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Volcker Claims Concern About Moral Hazard

Tuesday, September 29, 2009 – by Staff Report

Paul Volcker

Volcker said Obama's plan implies the government will be prepared to bail out the firms in a crisis, encouraging even more risky behavior in a phenomenon known as "moral hazard." Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker (pictured left) isn't too happy with the White House's proposal for financial regulation reform because it retains the "too big to fail" doctrine. The Obama administration plans to subject "systemically important" financial firms to more stringent regulation by the Fed. In testimony before Congress, Volcker pointed out that this idea implies the government will be prepared to bail out the firms in a crisis, encouraging even more risky behavior in a phenomenon known as "moral hazard." "Whether they say it or not, that carries the connotation in the market that they're too big to fail," said Volcker, chairman of the White House Economic Recovery Advisory Board, Bloomberg reports. He also called for stricter controls on commercial banks than the Obama administration has proposed, saying they should be barred from sponsoring hedge funds and private equity funds and forbidden to engage in proprietary trading. – NewsMax

Dominant Social Theme: Volcker speaks for responsibility.

Free-Market Analysis: One of the things that central banking does among other things is basically turn marketplace finance into radioactive waste. Mention hedge funds, private equity and derivatives and responsible people in Washington DC go apoplectic. Of course, in each instance, the marketplace is a fairly unregulated one. And there is nothing wrong with this absent central banking. The ability to print unlimited amounts of money is the marketplace's problem – not free-market profit-making strategies.

Why should it be that the market throws up so many dangerous financial phenomena? The answer of course is because central banking itself encourages the bubbles and euphoria that affect both public and private markets. In fact, there is nothing "public" about public markets except a regulatory enterprise. Public firms are firmly under the thumb of a variety of regulatory authorities while private firms are somewhat exempt. Public firms have a variety of reporting duties while private firms of all sorts have fewer.

The idea however that public firms are any safer than private ones is a stretch, especially given the most recent meltdown in which central banks and treasury authorities had to throw tens of trillions into the market to prevent the collapse of even the bluest of blue chip companies.

Volcker seems to speak for the market in his comments. He is upset that the government is providing implicit assurances to the market for certain firms. This should not be, he believes. But at the same time, Volcker comes down on the side of stringent regulation for private enterprises that are unregulated. Volcker never explains – though he must know – that it is the very institution he once chaired (the Federal Reserve) that helps create chaos in the marketplace worldwide and poisons the well of entrepreneurship.

This is the same sort of schizophrenic logic that dogs the larger Conservative and Republican movements when it comes to sticking up for free markets. On the one hand, free-markets are lauded. On the other, a vast, aggressive and highly-regulated multi-trillion dollar military-industrial complex is not only tolerated but supported by the same individuals who support the nation's entrepreneurship.

Between the US military and Federal Reserve, there is not, unfortunately, very much free market left. Those on the "right" are reduced to battling over changes that are really on the margin – tax rates, regulatory structure, etc. The real power in America is held by the banking industry and its related military and pharmaceutical holdings among others.

Conclusion: There is nothing the financial marketplace would cast up that would be considered dangerous were it not for constant money stimulation. It is central banking policies that make derivatives, hedge funds and private equity "dangerous" – in the sense that these instrumentalities are subject to failure. Were there an honest money standard such as a market-based gold and silver one, all the strategies and asset-gathering in the world would not likely prove much more dangerous than the current crop of large, hemmed and heavily regulated ones. The choice is between further pruning back financial innovation and capital creation – especially for entrepreneurs – and pruning central banking. We know where Volcker stands.




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  Posted by Kevin on 10/01/09 06:47 PM

Well okay maybe blood sucking is a bit over the top heheh. How about money sucking?

Now how about this Iran thing. Are they serious man? I hear people clamoring for war. This can not be good. Sure would help the elites though a good ole war. Yeah get everyone on board it will be like the old days... Stop the bad people before they stop us.

