporations rated AAA and AA- to a never before heard astonishing level of 62 to 1; and that it was these capital requirements that gave way to the mother of all the regulatory arbitrage booms.

Also when Wolf writes on how “huge capital flows…largely ended up in a small number of high-income countries and particularly in the US” among other he suggests the US government programs but finds no place at all for the credit rating agencies. Wolf does simply not want to accept that the big explosion in the growth of the subprime mortgage market had very little to do with a FHA or a Fannie Mae and all to do with the excessively empowered credit rating agencies stamping their AAA sign on securities fabricated on Wall Street. Wolf simply refuses to ask himself why for instance Europe financed more subprime mortgages in the US than the US itself.

The current crisis is a remarkable fertile ground for all type of other-agenda-pushing and I have already heard arguments attributing it to Israel/Palestine, genetically modified seeds, increased narcotic production in Afghanistan, the military control of the political apparatus of the world and other similar mindless arguments. The only way we can avoid this crisis from degenerating into something even worse is to defend the truth and the whole truth about it.