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Banks on the Brink
A screen shows Lehman Brothers' stock evolution in a financial office in Paris, Monday Sept. 15, 2008. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

A screen shows Lehman Brothers' stock evolution in a financial office in Paris, Monday Sept. 15, 2008. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

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Full-blown crisis on Wall Street in the last 48 hours. Odds are you have never lived through a meltdown like the American financial system is up against right now.

“Shaken to its core,” says The Wall Street Journal. Giant Lehman Brothers, headed for bankruptcy. Once mighty, century-old Merrill Lynch — with its famous brawny bull logo — racing for cover with a sale to Bank of America.

More giants trembling. Everybody praying for a taxpayer bailout. The federal government trying to stop doing that.

This hour, On Point: What just happened, why, and where it ends.

What do you see going on here? How do we stop the bleeding? How did the billionaires get it so wrong? Who will take the hit? Join the conversation and tell us what you think.

-Tom Ashbrook

Guests:

Joining us from Washington, just off a train from New York, is Jon Hilsenrath, chief economics correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. His article this morning looks at the Fed’s effort to calm the markets. And on the Journal’s Real Time Economics blog, he and colleague Sudeep Reddy analyze the government’s decision not to bail out Lehman Brothers.

Also with us from Washington is Vincent Reinhart. From 2001-2007, he was director of the Federal Reserve Board’s Division of Monetary Affairs. He is currently a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Last month he wrote about “Messages from Merrill’s Misfortunes” for The American magazine.

Joining us in our studio is Allen Sinai, chief global economist, strategist, and president of Decision Economics, Inc. He spent 15 years at Lehman Brothers, where he was chief global economist and managing director of Lehman Brothers Global Economics.

And with us from Belmont, Mass., is Nancy Koehn, professor of business administration at Harvard Business School and author of “Creating Modern Capitalism: How Entrepreneurs, Companies, and Countries Triumphed in Three Industrial Revolutions.”

 

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Listener comments
  • To what degree is this financial melt-down likely to affect retirement funds? IRAs, 401K plans and the like?

    To what degree is it likely that the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which repealed regulations that had existed since the Depression, is the cause of this current crisis?

    What are McCain’s and Obama’s policies with regard to the finance industry and how do they differ in practical terms?

    Posted by Anne Humphrey, on September 15th, 2008 at 12:55 am EDT
  • How much will the student loan market be affected? Especially private student loans? Lehman Bro solely owned CampusDoor – a huge lender in the private student loan industry. Now Lehman is closing CampusDoor’s headquarters in PA and (I received the letter yesterday) — they sold the loan to AES (American Education Services).

    What is the future of CampusDoor and the private student industry? Bank Of America stopped making private student loans. Wachovia no longer makes undergraduate loans – only graduate loans.

    I have no idea if I’m going to get a loan for the spring semester and be able to stay in school full-time.

    Posted by JSR, on September 15th, 2008 at 6:19 am EDT
  • Will the government or people ever demand participation in whole equation — Profits as well as Risk? The government has been willing to socialize the risk, shouldn’t taxpayers be part of the good times also? Nationalize the Banks.

    Posted by Nate, on September 15th, 2008 at 6:56 am EDT
  • Is this somehow related to the Anne Rand-style deregulation of the Greenspan era?

    Posted by jr, on September 15th, 2008 at 7:04 am EDT
  • As a Bank of America shareholder I’m very dismayed at BAC’s decision to acquire Merrill. They haven’t even digested their previous acquisitions, one of which, Countrywide, is still causing BAC indigestion with various pending lawsuits. BAC also has looming liabilities with regard to to auction-rate securities. And Merrill, meanwhile has had losses for four straight quarters, and also has billions of dollars interested in mortgage-backed securities.

    Ken Lewis, Bank of America’s CEO, is like a teenager armed with a new credit card turned loose in a mall.

    Banks are supposed to have a culture of fiscal conservatism and fiduciary responsibility, but in 2008 those things have gone the way of hoop skirts and whale oil lamps. Our entire culture, from top CEOs to mom and pop and the kids on Main Street, have gone mad with recklessness.

    Nationalize the Banks.

    Where is an example of where this has ever worked?

    Even in Sweden the banks are private corporations.

    The correct solution is proper regulation and oversight, two words that are not in the Republicans’ dictionary . . .

    1. Higher loan-loss reserves.

    2. Restrictions on the sorts of investments institutions with high presumed levels of fiduciary responsibility are allowed to make.

    3. Restrictions on retail lending practices – anyone with half a brain could see that no-down-payment mortgages, “interest only” mortgages, ARMs with big balloon payments, etc were going to cause nothing but trouble. When my wife and I bought our first house in the early 80’s you were required to make a 20% down payment else you had to pay PMI, and even with PMI getting a mortgage with less than 10% down was almost unheard-of. We need to bring back those standards.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 9:13 am EDT
  • Lower-middle and middle-middle income classes will continue to lose their home equity and some of their homes while paying taxes to spare the newly rich of the world loss.

    Spare liabilities, not equities of these financial intermediaries.

    Truthfully, it’s difficult for non-Americans to care about a rich country taken over by those taking advantage of its ignorant and hostile majority.

    Posted by ginnie, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:29 am EDT
  • We have allowed corporate fat cats to get rich on poor decisions. As such we have privatized the reward to exorbitant levels and we are now placing the risk on the pubic.

    We need to push for reform in corporate compensation and encourage a fundamental change in the way all American business is operated. That is to say, get away from quarter by quarter measurement of success and reward to long term thinking and planning and long term measurements for reward.

    Shut down the Harvard Business School.

    Posted by Patrick Bradshaw, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:30 am EDT
  • One of the guests just made a point about the capital needed to fix this is going to have to come from us … presumably meaning US citizens and taxpayers.

    My question is who really comprises the “us.” To date, when this happens, taxpayers and users of social services are the ones whose hide it comes out of. Those at the top of the wealth ladder will get their big bonuses and compensations still and they’ll find all the tax loops to boot. The folks who have gained most financially out of this industry in the last several years should be the first, not the last, to take it from their pockets.

    Posted by Tania Mireles, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:37 am EDT
  • We will only be able to understand the continuing financial crisis when we see it as a manifestation of underlying cultural attitudes rejecting reasonable limits. Investment banks over-reached reasonable limits on earnings, seeking 17-20 percent annual returns as a norm. Consumers over-reached their limits and have indulged in an orgy of credit leading to negative savings. We have over-reached the limits of the environment’s capacity to moderate global warming, replenish forests and fish stocks. We have over-reached energy supplies.

    As the founder of an international organization focused on sustainable development, I see the convergence of our “over-reaches” pointing to a need for moral, financial, and political leaders who will encourage us to accept limits, not seek bailouts, or drill for more before we conserve.

    The Chinese, with whom we work, have a cultural value of xiogang or “enough” which is essentially moderate wealth. Perhaps we are caught in a complex of problems where the solutions require addressing a host of moral and values issues and finding our way to “enough.”

    I write from Vermont where banks weathered the depression because thrifty people had adjusted to living sustainably within limits. Perhaps it is time to look around the world at cultural values of moderation.

    Posted by Randy Kritkausky, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:40 am EDT
  • What would have happened if instead of bailing out the big businesses we let people refinance their homes at lower rates? Wouldn’t that have stopped the massive foreclosures? Why is bailing out big business more important than helping the working class people struggling to survive? Would helping the people have prevented this crisis?

    Posted by Audrey Huntley, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:42 am EDT
  • Our current financial crisis is a direct result of Wall Street’s tendency to securitize concepts that are of little or questionable real value. Enron was a stark example of this, Mortgage Back Securities in the face of the proliferation of Sub-Prime loans another.

    I worked on Wall Street in the 1960’s and as a young man heard senior executives in a Wall Street firm speak in terms of “we think XYZ corp is a $40 stock.” XYZ was an almost non-company created by the Wall Street firm. It had very little to offer investors.

    In the 1990’s the Dot.Com bubble was a result of investments in phantom companies that were little more than conceptual designs for companies, not real assets at all.

    We are now paying the price.

    Posted by Frank Winters, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:43 am EDT
  • The last caller was absolutely correct. The watch dogs have been dismantled by the Bush administration and the Republicans. Whether it’s the Justice Dept corruption…the economy…The Agriculture Dept failure…where are the banking regulators?

    Remember McCain-Palin are saying that the economy is sound.

    Agencies don’t run amok…people run amok! How about the Dept of the Interior?

    Government is NOT the problem…the Republican and greedy financial people are the problem.

    Posted by stephen hogan, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:44 am EDT
  • Within the hour, John McCain said that “our economy is fundamentally strong” ???? Obviously, he’s not paying attention to current events.

    Posted by kate knoer, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:44 am EDT
  • Lower-middle and middle-middle income classes will continue to loose their home equity and some their homes while paying taxes to spare the newly rich of the world loss.

    This is a common misconception, that the governmaent interventions in Fannie, and Freddie and Bear were in order to bail out rich shareholders.

    In fact, as you can see if you just look at the share prices, the shareholders of those institutions lost nearly all their investment.

    The purpose of the government intervention was to try to prevent a wider financial calamity that would have hit ordinary people even harder. Imagine an economy where no one could get a mortgage and no one could get a loan to start or expand a small business! So far this recession is fairly mild in historic terms. History shows that it could be a LOT worse and the government is trying to prevent that. Whether they’ll succeed is an open question.

    Shareholders have no right to expect a government bailout and we’re not asking for one – we make our decisions and must live with the consequences. As of this minute I’m about $4000 poorer just on my BAC holdings, and I’m about $25000 poorer overall than I was when the markets closed on Friday. I’m not asking for Fed bailout.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:47 am EDT
  • The Masters of the Universe get their comeuppance.

    While Wall Street might have hired the best and the brightest to find ways to make money and find the gaps in the rules, the best and the brightest have now succeeded in bringing about the collapse of at least three major i-banks: Bear Stearns, Lehman and Merrill.

    Hardly a ringing endorsement of “best and brightest”.

