The Greatest Risk to
Americans is the Federal Government, Not Bank Failures
by Scott S. Powell 3-20-2023
One of the benefits of bankruptcy and economic failure of banks,
financial exchanges and businesses is that such events shine light on the direct
and indirect causes of insolvency. The recent failure of two major banks—Silicon
Valley Bank and Signature Bank—and the forced bailout and recapitalization of First
Republic Bank, have caused some chatter projecting these developments is as harbingers
of falling dominoes—leading to the collapse of the U.S. financial system.
Globalist
Deep State players may be pushing that narrative to promote fear which can
prompt banks runs for the purpose of consolidation and centralization of
banking institutions, which is a necessary stage to roll out a central bank digital currency (CBDC). But
Americans should not be fooled. The balance sheets of American banks are stronger
today than they were at the time of the 2008 financial crisis. The main problem
is that the inflation that has been triggered by Biden’s policies has now
enveloped the economy, driving interest rates up and valuation of all bank’s bond
portfolios down.
The
core of most financial and business failures is management’s bad judgment and loss
of discipline—both moral and financial. In fact, economics and morality are
brought together in an axiom known as “moral hazard.” Moral hazards are situations
where financial actors such as banks and brokerages have incentive to take more
risk as they bear less and less of the cost of that risk. For instance, banks like
Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) are likely to make more risky loans when they know
that government views them with political favor and will bail out the bank’s
depositors even beyond the FDIC protection limits.
SVB’s recent failure had two main
components: 1) Losses from excessive
lending to new and unproven companies in the politically favored climate
technology and sustainability sector: and 2) The loss of capital from bank
management’s failure to hedge against bond price declines from inflation and
higher interest rates. This resulted in a forced sale in SVB’s bond
portfolio—resulting in a $1.8 billion impairment of critical bank capital.
It’s
good that the specific links in the chain of moral hazards that brought
about the financial collapse of 2008,
which precipitated the Great Recession—a national economic crisis considered
second in severity and duration to Depression of the 1930s—are not present
today. But we need to see links in new chains of moral hazard that have
developed.
Looking
back, the seeds of 2008 crisis were planted a decade earlier. Political
pressure was brought to bear on the Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) to increase affordable housing. HUD in turn pushed the Government Sponsored
Enterprises—Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—to accept and purchase subprime mortgages.
Banks then responded by increasing lending to weak borrowers unqualified for
conventional loans, utilizing the more lenient underwriting requirements of
subprime mortgages, knowing that those loans would not stay on their books. In 2007,
the year before the collapse, about 40% of new mortgage underwriting was in the
risk category of subprime loans, which were securitized and sold to investors,
with the bulk going into the portfolios of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Fannie and Freddie had a pivotal role in
the US. Housing market for several prior decades. They were considered blue
chip stocks and “too big to fail” due to both the size of their mortgage portfolios
and their role in providing liquidity to the mortgage market. But because of the
politization of their business that led to huge growth of subprime mortgage
acquisitions, by 2007 both companies were reporting losses from growing
defaults in their subprime holdings. Less than a year later, by April of 2008 both
companies collapsed—requiring a $187 billion bailout from the taxpayers through
the federal government.
Looking ahead, the greatest risk to the
U.S. economy is not private sector bank failures. The real risk to America’s
financial stability is rooted in the public sector.
First, we have an out-of-control federal
government that has grown into a leviathan of vast bureaucratic, unaccountable,
and highly politicized agencies that undermine efficient and impartial
allocation of resources by favoring some industries and hurting others. Second,
we have a Congress that is a handmaiden to increasing systemic moral hazard
through fiscal policy—passing for example the $1.2 trillion “infrastructure
bill” of 2021, making available hundreds of billions to unproven technologies directly
and indirectly through subsidies and household tax credits. Third, we have a
Federal Reserve whose monetary policy accommodates endless government deficit
spending and national debt growth, while largely failing at its primary job—keeping
interest rates low while promoting full employment. In practice, Fed policy has
fluctuated between inflationary expansion of the money supply through low
interest rates, and then counter
policies that contract the money supply by sharp interest rate increases, which
often precipitate recessions.
America is undergoing a cultural and
political war not unlike the cultural revolution that consolidated Mao’s power
and control in China. The free market system in America is a critical line of
defense. It is preferable for the allocation of resources to be driven by people’s
preferences expressed through the free market, then it is for government to
pick winners and losers and push an economic agenda through subsidization and
regulations that favor a minority. Socialization of unproven products and businesses—whether
in alternative energy, vaccines, agriculture, or climate—should end.
We must remember that expanding
government’s intrusion into the private sector doesn’t come without great risk.
The fact is that the renewing and self-correcting nature of the private sector
is lost in the public sector, where accountability is impaired by obfuscation
of responsibility, failure gets socialized, and special interests benefit even
when the public good is ill-served.
Far better for America’s citizenry and
businesses to have a strength and resourcefulness that comes from free exchange
of ideas and information, creativity, honesty, and self-reliance than to have a
dependence on a profligate and corrupt government.
______________
Scott Powell is a member of
the Committee on the Present Danger China and senior fellow at Discovery
Institute. His recent book, Rediscovering America, was #1 new release
in history for eight straight weeks at Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1637581599). Reach him at scottp@discovery.org
Comments
Post a Comment