The lump of unfairness fallacy
Once you understand that the problem is a fairness issue rather than a dollars-and-cents issue, the policy space grows wider. Holding constant the level of expenditure, one can make bail-outs more or less fair by the degree to which you demand sacrifice from the people you are bailing out. TARP was deeply stupid not because it meant socializing risks and costs created by bankers. TARP was terrible public policy because it socialized risks and costs while demanding almost no sacrifice at all from the people most responsible for those risks. The alternative to TARP was never “let the banks fail, and see how the bankruptcy system deals with it.” The alternative would have been to inject public capital (socialize risks and costs!) while also haircutting creditors, writing-off equityholders, firing management, and aggressively investigating past behavior. It was not the money that made TARP unpopular. It was the unfairness. And the unfairness was not at all necessary to resolve the financial problem.
If the Obama administration, or any administration, decided to encourage principal writedowns by having the government simply cover half the loss, that would be unfair … Fairness should never be a policy afterthought … A large part of why the financial crisis has been so corrosive is that people understand that major financial institutions violated these norms and got away with it … .
- Interfluidity nails it again
7 months ago • 24 notes