    Unfortunately, it is likely that the bankers will walk away with their high incomes from the go-go years, yet the cost of setting this right will fall to the American taxpayer.

    Posted by Stephen Maire, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:47 am EDT
  • This financial crisis was not caused by a general sleepiness of the system but a specific decision NOT to regulate mortgages by the Bush administration and Republican Congress over the objections of something like 40 Attorney’s General.

    Posted by Eileen Sweeney, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:50 am EDT
  • ‘Poorly aligned incentives’??
    ‘Greedy snake oil salesmen’??

    As banks take the promise of repayment and use it as capitol to make more loans, you’re left with debt as capitol. So all ‘new’ tools availed by the financial institutions are merely ways to create more debt, the capitol that keeps this upside down system slightly ahead of its ultimate demise.

    Posted by Nate, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:52 am EDT
  • What would have happened if instead of bailing out the big businesses we let people refinance their homes at lower rates? Wouldn’t that have stopped the massive foreclosures?

    And where would the capital for all those loans come from?

    Note that SO FAR the government hasn’t actually spent very much money on these “bailouts”. What they’ve done is transferred lots of liabilities to the taxpayers, which might have bad consequences down the road. Whereas what you’re proposing would require actually coming up with lots of money right now.

    There’s also the moral hazard problem. If the government makes it clear that if you or I make stupid, reckless decisions and take out a loan we can’t possibly afford, they will bail us out, this removes a major disincentive for reckless behavior. As I said, above, recklessness, irresponsible behavior is a hallmark of our culture and it has to stop.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:00 am EDT
  • Great program, highlighting the incomprehensible scope of our problems.

    However, I have to say that I was surprised at the last few minutes – sounded like Tom was almost browbeating his guests to make political statements – demanding whether Sarah Palin was qualified but not asking if Barack Obama was.

    Tom’s erudition and passion makes this show, but something sounded odd about the end of the show today…

    Posted by Charles, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:01 am EDT
  • Great show. Thanks for not holding back the punches Tom.

    Posted by Joe B., on September 15th, 2008 at 11:04 am EDT
  • I have to say, I’m GLAD Tom was browbeating his guests, as he never does… and showing his (our) anger at the fact that the biggest losers in all this is the middle class, while those most responsible for this debacle will continue to have weekends in the Hamptons on their private beaches.

    I’m not for socialism, but accountability is a very un-American idea these days. McCain’s choice of Palin is a reflection of that–let’s get elected, it won’t matter if things go to hell because this vivacious, vote-getting woman doesn’t know squat about the world outside Alaska.

    Posted by Leah Bird, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:06 am EDT
  • Dear Tom Ashbrook:

    Your panelists seem naive to me, when they talk about our economy as if business were a discreet and separate entity. What they fail to realize is that the Bush Administration has made many bad choices for eight years that have put us in this hole. Our aggressive military policy has hurt us financially. Our policy to enforce draconian security measures has made it difficult and unpleasant to do business with the U.S.

    Bush opposed CAFE standards for U.S. auto manufacturers and encouraged car manufacturers to build inefficient trucks and SUVs. We kept the dollar low. His go-it-alone foreign policy discouraged American leadership in economic affairs. I could go on and on.

    The point is that this mess is reversible, but not by the likes of G.W.B. and his crew. They are living in the past, a past that will not work for us now.

    Richard
    Buffalo, NY

    Posted by Richard, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:08 am EDT
  • No one dares mention the big white elephant hiding behind the sofa: the war on terrorism.

    Surely, wasting trillions of dollars in a sabre rattling exercise has SOMETHING to do with our current financial crisis. I think Ike warned us about the risk of an out of control industrial-military complex.

    The sad thing is that raising that issue is still so “controversial” that intelligent pundits avoid the subject entirely.

    Maybe we should invest a few billion dollars in guarding ourselves from the real terrorists: the CEOs getting rich on the backs of the people on Main St. USA and sending our sons and daughters off to die.

    Posted by Joe, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:09 am EDT
  • Financial failures and bail-outs.

    Many comments this morning suggested that our free market system was the problem and that more government regulation is required.

    My opinion is that a personally-held belief or tenet for business (an equation) “BIG = BAD” is the base problem. If Bear Sterns had been 500 small companies rather that the giant it was, 20 or so would have failed long ago, and no one would have even noticed.

    When a perfectly sound public company is allowed to be bought up by another over and over the process causes the base problem. No one benefits but the people at the top.

    More regulation for small/medium sized business is counter productive. Stop the giants from forming in the first place, and small failures will be seen as a normal part of our capitalist system.

    Thank you.

    Posted by Mark R. Dintzner, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:12 am EDT
  • This financial crisis was not caused by a general sleepiness of the system but a specific decision NOT to regulate mortgages by the Bush administration and Republican Congress over the objections of something like 40 Attorney’s General.

    There’s an element of truth to this, as I mentioned above. But we should not forget that the Democrats were big supporters of loosening up mortgage standards, too. The general theory was that everyone should be able to buy a house – if people were all homeowners it was felt this would stabilize neighborhoods and give people more of a sense of roots in a community.

    So both liberals and conservatives for different reasons looked the other way when mortgages were restructured to be more affordable to poor people who could never afford a house before, and really had no business taking out a mortgage in the first place. A mortgage is a huge financial responsibility and it requires income and income stability that many people don’t have. But we’ve made a fetish of home ownership.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:12 am EDT
  • Tom, great show.

    The John and Sarah show will bring us more of the same trouble we have now. If we listen to both of them, it will be obvious.

    Posted by Bob Delaney, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:14 am EDT
  • I just wanted to make a comment about Tom’s tone on the program. He was much more willing to challenge the panel’s assumptions and establish a larger context that included his own perspective than we’ve been used to.

    I appreciated it, and thought the conversation was richer as a result.

    Tom Ashbrook and “on Point” = national treasure!!

    Posted by Tom Howell, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:22 am EDT
  • When a perfectly sound public company is allowed to be bought up by another over and over the process causes the base problem. No one benefits but the people at the top.

    That’s not true at all.

    I’m an employee of a big tech multinational and I guarantee my job is better-protected by the fact that my company is big enough to coordinate basic R&D in many different disciplines, and worldwide enough to operate in many markets simultaneously. We employ thousands of people in New England, mostly in good-paying “white collar” jobs.

    Companies grow and acquire to fill in gaps in their skill set or product lines, have products that compliment each other, or enter broader markets, and to enjoy the economies of scale. If they are successful it’s not just the people at the top who benefit, it’s the employees and the shareholders.

    Also, in an earlier posting Nate asked, “shouldn’t taxpayers be part of the good times also?

    They can. Just buy stock. The financials are really cheap right now.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:27 am EDT
  • Peter Nelson,

    Thanks for making the point that its a bi-partisan problem, however both parties knew the Wall-Street economy would benefit from mortgage restructuring rather than addressing decades of overinflated housing prices.

    Homeownership is a noble egalitarian goal, the fetish is even the base of the pyramid scheme and those of the middle feel ‘invested’ in policies which clearly benefit the top disproportionately, as the caller today referenced with the 401k bubble.

    Posted by Nate, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:37 am EDT
  • It is ironic to hear that making the current tax cuts and the radical changes in our economic policies permanent is a solution to our economic situation when these policies might have created this problem in the first place.

    Many credible economists warned of similar outcomes 8 years ago. Historically, economic stimulus has consisted of both demand and supply side stimuli. These economic stimuli have been largely supply side and many demand side have even been reduced (e.g. reduced federal spending on U.S. infrastructure, tax cuts for corporations expanding overseas, globalization of government purchases).

    Now record federal budget deficits seem also to have taken some of the demand side economic stimuli solutions available to previous administrations off the table (e.g. borrowing and spending our way out of the Great Depression). What if China and other US debt holders say “no more”?

    Posted by Rob, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:44 am EDT
  • Thanks for putting on an objective intelligent and well informed program regarding the current fiscal health of this nation. Tom Ashbrook hosted/mediated a well chosen set of guests and gave a wonderful bottom line of inciteful wisdom in an impassioned yet truly professional manner. A very fine and honest performance.I just wish we had more of the media reflect that integrity rather than the mis-aligned political agendas that spew from the mouths of the ‘Pop-Press’ A stellar program of which I welcome more. Congratulations to all your team.

    Posted by rick woods, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:56 am EDT
  • however both parties knew the Wall-Street economy would benefit from mortgage restructuring rather than addressing decades of overinflated housing prices.

    Yet contrary to the above, The Wall Street economy did NOT benefit – infact, shareholders have collectively lost billions of dollars and thousands of security analysts and brokers are now unemployed, and no doubt thousands more will be after BofA digests Merrill.

    Futhermore the decades of overinflated house prices you mention were partly the result of what I described above as a fetish for home ownership.

    Basically subprime and other loosely-qualified mortgages designed to make home ownership appealing to people who previously couldn’t afford homes flooded the housing market with money, driving up house prices. Couple this with what I called recklessness (and Randy Kritausky, above, calls a rejection of reasonable limits) and we see middle class people stretching to buy houses way beyond their means. Back in the late 80’s when my wife and I bought a 2K ft^2 house in a Boston exurb for $180K, we knew people with our same income who were buying 4K ft^2 McMansions a mile away for 400K! You can’t really blame Wall Street for the bidding war that happened in suburbia.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 12:09 pm EDT
  • “The financials are really cheap right now.”

    How do you know this? I’m an investment professional, and I have no idea whether these things are cheap because I have no idea how strong their balance sheets are, i.e. how solid their loan portfolios are.

    You don’t either.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 15th, 2008 at 12:13 pm EDT
  • How do you know this? I’m an investment professional, and I have no idea whether these things are cheap because I have no idea how strong their balance sheets are, i.e. how solid their loan portfolios are.

    You don’t either.

    No kidding, Michael. My stock portfolio is down about $25k from market-close on Friday.

    I was being sarcastic, but obviously this was lost on you.