We are on the edge and who will be the winner take all remains to be seen. Lets see what the Vegas Odds makers come up with.
as the band plays on.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the clarification.

  Posted by Kevin on 09/30/09 10:54 PM

Sure they laud entrepenreneurship.

Why would they not? They need a nation of hard working entreprenuers so they can suck the people's blood.

A man's labor is his blood and sweat a man (or wombman) produces something of value to some one else and a deal is struck value for value in the eye of the beholder.

We are trapped by our own greed when we want more value than we can attain at any given time So off we go to our 'friennd' the bankster and so the story goes....

If only we people could come up with our own 'store of value' heck we could use anything right.
Shiny easily molded metals seem perfect for this.I don't know if thes finacial wizards are stuck in some sort of mindlock and can't see or... do they see? and know.

Mr. Volcker sure seems concerned in the photo. IS he serious? is he really a nice caring man looking out for the good of his fellow man, trying to provide a valueable service? Is he an evil man drinking the blood of society? or do these hidden money masters run him like a puppet? Man how does this thing work? It this what you guys mean when you say the Internet is changing the scenario?

Even dumbed down slaves like us are getting the idea, or is it all a bait and switch the good guys are the bad guys and the bad guys are the good guys.

Gosh It sure does seem like the earth is on the verge of something. What it will be ... well lots of scenarios there too.

Took my daughter to Saratoga battlefield today all those men who fought.. what did they fight for? High ideals? Maybe so but wasn't it land.. tangible property to make use of?

Reply from The Daily Bell

Don't know about the blood-sucking part...

  Posted by Steve on 09/29/09 01:31 PM

I was a bit dismayed at this article.

I do realize that it's a bit like giving a person a knife and fork and then placing a cooked elephant in front of the diner. It's a subject that is both complex and emotionally charged.

At the onset I would say that I do not agree with forced vaccination, though would agree that in certain cases quarantine might be in order, the classic quarantine case that comes to mind was Typhoid Mary. Mary Mallon was a cook who was commensally infected with typhus and who infected a number of people, for those who care to look it up. She was forcibly quarantined but later released when she agreed to never work as a cook again.

Vaccines are a magic bullet and are economically viable, but not without risks. The most notable incident was the RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus) trial (1969?) which turned tragic with many in the trial becoming ill and some dying. The Gullian-Barre outbreak related to the 1976 swine flu saw about 30 deaths GB and as many as 450 cases. Yet, the cause and relationship is still unanswered. Was it a contaminant and not the vaccine? It is a mystery and there is little to link a vaccine to the current H1N1 to that as a likely outcome.

It is indeed about money. But almost ever chemical that industry uses undergoes a NIOSH criteria study which relates risk to cost and this is done as a matter of routine. If it costs industry $100,000 to save 100 lives a year then that cost is justified. If the theoretical cost to bring a fatality rate of a chemical to 1 person per year, is 4 trillion dollars, then the cost for that level of control is not justified.

As far as big pharma has passed laws to ensure that it cannot be sued by aggrieved parents, I'm not sure I agree for as much as I dislike some of the actions of big pharma, big pharma does not in itself pass laws.

Almost ever reader reading this has given up its right to sue his or her employer for workplace accidents. It is called Workers Compensation Law. Should we then say: think twice before working because big industry has passed laws to ensure it cannot be sued?

About 4,070 women died in 2009 from Cervical Cancer. The prevalent virulent strains of virus mostly (97) responsible are those that the vaccine protects against.

So we have one death in 1.5 million vaccinations versus how many deaths averted in future years? It is, admittedly a lottery system with a whole lot of winning numbers (except in the RSV trial) and some losing numbers. We hear about the losers, but never hear about the person who did not die of seasonal influenza, tetanus, etc, because we don't know who the ones that would have died did not.