    The other poster had suggested that the only way taxpayers could partake of corporate profits was to nationalize companies. I was simply pointing out that ANYONE can participate in corporate profits by simply buying the stock. My “cheap” remark was a reminder that if you want profits you must be willing to assume risk.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 12:30 pm EDT
  • ****One of the guests just made a point about the capital needed to fix this is going to have to come from us … presumably meaning US citizens, taxpayers. My question is who really comprises the “us”. To date when this happens, taxpayers and users of social services are the ones whose hide it comes out of. Those at the top of the wealth ladder will get their big bonuses and compensations still and they’ll find all the tax loops to boot. The folks who have gained most financially out of this industry in the last several years should be the first, not the last, to take it from their pockets.****

    Thank you, can’t agree more.

    But how do we make it happen, protest? What kind of democracy is this when most of your congress and government are corrupted, and they use legitimate terms for these corruption?

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 12:32 pm EDT
  • “You can’t really blame Wall Street for the bidding war that happened in suburbia.”

    Actually, you can. They provided the investment vehicles that allowed lenders to sell their loans off and take the money to write more mortgages. Without Collaterized Mortgage Obligations, much of the fuel that powered those suburban bidding wars wouldn’t have existed.

    And neat trick: claiming sarcasm when you say something indefensible.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 15th, 2008 at 12:54 pm EDT
  • I like the way Tom kept pushing the “experts” to say somthing substantive one way or the other. But it was to no avail. The content of what they said boils down to: the system needs to work better than it has.

    No kidding. The question is, who is going to make sure it works better?

    The guy on the show who said, “the system gave us two good presidential candidates and two good vice-presidential candidates” must work for the Emperor (as in “New Clothes.) Ask a psychologist to analyze John McCain’s statements and speeches the last few months…. he shows signs of memory gaps and disassociation. Anaylze Sarah Palin’s career and her statements and you find high ambition, coupled with a low ethical standard.

    Obama has been sounding like a baloon with a slow leak.

    It’s time to call in the poets to describe the situation we face in this country: “… the worst are full of passionate intensity, the best lack all
    conviction.

    Kathleen Cahill, Salt Lake City

    Posted by Kathleen Cahill, on September 15th, 2008 at 1:20 pm EDT
  • Good to hear Tom be really passionate for a change and get angry and call people on the carpet for this financial mess.

    Posted by Hank, on September 15th, 2008 at 1:51 pm EDT
  • “You can’t really blame Wall Street for the bidding war that happened in suburbia.”

    Actually, you can. They provided the investment vehicles that allowed lenders to sell their loans off and take the money to write more mortgages. Without Collaterized Mortgage Obligations, much of the fuel that powered those suburban bidding wars wouldn’t have existed.

    All that says is that Wall Street had the power to prevent it by limiting the available capital. That doesn’t mean they caused it. My wife and I had access to the same pool of mortgage money as the people a mile away who bought the McMansions; the banks would have happily qualified us for the same loans. But we are fiscally conservative and saw no need to stretch in such a manner. The cause of the bidding war was the same thing that caused the dot-com boom and bust; the tulip mania, etc- people irrationally bidding up the price of some asset because they think it will go up forever.

    And neat trick: claiming sarcasm when you say something indefensible.

    Since it was obviously indefensible how could it have been anything but sarcasm?

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 1:51 pm EDT
  • I like the way Tom kept pushing the “experts” to say somthing substantive one way or the other. But it was to no avail. The content of what they said boils down to: the system needs to work better than it has.

    No kidding. The question is, who is going to make sure it works better?

    I think you (and Tom) are expecting too much of economic analysis. Economic systems are not only incredibly complex to begin with, but at their base they start with human beings, who are, themselves, way more complex than we can model predictively, and economcs grows out of the interactions between these unpredictable actors.

    There is a very young field in economics called “behavioral economics” which is starting to shed some light on how individuals make economic choices but the results suggest that humans are even less rational than was previously imagined!

    So the bottom line is that no one can state with confidence how to fix this mess. Everyone has their own opinion. As I said above, tighter oversight and regulation might help, but I personally think the major problem is cultural – if we had a culture of fiscal conservatism and thrift it would help a lot, but no one knows how to change culture.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:01 pm EDT
  • A few comments make a valid points on changing the root problem which is the culture of this country.

    Please don’t take the example I am going to make too literally, it is just a metaphor.

    When I first came to this country, people told me that “I deserve to buy this and that, hell, I work hard, even if I can’t afford it”. I have heard many people talked this way. Then I realize this is how they were taught by this culture of spending beyond your means.

    To me coming from a foreign country, this kind of mindset sounded a little strange. If I can’t afford buying something even if we work hard, then I just don’t buy it, simple as that. And most people of my culture first priority is to save money before you buy something you can’t afford and go into debt.

    Of course I understand how the system works here now, so it’s no longer strange to me with that mindset. But still it tells you how system sort of creating culture.

    Just a thought.

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:11 pm EDT
  • ****I worked on Wall Street in the 1960’s and as a young man heard senior executives in a Wall Street firm speak in terms of “we think XYZ corp is a $40 stock.” XYZ was an almost non-company created by the Wall Street firm. It had very little to offer investors.

    In the 1990’s the Dot.Com bubble was a result of investments in phantom companies that were little more than conceptual designs for companies, not real assets at all.****

    This kind of investment used to be illegal in some other countries. Not sure if those countries remain that illegal or have joined this game.

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:21 pm EDT
  • Tom and Onpoint Staff:
    This was one of your BEST shows! Thanks, Tom, for taking your “nice” gloves off, with your grilling of your guests.
    Thanks to Kathleen Cahill for capturing the quote ( by Alan Sinai?) about the…”good presidential and vice presidential candidates”. I looked at my radio in total disbelief, and asked it, “Is this guy an idiot? — or does he just think we’re idiots?!”.
    Thanks for not letting that sort of statement “pass”.
    We have a dismal slate of candidates by the two reigning parties.
    Kathleen Cahill’s got it re. Obama – a balloon with a slow leak. What’s up with these candidates? Follow the MONEY in their campaigns from large corporate interests.
    YOU TAKE THE MAN’S MONEY – YOU DANCE TO THE MAN’S TUNE.

    This has been widely called the most important presidential election in many decades. Maybe so – but judging by the quality of candidates and the quality of debate subjects, you would NEVER know it.

    Dan Treecraft
    Spokane Washington

    Posted by Dan Treecraft, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:21 pm EDT
  • When I first came to this country, people told me that “I deserve to buy this and that, hell, I work hard, even if I can’t afford it”. I have heard many people talked this way. Then I realize this is how they were taught by this culture of spending beyond your means.

    My wife and I save up for things and pay cash. The only debt we’re ever had in 23 years of marriage is our mortgage, and on our current house we made a 60% down payment. So at least there are some Americans who are fiscally conservative.

    It’s true US culture may *teach* bad spending habits, but no one is required to *learn* those bad habits. So I still think it comes down to personal choice.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:34 pm EDT
  • ****The purpose of the government intervention was to try to prevent a wider financial calamity that would have hit ordinary people even harder. Imagine an economy where no one could get a mortgage and no one could get a loan to start or expand a small business! So far this recession is fairly mild in historic terms. History shows that it could be a LOT worse and the government is trying to prevent that. Whether they’ll succeed is an open question.****

    What if those gigantic profit makers are not shareholders? Aren’t they supposed to spit out those gigantic profits they made when they were consciously making those profits. Wouldn’t that help to ease the burden before it roll back down to taxpayer?

    Another question, could anyone tell me in what form of easing the burden that the government will ask the taxpayer to do? raising tax or come from other budgets?

    Thank you.

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:37 pm EDT
  • In the 1990’s the Dot.Com bubble was a result of investments in phantom companies that were little more than conceptual designs for companies, not real assets at all.****

    This kind of investment used to be illegal in some other countries. Not sure if those countries remain that illegal or have joined this game.

    The dot-com companies were real companies, not “phantom” companies. I don’t know how you could make it illegal to invest in a company like that – new companies need to raise capital to grow and expand just to reach a point where they are profitable.

    I’ve been an investor for almost 40 years and I have a strict set of rules, one of which is that I don’t invest in companies that are not profitable. But I can understand why a less risk-averse investor might be willing to put his money into a startup if he thinks it’s destined for great things.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:42 pm EDT
  • ****It’s true US culture may *teach* bad spending habits, but no one is required to *learn* those bad habits. So I still think it comes down to personal choice.****

    Lots of college graduates are already in debt before they can even make money. Debt is considered so normal here, and if you want to get out of it, just file bankruptcy.

    I think the younger generation is getting smarter from learning the mistakes of their past generations. But not until then, lots of lots of people were not raised in a environment of “encouraging” saving and moderate living. It is a system of fermenting and encouraging greed if you are not careful, and wise enough.

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:46 pm EDT
  • What if those gigantic profit makers are not shareholders? Aren’t they supposed to spit out those gigantic profits they made when they were consciously making those profits. Wouldn’t that help to ease the burden before it roll back down to taxpayer?

    You mean the CEO’s? Their salaries might look big but they’re a drop in the bucket on the company’s balance sheet- making them give back the money isn’t going to have any affect. And anyway, on what basis can you legally do that?

    Another question, could anyone tell me in what form of easing the burden that the government will ask the taxpayer to do? raising tax or come from other budgets?

    Most likely they will sell more Treasuries, so indirectly it will come out of the budget in the sense that more of your tax dollars will be to service out incredible national debt.

    Alternatively it’s been suggested they might monetize it – i.e., print more money. This would cause inflation so we would pay for this by reduced purchasing power – a sort of tax.

    But in the most Panglossian view they won’t need to do anything. So far they haven’t actually spent very much money, they’ve just co-signed our name on lots of loans.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 2:51 pm EDT
  • In brief, we are led by the people we hated in high school. Big money and big politics are comfortably in bed together. Solution? Probably impossible, but, in the best of all possible worlds: term limits.
    I suggest all of congress and the exec. branch be limited to 5 years, single term. No retirement benefit, no health insurance included. BUT. This would mean all of us getting off our fats asses and revising both our constitution and our lazy acceptance of “the system”. It won’t happen, but these are my thoughts. Tom Broderick brodericktvt@yahoo.com

    Posted by tom broderick, on September 15th, 2008 at 3:11 pm EDT
  • Hi Justanother – I too came from another country (former USSR). I too thought that first you earn, then you save, then you buy. However, I believe it turned out to be a big miscalculation on my part. While I was going to law school and putting off buying a house until after graduation people around me were buying houses and condos, ripping the benefits of quick appreciation. When the appreciation stopped those people either still own a house or, if they are unable to pay their mortgages, have become beneficiaries of the public sentiment that they are victims in need of help. The government in this country wants to help borrowers and spenders because this economy is 75% consumer spending. The saver gets a short end of a stick everytime because the gov. needs to lower interest rates to prop up the economy. As a result, your savings are eroded. Today, I am no better off than a subprime borrower facing foreclosure. He/she by definition put little or nothing upfront and was paying low initial monthly payments. What exactly is his/her loss here? So I don’t think playing by the “right” rules makes you better off.

    Posted by Alex, on September 15th, 2008 at 3:26 pm EDT
  • “All that says is that Wall Street had the power to prevent it by limiting the available capital. That doesn’t mean they caused it.”

    Once again when you argue with me you’re on the wrong side. I never said they caused it by themselves, I was responding to this:

    “You can’t really blame Wall Street for the bidding war that happened in suburbia”

    And you can blame them. Anyone with a rudimentary knowledge of what happened wouldn’t deny this.

    And you write indefensible stuff like this all the time, so how are we to know when you’re kidding?

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 15th, 2008 at 3:27 pm EDT
  • “You mean the CEO’s? Their salaries might look big but they’re a drop in the bucket on the company’s balance sheet- making them give back the money isn’t going to have any affect. And anyway, on what basis can you legally do that?”

    Salaries show up on the income statement, but your point is valid. But attorneys genral do have legal recourse: fraud. these guys knew that this stuff they were selling as investment grade debt was closer to junk than it was to investment grade.

    That’s criminal.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 15th, 2008 at 3:33 pm EDT
  • And you can blame them. Anyone with a rudimentary knowledge of what happened wouldn’t deny this.

    We can legitimately blame Wall Street for a lot of things, such as lack of due diligence and fiduciary responsibility, lack of transparency, undue faith in certain mathmatical models, CEO compensation unrelated to performance, etc, etc, but if you think you can blame Wall Street for the bidding war in housing (or any price bubble) you’ll need to show us how.

    I think my example demonstrates very clearly the role of personal choice by individual consumers in these matters. When you have ordinary $100K/yr software engineers taking out $400K mortgages this floods local real estate markets with capital and thus drives up house prices. When we sold our previous house we had three bids on the first day OVER our asking price!

    Wall Street happily supplied the capital for this, but blaming them for the result is like blaming the liquor store for someone’s cirrhosis of the liver because he drinks too much.

    Wall Street’s failure was not in making too much capital available, but simply in failing to assess the degree of risk of the resulting investments. The price bubble would have happened anyway, but its risk would have already been expected. An analogy is the stock market where 20% declines happen routinely – we call that a “bear market” – so the industry takes it in stride. A 20% decline in house prices should have been expected and its risk baked into mortgage-backed securities.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:01 pm EDT
  • ****“You mean the CEO’s? Their salaries might look big but they’re a drop in the bucket on the company’s balance sheet- making them give back the money isn’t going to have any affect. And anyway, on what basis can you legally do that?”*****

    Not just the executives, but also including all the transition fee and the bonus that were made by the brokerage firms. There are billions of dollars made by brokerage firms.

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:04 pm EDT
  • Salaries show up on the income statement, but your point is valid. But attorneys genral do have legal recourse: fraud. these guys knew that this stuff they were selling as investment grade debt was closer to junk than it was to investment grade.

    Certainly if fraud can be shown then it represents a way to recover compensation paid to CEO’s (not to mention sending them to jail!). We’ve seen a few recent successes in the last few years. Another way that’s been used is shareholder lawsuits, although they are seldom successful – The Supreme Court actually toughened the standards for them in 2007.

    But I had the impression that the prior poster wanted to recover the money just on the principle or fairness, because the CEO made bad decisions and drove the company into the ground, costing the economy, shareholders, and employees zillions of dollars.

    Speaking as a BAC shareholder I have doubts about the wisdom of the Merrill acquisition so soon on the heels of Countrywide and with so little time to do due diligence. But I don’t think I can make any claim on Ken Lewis’ salary if BofA crashes and burns.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:11 pm EDT
  • Those who made the points about the disassembling of the regulatory apparatus were on the mark. There were too many people looking only at whether the debt in question was good enough to unload through the next financial instrument and too few looking at whether it was good at all.

    Capitalism as practiced in the U.S. has become an extractive practice with a few harvesting as much as possible to the detriment of the many.

    Posted by Eric McNulty, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:14 pm EDT
  • Hi Alex,

    I do agree with surviving under a system is to play part of their games.

    In this credit system, even if we are debt free, we still need to hold at least one credit card to show our activities in developing our credit.

    Most people in this country would finance their houses and cars, or major purchases. Also taking risk to invest is universal throughout the world. No more or less than in this country, When you invest, you lose or gain, that’s a fair game (in most cases).

    What I was talking about is more of a mindset problem here. Average people without the mind of taking risk of investing, would keep spending even if they can pay them off, I do consider that a more unique culture here.

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:15 pm EDT
  • Correction—-

    ***Average people without the mind of taking risk of investing, would keep spending even if they can pay them off, I do consider that a more unique culture here.***

    “if they can pay them off” should’ve been “if they CAN’T pay them off”

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:18 pm EDT
  • Not just the executives, but also including all the transition fee and the bonus that were made by the brokerage firms. There are billions of dollars made by brokerage firms

    And do you think they just keep it in a big box in the basement?

    By the time you get to the point where some firm is on the ropes, like Bear or Merrill or Lehman Bro’s, that money is gone. Look how little JPMorgan paid for Bear Stearns. You can’t squeeze blood from a stone.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:28 pm EDT
  • ***Average people without the mind of taking risk of investing, would keep spending even if they can['t] pay them off, I do consider that a more unique culture here.***

    Well, what sets this country apart is a pretty humane system of personal bankruptcy laws (even after the 2005 amendments). The borrower buys stuff thereby financing the economy. The use of debt provides even more blood for the system. If borrower goes overboard with debt he can file for bankruptcy and get rid or adjust most of his debts. Creditors include the losses into the cost of doing business. The borrower can start spending afresh thereby financing the economy… And so it goes. I think this system largely contributes into the mindset you speak of. It encourages people to spend, sure, but also to start businesses. Because you have the right to start and fail without spending the rest of your days in debt prison.

    Other countries don’t allow the use of credit to the same extent and do not provide an easy way out. They do not hold the economic growth as the most important thing there is. The US does.

    Posted by Alex, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:34 pm EDT
  • “But I don’t think I can make any claim on Ken Lewis’ salary if BofA crashes and burns.”

    If making a bad acquisition was legally actionable, Carli Fiorina would be in jail.

    I’m talking about fraud, not bad business judgement.

    And Eric, you wrote “There were too many people looking only at whether the debt in question was good enough to unload through the next financial instrument and too few looking at whether it was good at all.”

    It’s worse than that: the people who get paid for assessing the quality of debt – Moody’s and S&P – totally blew it. It was so bad that this joke was circulation in the capital markets community a few months ago.

    MOODY’S PLACES ITSELF ON NEGATIVE WATCH

    Washington – Moody’s, the ratings agency, has placed itself on negative watch, citing it’s horrendous track record at rating just about everything except t-bills.

    “We suck. We couldn’t spot an investment-grade bond in a box of Confederacy Debentures or Continental Bank CD’s.” said one source at the agency…

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 15th, 2008 at 4:50 pm EDT
  • ****Other countries don’t allow the use of credit to the same extent and do not provide an easy way out. They do not hold the economic growth as the most important thing there is. The US does.****

    That will depend on how big you want to grow, the bigger the growth, the more give and take there is If you always want to remain yourself as the biggest and most powerful country in the world. I know it sounds real cliche, but it is true the bigger you grow, the harder you fall.

    There is a better and ethical way to grow, this is not the only way.

    Posted by justanother, on September 15th, 2008 at 5:27 pm EDT
  • Tom, you were great! Thanks for being tough on this one.

    Posted by Robin, on September 15th, 2008 at 5:39 pm EDT
  • “That will depend on how big you want to grow, the bigger the growth, the more give and take there is If you always want to remain yourself as the biggest and most powerful country in the world. I know it sounds real cliche, but it is true the bigger you grow, the harder you fall.

    There is a better and ethical way to grow, this is not the only way.”

    I agree. I am not convinced at all that America took the right turn with the Reagan revolution. This free market puritanism is just as dangerous as the communism puritanism. I think the US will do well by learning from other countries’ experiences. No one advocates government-owned means of production or central planning here. But some basic rules of the game for the business folk and protections for the middle class and the poor are absolutely necessary for the society as a whole to be strong and viable.

    Posted by Alex, on September 15th, 2008 at 5:40 pm EDT
  • I listen to Onpoint every day. Today’s crisis program scared me like no toher on the subject. It made me very angry, but I’m so glad it was aired.

    I was one of the small corporation founders raped by the SEC’s policy in the 80’s of looking the other way at frauds less than $4M. God knows what their policy limit is now. There seems no limit to the corruption and lack of regulations and enforcement.

    I especially liked Tom’s challenge to the snake oil snide comment. NO amount of fancy language can disguise that deregulation has been preached to allow near criminality without punishment for the few. Enough!

    Posted by Jay Gilchrist, on September 15th, 2008 at 6:28 pm EDT
  • “if you think you can blame Wall Street for the bidding war in housing (or any price bubble) you’ll need to show us how”

    Sigh. I’ll try to keep this simple.
    To use your example, how does someone making $100K buy a $400k house? They either save forever or take out a loan.

    Banks make the loans and collect interest AND fees on those loans, so the more loans they make, the more fees they collect and the more profitable they are. But they are limited in the loans they can make by the equity on their balance sheets, so how can they keep making loans? By selling their existing loans for cash and writing new loans.