Britain's vaccine agency reported 2,137 adverse reactions to Cerarix out of 1.4 million inoculations. But if one looks at these adverse reactions, many include mild rash, nausea, fainting, muscle aches and other things that well, are not really that "adverse." A handful of student at the school reported nausea or dizziness after receiving the inoculation that day.

Well, if I heard that a person just got vaccinated and was taken away to hospital due to the injection; I too might feel dizzy and nauseous, though I' likely relate it to my own propensity to anxiety.

Let's keep reporting here a bit objective and impartial please? And in parting consider this: Cervical cancer development from the virulent strains almost never occur in infected women who do not smoke. Tobacco smoking is synergistic in the carcinogenicity of the virus.

Simply outlaw all tobacco. Hey, let's bring on the Sin Tax people! What, why am I being shown the exit door?

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the great feedback.

We are not enamored of government law in general, but big pharma's determination to shield itself from litigation is telling.

Most vaccines are not widely tested so far as we know.

Adverse incidences are probably under-reported for numerous reasons.

There are plenty of questions as to whether vaccines contribute to autism, asthma and other ailments that are on the rise in the US and Europe.

The reaction to viruses and bacteria from vaccines is an artificial one that draws down the immune system.

There are likely too many vaccines being given to children these days at an early age.

There are still questions about the preservatives in vaccines.

On and on. Vaccines may be a magic bullet but indiscriminate application to ever-smaller pools of potential users is a troubling trend in our humble opinion.

  Posted by Tawny on 09/29/09 01:05 PM

The whole mercantilist system - against which our 'founding fathers' fought - to which a central bank of issue of a fiat currency is an integral and essential 'tool of conquest,' is, behind all the smoke and mirrors, in essence a system that creates an unlevel playing field that facilitates - in fact enables and ensures - a good ol' boy ruling clique network that systematically exploits (captures the wealth of) the producers.

The 'public/private'distinction becomes obscured - finally it effectively, in practice as opposed to theory, dissolves - becomes meaningless, as all of government's centers of power - executive, legislative, judicial, regulatory - are 'captured.'

To keep this home truth from getting out, information - schools, mass media - are likewise 'captured.'

As Jonathan Swift remarked, 'Politics, as the word is commonly understood, are nothing but corruptions.'

Was it Oppenheimer, or Nock, who succinctly remarked that the state is the organization of the political means of parasitic acquisition...

Think I am overmuch given to gloom and the 'conspiratorial outlook'?

Feast your sheltered little eyeballs - and brain - on these. Read and weep as they say....

Click to view link

and also go to Patrick Byrne's 'deep capture' website and start reading.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the links.

  Posted by Howard Bernbaum on 09/29/09 08:10 AM

I agree and disagree with the article.

Unwarranted and mandatory mass vaccinations for a relatively minor flu such as H1N1 is wrong. Particularly when there has been so much harm attributed to the vaccine.

On the other hand, diseases such as measles, polio, whooping cough, scarlet fever, typhoid, etc used to kill millions of people. The availability of vaccines against these diseases has increased the average lifespan of the human species by decades.

The case can be made that making vaccines available to the masses is for the overall good with one caveat. It needs to be a proven vaccine so that the rare death is regrettable, but not a reason to discontinue the program.

We have reports of an entire naval ship coming down with H1N1 flu as a result of the vaccine attended by two deaths. That is a tragedy and unwarranted. Also a harbinger of what's to come when politicians take over the decision making process for the medical profession.

Reply from The Daily Bell

This is just our point, thanks ...

We have reports of an entire naval ship coming down with H1N1 flu as a result of the vaccine attended by two deaths. That is a tragedy and unwarranted. Also a harbinger of what's to come when politicians take over the decision making process for the medical profession.

  Posted by Eileen on 09/29/09 01:45 AM

Could it be that the child who died had a reaction due to having really great immunities to HPV to begin with due to a diet high in vitamin A, the one that fights off viruses?

Reply from The Daily Bell

That's a startling thought.