    And the drive to generate more loan fees led to the relaxation of credit standards.

    Here’s where Wall Street comes in. They go to the banks and offer to underwrite the selling of the banks loans to Structured Investment Vehicles, pension funds, insurance companies, etc. The problem they have is that those customers require investment grade debt, but many of the mortgages that Wall Street wants to sell are of poor credit quality. So what did they do? They bundled the good loans with the bad ones and voila!, S&P and Moody’s give them investment grade ratings.

    Wall Street knew that mixing good debt with bad debt doesn’t result in good debt, but they sold it anyway. Why? The fees, and thus the bonuses, were huge.

    But selling something to clients that require investment grade securities that you know isn’t violates one of the most important legal and ethical standards of the industry: investment suitability. So it wasn’t just that they created excess liquidity in the market, they actually inflated the excess fraudulantly.

    So your liquor store analogy is not a good one. A better one would be if a liquor store owner has a product that smells and tastes like grapefruit juice and sells it to a diabetic recovering alcoholic as grapefruit juice, and the alcoholic goes into diabetic shock.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 15th, 2008 at 7:10 pm EDT
  • Thanks Peter Nelson for pointing out the free market point of view. I don’t agree with all of your comments, but a few are a worthwhile read. I think we get the point. None of us wants to throw the baby out with the bath water.

    On the other hand, the sheer quantity of your comments on this page is overwhelming… to the point where some may think this is the “the Peter Nelson blog.” Consider this a plea to cut down on your quantity (but not quality) of postings.

    Anyway, this was among the best On Point shows I’ve heard. It ranks up there with the post 9/11 “Special Coverage” shows. (The others are good too.)

    Posted by jr, on September 15th, 2008 at 7:35 pm EDT
  • This is it, the final nail in the coffin of unregulated trickle down economics.

    Anyone voting should take heed of this.
    I, for one, am sick of being lied to, just furious.

    Posted by Ben Greening, on September 15th, 2008 at 7:47 pm EDT
  • Thank you, Tom, for beginning to delve into this complex issue and getting to the point about the context in which this economic devolution is happening. One would have to be totally unaware not to realize that the real estate market has been artifically healthy for at least 10 years. The equity loans, voracious appetite for credit and the price of land/homes have been out of control.

    Posted by Joanne, on September 15th, 2008 at 8:00 pm EDT
  • I listened to this show and I thought they were talking about the 1929 crash.

    I am sick of both parties lying to us.
    I am tired of the rhetoric and the platitudes from both men running for president.

    A few points, Obama might have what it takes to the country through this, maybe. It will take more than one term to fix however. Bidden is seasoned enough to know how to use the system and despite my complete lack of faith in this man he is miles better than Palin who is a political neophyte.

    McCain would be a disaster, his economic platform is tax cuts. He does not understand what is going on.

    The two houses of our esteemed Government… I don’t know what to say about these idiots. It’s dumb and dumber as far as I can see. They need to start to wake up do the jobs they were hired to do. Something has to give here.

    The top 20 to 30% of the country are going to have to pony up. The party is over. Raise the taxes on these people to at least 45%. If you all have to sell that second or third home I just read about in the Home section of the NY Times so be it.

    The middle classes don’t have the money, so I don’t know how they will be affected. The poor are just poor.

    Corporations are going to have pay more in taxes as well.

    This is the reality, all this talk about cutting taxes is absurd.

    The other thing is the war in Iraq needs to have an end in site, some kind of exit plan please. Can anyone in government lead anymore?

    Iraq now has billions in reserve in cash from the oil market. They need to step up and pay for there own reconstruction. We can’t afford it anymore.

    Afghanistan is another problem, that ate least NATO is helping with.

    Of course none of this will happen.

    McCain and Republican party will keep playing the culture war card and the Democrats will play defense.

    you’ll have people how are in weeks away from being homeless voting for McCain/Palin just because they are right to life and have some twisted moral value system based on a fantastical belief system.

    When all this BS does hit the fan, they will say, “it’s all in Gods plan”…

    Posted by jeff, on September 15th, 2008 at 8:23 pm EDT
  • “When all this BS does hit the fan, they will say, “it’s all in Gods plan”…”

    No Jeff. I believe they will say that the market is falling because it is reacting to the threat that Democrats may come to power and start taxing and spending. I actually read this on some blogs.

    Posted by Alex, on September 15th, 2008 at 8:36 pm EDT
  • The real issue to me is I don’t think we have time for partisan politics anymore.

    Both parties are not offering any real solutions.

    It’s clear Wall Street is incapable of self regulation and that something has to give.

    I see the extremes of both parties becoming more splintered as things get worse.

    We can then see a rise in the extremest elements of the left moving further towards the ideals of anarchy.

    The extremest of the right will move towards fascism as it will offer the false comfort of control.

    I hope this does not happen, but it seems we grow more intolerant with each passing year.

    Posted by jeff, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:01 pm EDT
  • I am listening to the re-broadcast of the show here in Michigan, and seething at the guest who made the comment that the “conventional wisdom” is nothing more than “snake oil.”

    I am in my early 30’s, and bought into the concept that you pay into your 403(b) as much as you can, you get a house and earn as much equity as you can, and you will be protected when the bottom drops out of Social Security. I thought I was doing the correct and responsible thing for my future.

    With the financial meltdown, my mutual funds are sagging, and my house is dropping in value as fast as I pay down the debt. Fear of the future is causing financial paralysis, and at the same time I fear that the rules of the new financial markets will not be written in time for me to take advantage of them.

    I am trapped in that perfect storm of too young to have benefited from the old conventional wisdom, possibly too old to take advantage of whatever the new wisdom will be. And there are millions of us.

    Posted by Scott, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:08 pm EDT
  • “The real issue to me is I don’t think we have time for partisan politics anymore. Both parties are not offering any real solutions.”

    So what are we to do? Seriously. What are the options for the voter? Elect Democrat this time, Republican the next and so on?

    Posted by Alex, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:21 pm EDT
  • sorry for the typos it’s been a long day.

    Scott we are all in the same boat.
    The boomers are in worse shape.

    In the words of Margo Channing, “Fasten your seat belts, it’s going to be a bumpy night.”

    Posted by jeff, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:22 pm EDT


  • Wall Street knew that mixing good debt with bad debt doesn’t result in good debt, but they sold it anyway. Why? The fees, and thus the bonuses, were huge.

    But selling something to clients that require investment grade securities that you know isn’t violates one of the most important legal and ethical standards of the industry: investment suitability. So it wasn’t just that they created excess liquidity in the market, they actually inflated the excess fraudulantly.

    Michael, you’re confused. The thing you were purporting to explain was the bidding war in suburbia, remember? The insane runup in house prices?

    Your explanation, above is of the current financial crisis. We already get that. You’re not telling us anything we don’t all know.

    But the message you are responding to is why house prices were bid up so insanely and the reasson for that has nothing to do with Wall Street, and everything to do with a US culture of consumer excess.

    With the financial meltdown, my mutual funds are sagging, and my house is dropping in value as fast as I pay down the debt. Fear of the future is causing financial paralysis, and at the same time I fear that the rules of the new financial markets will not be written in time for me to take advantage of them.

    I think you’re panicking. My parents and my wife’s parents lived through the Depression so they taught us some financial verities that apply as much today as they ever did; it doesn’t matter how old you are.

    1. Live within your means. And I mean WELL within them, so you have a surplus to save. Ignore the larger immediate-gratification culture. When your friends are buying new cars, coax an extra few years from your current cars; when your friends are going to Paris, go to Cape Cod.

    2. Save aggressively. We save 1/3 of our income for retirement, and we’ve been doing this for 23 years. Invest most of your your money conservatively in well-run companies with strong balance sheets. If you’re worried about inflation, buy TIPS. If you’re an aggressive saver you don’t have to chase high returns; you just have to stay slightly ahead of inflation, after taxes.

    WRT your house – the market value will never go to zero but eventually your mortgage will and you’ll own it free and clear. Prepay a few hundred dollars of principle a month and you’ll have it paid off in no time.

    Don’t panic – just hunker down; be frugal, don’t get caught up in a culture that equates how much you spend with how good a life you’re having, and you’ll be fine.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:36 pm EDT
  • I listened to the program this evening and felt it was very unbalanced. What was with badgering the guests to say Sarah Palin was unqualified and that she doesn’t have the experience? Just what experience does Obama have? He actually has less experience then her. I really wish someone pointed out the amount of money the Wall Street people give to BOTH Republicans and Democrats. The housing bubble got really going under Rubin and Greenspan during the Clinton years. Barney Frank and others stoked the fire. Wall Street firms tossed more wood on the fire. The bubble started to collapse two or three years ago and now you are seeing the current phase of the fallout. You can’t build an industry on loans that can never be repaid. Where were the “thoughtful” commentators a couple of years ago when housing prices were soaring? Markets go up and markets go down. You also can not be considered objective if you badger the guests who won’t agree to say what you want them to say. I tire of the constant, mindless babbling of sufferers of Bush Derangement Syndrome. Give it up Tom. Try to be objective, it won’t kill you.

    Posted by Mike M, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:39 pm EDT
  • To Mike M. – the Bush Derangement Syndrome results from the fact that he has been president for the last 7 years. That position comes with some responsibilities. I think he gets off rather easy considering that he provided no leadership whatsoever on the economy. Taking political credit for the ownership society was easy. Now all we hear is how presidents do not affect the economy so don’t blame it on Bush. It is a pretty nice set up for a chief executive.

    Posted by Alex, on September 15th, 2008 at 10:50 pm EDT
  • Thank you Tom taking your “expert” guests on, especially the foolish Alan Sinai. “Snake Oil” is referring to Palin as a “Solid” vice presidential pick. No wonder the troubles we are in. Thank you Tom!!

    Posted by JB, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:08 pm EDT
  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Invest in Lawmakers

    When the federal government announced two months ago that it would prop up mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, CRP looked at how much money members of Congress had collected since 1989 from the companies.

    These totals are based on data released electronically from the FEC on Sept. 2 and include contributions to lawmakers’ leadership PACs and candidate committees from the floundering companies’ PACs and employees. Current members of Congress have received a total of $4.8 million from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, with Democrats collecting 57 percent of that.

    All Recipients of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Campaign Contributions, 1989-2008

    Name Office State Party Grand Total Total from
    PACs Total from
    Individuals
    Dodd, Christopher J S CT D $165,400 $48,500 $116,900
    Obama, Barack S IL D $126,349 $6,000 $120,349
    Kerry, John S MA D $111,000 $2,000 $109,000
    Reed, Jack S RI D $78,250 $43,500 $34,750
    Reid, Harry S NV D $77,000 $60,500 $16,500
    Clinton, Hillary S NY D $76,050 $8,000 $68,050
    Pelosi, Nancy H CA D $56,250 $47,000 $9,250
    Rangel, Charles B H NY D $38,000 $14,750 $23,250
    McCain, John S AZ R $21,550 $0 $21,550

    Posted by Mike M, on September 15th, 2008 at 11:57 pm EDT
  • Jamie Gorelick (Clinton administration) was Vice Chairman of Fannie Mae from 1997 to 2003 (Fannie’s fraudulent accounting scheme was made public in 2004).

    Posted by Mike M, on September 16th, 2008 at 12:03 am EDT
  • Sen. Barack Obama is the No. 3 recipient of Fannie and Freddie campaign dollars, having collected $123,000 from the companies since he first ran for the Senate in 2004, according to the Federal Election Commission and the Center for Responsive Politics.

    The former chief executive of Fannie Mae, James Johnson, was the original head of Obama’s vice presidential search team. Johnson resigned from Obama’s campaign amid controversy over discounted home loans he had received.

    Sen. John McCain has received $19,000 from the two companies in the past ten years.

    His campaign manager, Rick Davis, formerly led the Homeownership Alliance, an advocacy group for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s mortgage businesses.

    Posted by Mike M, on September 16th, 2008 at 12:05 am EDT
  • Cheers to you Mr. Ashbrook!!

    I was so happy that you kept pressing your guests to explain and defend their positions that I nearly cried driving home tonight. So refreshing to have some human emotion expressed. These financial instututions have no shame. They use the money they fleece from us to brainwash us in believing their lies. Caveat Emptor. These institutions with holier than though names are just another business trying to make a buck. That is where Gov’t regulation comes in. How could we swallow the snake oil to the point of this collapse. It is despicable that it was not stopped. It is so pathetic that we allowed the mantra of smaller gov’t to convince us to gut important oversight mechanisms. Let’s be honest though most people don’t pay attention and our politicians by and large go along to get along. We must support politicians that are passionate and not afraid to challenge the status quo. Please keep it up Tom-on all the issues. You help educate the masses.
    Mark O’

    Posted by Mark O'Lalor, on September 16th, 2008 at 12:13 am EDT
  • It’s scary to listen to McCain said the economy is “fundamentally strong”?????

    Don’t give me wrong, I am not that crazy about Obama, but he is less scary.

    McCain’s comment almost sounded like, ok, now we don’t have a roof to live in, next thing you know it’s the walls are gone, what’s next, go figure.

    Posted by another opinion, on September 16th, 2008 at 12:29 am EDT
  • This is so absurd. We have laws and regulation on someone commits a crime, like drugs, stealing and murder. How can you not have better regulations to prevent greed? You get sentenced by stealing, but you can’t put some kind of punishment on those financial criminals taking away people’s life and life saving.

    The free market without tighter regulation itself is a crime. Maybe in heaven it might work, not in this world full of human greed and flaws.

    Does freedom mean free of taking responsibility for the damage you have caused on lots of people?

    Posted by another opinion, on September 16th, 2008 at 1:14 am EDT
  • Tom, thanks for a great show. I’m new to your show, so I apologize if this topic has already been discussed.

    Can you please discussion the crisis in Medicare and the Accountant General’s (Walker, head of the GAO) 2004 report on the coming looming fiscal crisis that everyone ignored and it’s current and future implications amidst the housing fallout and an irresponsible War.

    I believe the Republican Party is now Big Govt.., fiscal conservatism has now gone by the wayside; a once great Republican institution. Let’s be clear the Republican Party now represents fiscal liberalism fronted by cultural conservatism. Change can only happen with a Democratic Executive Branch and a Democratic Congress, Otherwise we will continue to be in this current stagnation.

    McCain failed to vote recently (even though he was physically present in D.C.) for the third time to extend the current tax credit to American companies (set to expire in Dec ‘08) currently developing alternative renewable technologies , even though the tax incentive would create immediate steel manufacturing jobs in his own home-state of Arizona (by way of wind technology infrastructure). McCain policy reeks of the putrid smell of carbon emissions and man made environmental catastrophes. “Drill baby drill” ???. Is this what the Republican party has come to? Greed.

    Thank you

    Posted by Sevak K., on September 16th, 2008 at 2:54 am EDT
  • Tom… this topic really got you going. I didn’t know you had it in you. This was great.

    Posted by Richard, on September 16th, 2008 at 6:36 am EDT
  • Thank you, Tom, for responding energetically to your guests and to the way they dismissed so lightly things we had all been told were true. I can’t get over the way we are all being punished for the gambles and deceit of the big players.

    Another opinion

    Posted by Rachel Jacoff, on September 16th, 2008 at 7:39 am EDT
  • Don’t give me wrong, I am not that crazy about Obama, but he is less scary.

    He’s marginally less scary – he’s more willing to have the government exercise types of oversight and regulation that might have prevented this, but on the other hand he’s opposed to free trade, which has been one of the bright spots in the US economy. I work for a major technology company that exports about 60% of what we make – millions of US jobs, including mine, are made possible by free trade.

    (Many Thanks to Mike M for his research on how lobbyists have their fingers in the campaigns!)

    This is so absurd. We have laws and regulation on someone commits a crime, like drugs, stealing and murder. How can you not have better regulations to prevent greed? You get sentenced by stealing, but you can’t put some kind of punishment on those financial criminals taking away people’s life and life saving.

    If they literally committed a crime then they can be sentenced. But bad business judgement is not, in itself, a crime.

    Here’s an aspect of this which has not been addressed : retirement. The classic “third rail” of US politics, which neither party has been willing to touch, is Social Security. The GOP has long advocated privatizing it by letting people put their money into the stock market instead.

    But today the Dow and S&P are both trading at about the same level they were 10 years ago, which means that people who invested their 401(K)’s in the stock market have made virtually nothing, nada, zilch, in 10 years. (and before someone mentions dividends, N.B. that the average S&P500 dividend yield is 2.13%, which is less than inflation.)

    So OnPoint should take a fresh look at retirement and Social Security in light of the stock market.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 16th, 2008 at 9:46 am EDT
  • Tom,

    Way to keep forcing the economists to speak in plain English and to keep forcing them to discuss impact on Main Street. Fat cats are getting bailed out, not the millions of Americans in debt.

    Keep up good work – one of you best shows,
    Chris

    Posted by Chris Rodriguez, on September 16th, 2008 at 9:46 am EDT
  • “This is so absurd. We have laws and regulation on someone commits a crime, like drugs, stealing and murder. How can you not have better regulations to prevent greed?” –posted earlier

    This is at the core of our problem. We get to an emotional response about this stuff, but cannot focus our thoughts down to a level where something can be done about it, or even discussed very well.

    These markets are very complex, and very small differences in government oversight can mean enormous differences. The goal of making greed illegal may be a very crude way of expressing something that we need to do, but we need to be much better and much smarter about it.

    To me, this is fairly simple. If a financial institution wants to be allowed to do something or sell something, it has to convince regulators of two things.

    1. Risk is appropriately assigned and is not hidden to investors.

    2. Recessions will not produce a bubble effect, where risk only surfaces during a financial downturn.

    Posted by Tom, on September 16th, 2008 at 9:49 am EDT
  • Thank you MikeM you prove my point. For you it’s all bout the blame game and partisan politics.

    Here we are in the worse finical crisis and your pointing fingers at the Democratic party while the Republicans have been in power for most of the last 8 years.

    I think both parties are to blame, as I said they, Congress have done nothing. Barney Frank was one of the worse when it came to dealing with Fannie and Freddie.

    I have been listening to what Obama and McCain have been saying about this in the last few days. McCain’s statements made no sense at all. He talked about some vague idea of reform, whatever that is. The other problem for McCain is that the Republican party is not going to be very supportive creating new regulations for the financial sector.

    It’s not reform but smart regulatory action that is needed.

    I have heard statements that Obama that mention using creating new smart regulation’s for this sector.

    Palin made spin out of it.
    Bidden did not offer much in the way of solutions.

    I don’t think either candidate is dealing with the economy in context to what is happening.
    The problem is McCain’s tax cuts, which are the same as Bush’s and then some, are the worse thing to do now.
    McCain keeps saying we are at war, he keeps using this as his platform. His experience and toughness and all that. How is that is we are at war can we afford to lower taxes? If you look back in history, taxes go up during war time, not down.

    It wont work, McCain’s economic plan is a farce.
    Obama’s is tepid half way solutions.

    Posted by jeff, on September 16th, 2008 at 9:57 am EDT
  • “Michael, you’re confused. The thing you were purporting to explain was the bidding war in suburbia, remember? The insane runup in house prices?”

    Not only are you a pompous jerk, you’re showing yourself to be a first class idiot. I outlined this in detail, but you’re too stupid to get it, so I’m going to shout.

    PEOPLE BID UP ASSETS ONLY IF THEY HAVE ACCESS TO CASH.

    WALL STREET FRAUDULANTLY HELPED TO GENERATE EXCESS LIQUIDITY (THAT MEANS CASH), SO THEY ARE CULPABLE.

    You’re unbelievably arrogant and you consistently throw out things when you have no idea what you’re talking about.

    I suspect that you’re a troll trying to shut down real dialogue here, because I find it hard to believe that someone is genuinely simultaneously as arrogant and as stupid as you appear on this board.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:02 am EDT
  • “but on the other hand he’s opposed to free trade…”

    Peter,
    And now you’re a liar.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:04 am EDT
  • Peter wrote:

    “But today the Dow and S&P are both trading at about the same level they were 10 years ago, which means that people who invested their 401(K)’s in the stock market have made virtually nothing, nada, zilch, in 10 years”

    That’s a lie. The Dow is up nearly 35% over that time period, so while theannualized return is not great, it’s hardly “zilch.”

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:19 am EDT
  • “PEOPLE BID UP ASSETS ONLY IF THEY HAVE ACCESS TO CASH.”

    We already addressed this in prior postings. Simply making cash available is no different from a liquor store making booze available – they are not responsible for excessive consumption. As I said, the banks would have been perfectly happy to qualify us for the same excessive mortgages they qualified my peers for, but we didn’t see any reason to extend ourselves. So this is proof that people have a choice in the matter – Wall Street did not force anyone to take out excessive loans.

    My credit card has a spending limit of $11,000 – does that mean I’m required spend up to that limit? Do you spend up to your limit?

    ““but on the other hand he’s opposed to free trade…”

    Peter,
    And now you’re a liar.

    Obama has repeatedly said that he wants to amend NAFTA and other trade agreements to force our trading partners to adhere to the same worker safety, organization, and environmental standards as the US. Since he knows they won’t do this it’s tantamount to saying that he’s going to restrict free trade. It’s also likely that if the big 3 auto companies get the federal bailout they’re looking for (which Obama AND McCain support) that this will violate our agreements under GATT, which would also cause trade problems.

    And really, Michael, get a grip – your ad hominem and name-calling attacks will probably get your posts deleted.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:31 am EDT
  • “But today the Dow and S&P are both trading at about the same level they were 10 years ago, which means that people who invested their 401(K)’s in the stock market have made virtually nothing, nada, zilch, in 10 years”

    That’s a lie. The Dow is up nearly 35% over that time period, so while theannualized return is not great, it’s hardly “zilch.”

    On October 1, 1998 the Dow was at 9181 – as of right now it’s 11,947. That 18%, which is less than inflation over that same period – effectively a loss. And the S&P500 is even worse – the average S&P500 500 for Oct-Dec 1998 was 1229; today it’s 1187.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:45 am EDT
  • “Obama has repeatedly said that he wants to amend NAFTA and other trade agreements to force our trading partners to adhere to the same worker safety, organization, and environmental standards as the US. Since he knows they won’t do this it’s tantamount to saying that he’s going to restrict free trade”

    That’s an interpretation, not a fact. The fact is you are a liar.

    And what part of FRAUD isn’t getting through your thick skull. The liquor analogy doesn’t hold.

    If you think that the investment bankers that sold this stuff din’t know what was in it, I’ve got a bridge I like to sell you.

    And look up “ad hominem,” this would only be true of my argument if you hadn’t shown yourself to be stupid, arrogant, and ignorant.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:48 am EDT
  • “On October 1, 1998 the Dow was at 9181 – as of right now it’s 11,947. That 18%, which is less than inflation over that same period – effectively a loss. And the S&P500 is even worse – the average S&P500 500 for Oct-Dec 1998 was 1229; today it’s 1187″

    Ten years ago was September 16th and the Dow closed at 8090, so saying the it was about at the same level is a lie.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:52 am EDT
  • 1. Risk is appropriately assigned and is not hidden to investors.

    Indeed, this is a central problem. But it’s hard to do. For example, I’m a shareholder in Evergreen Solar (ESLR) – a solar panel manufacturer in Massachusetts. In the last few days their stock has fallen by HALF because Lehman was a lead underwriter on some convertible notes they issued, and for which they had lent them some stock as a hedge. They’ll probably never see that money again.

    ESLR was finishing a new factory in Massachusetts and busily hiring lots of workers for it. It’s unclear how this will affect their plans. But this illustrates how assessing risk in this complex financial world is difficult, and how the effects can be felt far from where the financial bombs land.

    Posted by Peter Nelson, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:56 am EDT
  • “On October 1, 1998 the Dow was at 9181 – as of right now it’s 11,947″

    And BTW, the DOW closed at 7632 on October 1, 1998, and rigyesterday it closed at 10917 or 43% higher than 10/01/98, so that’s a lie too.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:56 am EDT
  • Great Show. The points made about the lost decade in Japan are pretty ominous but have real relevance. On a positive note hopefully we can leverage some of Japan’s solutions as we work our way through this mess. Below are the indicators that lead to Japan’s real estate crisis:

    * Historically low interest rates
    * Housing touted as a ‘can’t miss investment’
    * Median home prices doubled
    * Median home prices in the six largest cities tripled
    * Lenders offered bad loans
    * Government acted as a partner to industry
    * Home price increases far outpaced wages and rents

    Any of this look familiar.

    Posted by John, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:58 am EDT
  • I’m the minority among this crowd. I believe in capitalism and the power of the market to self correct. Just for the record though, your beloved President Clinton signed the legislation that effectively repealed the Glass Steagall Act – The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.

    Second, the derivatives and financial instruments being railed against currently are the same ones that opened the housing market to tens of thousands who previously could not purchase a home.

    The economy turned and pressure was brought to bear on this market when the oil market started its climb toward $140 per barrel, and food prices started to inflate thanks to the effect of ethanol use as a fuel additive.

    Ethanol is made from corn and is added to refined gas to make it more “green” or environmentally friendly. As the hysteria over global warming took hold of the country more corn was used in ethanol production which caused a scarcity in the food market driving up prices.

    Corn or corn by-products are in every processed food, pretty much.

    Next, again as a result of global warming fears and eco-politics, this country has voluntarily restricted it’s exploration, manufacture and refinement of crude oil. Coupled with global demand, the price of a barrel of oil increased dramatically.

    Oil is used in the production of literally everything. As its price rose so did the price of everything else. We felt the effect most acutely at the pump.

    All this took place during a congress controlled by the Democrats. And it happened because high energy prices and “green” fuels are a priority for the Democratic party who would like to shame us, punish us into being more green.

    See Thomas Friedman’s latest book and op-ed for more on the left’s desire to impose artificial price floors to stimulate consumer change.

    Now what happens when the two largest pieces of individual household budgets are under inflationary pressure, people start defaulting on their loans. Mostly, those on the lower rungs of the socioeconomic ladder.

    Actually, the same people who would never have had a home in the first place without the new securities and relaxed rules.

    Did the banks over leverage themselves? Yes.
    Are they being punished for it? Yes.
    Is there more pain to be felt? Yes.

    Did the Republican’s and their “rich” friends do this? No.

    Mr. Ashbrook, you let your outrage at CEO salaries etc. unveil your socialist stripes and partisan leanings. Your badgering and bullying were undignified and, most importantly, you missed the point.

    Posted by Paul Schauder, on September 16th, 2008 at 11:28 am EDT
  • Paul,

    The spike in corn prices was largely driven by speculation, not corn based ethanol. Overall demand for corn has barely risen.

    Exploration and drilling would have had little if any effect on oil prices because the demand from India and China outstripped any potential additional supply. Furthermore, nearly half of the rise in oil prices was driven by the decline in the dollar, which happened because of this unnecessary war and huge deficits.

    And Tom Friedman is an idiot. Anyone that says all he has to hear is “free trade” and he’s for it doesn’t understand that there is a huge flaw in the theory of comparative advantage: the transitory state, i.e. workers losing their jobs and having to be retrained, is not addressed. If you really want a good book on this, read Alan Blinder’s book.

    And to blame this on the Democrats is ridiculous. The seeds of this debacle were sown early in the Bush administration when Republicans had the Congress.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 11:39 am EDT
  • I am disappointed in Mr. Ashbrook’s gratuitous slam against Sarah Palin regarding her qualifications to serve potentially as President. The subject of the program had nothing to do with the presidential election campaign. The guest offered a gracious and neutral comment regarding all four candidates, but Mr. Ashbrook could not resist the opportunity to deliver a partisan cheap shot. This self-indulgent lapse in journalistic discipline (not there’s an oxymoron) might have been redeemed somewhat by some semblance of balance. I.e., the issue of experience and competence to serve as president could just as validly be raised concerning Mr. Obama, who, afterall, is one step closer to the presidency than is Ms. Palin. A competent and objective journalist would not have offered the comment.

    Posted by Rob H., on September 16th, 2008 at 12:06 pm EDT
  • Michael:

    Why was there speculation in the corn market?
    Why was there speculation in the oil market?
    Why were there subsidies in the ethanol market when importing sugar cane ethanol from Rio is cheaper?
    Why hasn’t the country built a new refinery since the seventies, or developed shale, or explored off-shore deposits?

    At least we agree that Mr. Friedman is an idiot.

    About five years ago, the Bush administration offered regulation of Fannie and Freddie because of their worries regarding the size of the liability. Look it up.

    Posted by Paul Schauder, on September 16th, 2008 at 12:12 pm EDT
  • Regarding regulation and oversight of the financial industry, I doubt that any solution exists that is foolproof and incorruptible. Overturning Glass-Steagal and other deregulation were clearly grave mistakes. Did we learn nothing from the Great Depression? Self-regulation by any industry is a joke. Greed, fear, and cronyism alway trump ethics, and the first and foremost concern of any industry, organization, or professional group is “protecting its own”. We need clear, objective and unambiguous standards for assessing and disclosing risk and asset value, and these must be rigorously and consistently enforced. However, a blind faith in regulation and oversight by the public sector is both naive and dangerous. Witness the current scandal regarding the Denver office of the Minerals and Management Service — hardly an isolated example. Who watches the watchdogs?

    Posted by Rob H., on September 16th, 2008 at 12:37 pm EDT
  • To Rob H.

    2 points:

    1. Tom pressed them all to pick a party. They could have made a strong argument for a Republican vote if they wanted to. Their replies were weak. It was hardly partisan.

    2. Sarah Palin was *picked* to be on her ticket, Barack Obama was vetted by an election process within his own party. In other words, his leadership abilities and platform have had to survive vetting on a large scale. She hasn’t.

    You’re the partisan one here, and defensive, too. With good reason, in my opinion.

    Posted by Robin, on September 16th, 2008 at 12:44 pm EDT
  • continued @ Rob H:

    Note that Tom didn’t say anything bad about her. He pressed his guest to give his assessment of her and her readiness to deal with financial crises and the assessment was:

    “I don’t think she’s got the experience to be the President of the United States in an urgent situation”.

    Allen Sinai is hardly some left-wing hippie. If you, as a partisan Republican, are upset about this assessment take it up with Sinai: the chief global economist, strategist who, by his own account “believes in the free market”, not with Tom Ashbrook, who pressed the question.

    Posted by Robin, on September 16th, 2008 at 12:56 pm EDT
  • I’m beginning to think the Fed should let these financial institutions fail. Enough of this, let the market settle bring back some smart regulations and over site.

    The other issue is the national debt which as I write this is $9,690,691,841,069.08

    I hate to say this but the next president will be raising taxes, they will have no choice. We can’t keep this kind of debt going and expect our country to have any sustainable growth.

    Posted by jeff, on September 16th, 2008 at 1:42 pm EDT
  • Tom, that was fantastic reporting. We need more of that in this world. A real reporter knows how to ask followup questions, and how not to accept the BS “talking points” from so-called experts and pundits. Good one, man.

    Posted by J Mac, on September 16th, 2008 at 1:56 pm EDT
  • Jeff:

    Raising taxes always leads to a reduction in the actual amount of money raised by the taxes.

    However, we should push for tax reform – a flat 17% without loopholes for all but the lowest income earners would be nice.

    Robin:

    Mr. Ashbrook didn’t bother to ask that question of his panelists re: Mr. Obama. And his tone when discussing who could get us out of this mess, Dems or Repubs left the panelists little room for doubt about where his heart was.

    He lost it a bit, playing into class warfare. My read was that the panelists were just trying to placate him.

    Posted by Paul Schauder, on September 16th, 2008 at 2:33 pm EDT
  • “Raising taxes always leads to a reduction in the actual amount of money raised by the taxes.”

    Not true. During the Reagan adminstrations, tax revenues grew at a compound annual growth rate of 7.3%.

    During the Clinton adminstrations, that number was 8%.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 2:59 pm EDT
  • I did not say I was for raising taxes, I was pointing to the issue of balancing the budget or at least lowering the deficit.
    I just think that if our country is going to be at war we should pay for it and not borrow the amounts we are now.

    I have not heard any of the candidates talk about the nation making any sacrifices. There is a lot of talk of our heroic troops, and McCain keeps saying he is some kind of maverick, but there is not much of a discussion on the debt incurred by the war in Iraq.
    McCain talks about leaving with honor; if the country is to broke to help the returning solders get on with their lives, where is the honor in that?

    Paul how would you deal with the deficit?
    We can’t keep this kind of national debt.

    Someone pointed out Japan’s economic slump from the 90’s. One huge difference is they have a national health care system that works pretty well.
    We don’t have one.

    Posted by jeff, on September 16th, 2008 at 5:33 pm EDT
  • “He lost it a bit, playing into class warfare. My read was that the panelists were just trying to placate him.”

    _____

    Maybe the panelists should have just answered the question, then. They could have easily said “McCain is strong on the economy because _____(fill in the blank)” but they didn’t. THEY didn’t, and they had the chance.

    Sarah Palin is widely regarded an an out-of-nowhere candidate who is only just being tested on the national stage. Obama has been there for awhile, and is not the mystery Palin is. I would like to see more Palin grilling, I only just “met” her. Obama’s been around and available for dirt-digging for quite a while now.

    Once again, that panelist could have said: Sarah Palin is just great because_______” and he didn’t. He admitted he finds her unqualified. I’m sorry if that upsets you. Tom asked point blank IF she was qualified, he did not say, for example “She’s not qualified, is she?” or word it in a leading way. So, anyone who sees deep partisanship in this is really grasping at straws.

    The panelists were shifty, and didn’t want to say anything concrete. They all wanted to say safe things that wouldn’t get them into hot water. I cannot be alone in having wanted some strong, specific opinion from one of them. If that opinion was right or left, so be it!

    Passive language like “mistakes were made” “we need better regulation, perhaps not more regulation” doesn’t mean anything. Tom, appropriately, kept pushing for concrete answers. A recommendation on who to vote for is a concrete action listeners can take. They all dodged the question and, frankly, seemed to find themselves above the situation. In every way I thought Tom’s anger was 100% appropriate.

    PS: There was a show a few days ago where some lady called in to talk about the “great dumb masses” (she was referring to Palin supporters) and Tom got pretty testy with the caller for being rude & dismissive of the Palin crowd. Was that partisan? Are you all offended on Obama’s behalf? Jeesh.

    Posted by Robin, on September 16th, 2008 at 6:06 pm EDT
  • Oops, made a mistake earlier – I get the compound annual growth rate of total revenue, not revenue from income taxes.

    Revenue from income taxes rose 6.4% annually under Reagan; the number under Clinton is still 8%.

    Posted by Michael Brown, on September 16th, 2008 at 6:25 pm EDT
  • Tom:

    I second JMac’s post. The show was engaging and informative in large part because of your strong reporting. We are in a crisis – I am not interested in hearing bland talking points from panelists. Keep up the good work!

    Posted by Maria, on September 16th, 2008 at 7:08 pm EDT
  • Everything about America is over inflated, its culture, its confidence, its freedom and democracy. I am not saying this out of prejudice, but over the years of observing. I could be wrong too.

    From the smallest scale to the large scale.

    Small scale is the bullies in American schools, the “big dog” mentality. Boost their confidence by putting down on others. Large scale is international bullies, boost American’s world images by portraying others evil.

    Posted by another opinion, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:36 pm EDT
  • This is Capitalism to its extreme. Is there any word for greed as an ideology? Greed-ism?

    Posted by another opinion, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:53 pm EDT
  • I think America system should find another term for its own unique financial system, it’s beyond the capitalism. In some cases, you don’t even need capital to get the supplies you want. American use up all the supplies and resources before they pay?

    Posted by another opinion, on September 16th, 2008 at 10:58 pm EDT
  • Many times, I have had to turn the radio off because Tom Ashbook was reciting GOP talking points or challenging liberal guests on spurious grounds.

    Not during this show. This show was a pleasure. When the conservative guests attempted to defend their own, claiming that business would now, finally, police itself (”to make sure this never happens again”), Ashbrook questioned whether they really would care that much, ensconsced as they are in their $20M Greenwich mansions. When the commenter at the end of the show said both parties had great VP nominees, Ashbrook pressed the speaker and got him to recant vis a vis Palin.

    This represents journalism in true action: Ashbrook was not a passive channel for propaganda, but an active questioner using reality and fact as the tests of guests’ credibility.

    I will keep the radio tuned to On Point if there is more like this!

    Posted by Lee Collins, on September 17th, 2008 at 12:22 am EDT
  • I’ve never heard Tom so angry.

    “THEIR SHOES ARE GOING TO BE OLD!”

    heh…

    I wonder where his money was invested?

    Posted by haochela, on September 17th, 2008 at 5:58 am EDT
  • I perceived Tom’s displeasure towards his guests as a normal reaction given that these few people in high finance can reek such havoc. Tom has investments as others do, maybe he took a huge hit.
    If you had stocks in A.I.G a few weeks ago it was about $70 a share, yesterday it was a few dollars.

    Because he like the rest of us are looking at this and seeing the whole idea of the free unregulated market going up in smoke. It’s not working, the republican ticket talks about reform and change, yet the track record of this party for the past 30 years shows me that this is not only a laughable idea, but I don’t think they mean it. It’s ploy to try and keep power.

    For those how think I am being partisan I have more contempt for the democrats who have always run as the party for the working stiff. They also let their guard down on this.

    For years we read about the disparity of pay, CEO’s make something like 300 to 500 times what the lowest paid worker makes. On wall street this is out of control, the whole system is geared towards greed.

    I was watching Charlie Rose the other night and this of course was the topic. One of the guest said that the books of all these firms are now so tainted that no one believes anything anymore when it comes to the bottom line of theses firms. This is a problem.

    Posted by jeff, on September 17th, 2008 at 10:11 am EDT
  • The housing bubble is linked to Wall Street in that by providing easy money (ex. interest only, and stated income loans and whatever else), more people were getting loans.
    So you have people shopping for houses, some who legitimately qualify for conforming loans, and others who qualify for subprime, some who may be able to afford their payments and some who may not.

    All of these people, people with good money who just want to own a home, house flippers trying to make a quick turnaround, some people trying to get the McMansions that they can’t truly afford are all shopping and competing and bidding up the prices for the same homes pushing housing prices up.

    If Wall Street didn’t provide the easy money there wouldn’t have been so many house flippers, unqualified buyers out there driving up the prices. House prices would have stayed more stable if the only people getting home loans had the income to actually pay them.

    It seems simple as that. Wall Street facilitated it more by then bundling up these crap loans and foisting them off in these “securites” to investors. Then they’ve got more easy money to do more of the same. No wonder these companies can’t get infusions of cash from the private sector.

    I don’t know the technicalities of the de-regulation but I do believe…

    Mortgage brokers should not be allowed to write a loan for a borrower who has no hope to ever repay that loan. If that’s not criminal- it should be.

    Crap loans should not be able to be bundled in and sold as good products to investors. If that’s not criminal – it should be.

    I’ve heard it asked “Why should people be protected from themselves?” This crisis proves that we all are invested in this. Tax money bailouts, average joe’s 401k losses because of the market downturn, aren’t we all affected?

    Posted by Barbara, on September 17th, 2008 at 11:43 am EDT
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Video: Google CEO Eric Schmidt

Last week, host Tom Ashbrook was on stage with Google CEO Eric Schmidt, asking him about some of the biggest technology and business issues of our time.
It was part of an MIT event held on Thursday, Nov. 5, to commemorate computer science professor Michael Hammer, who died last year. Here’s video of the full interview, courtesy of WBUR.org:

Among other things, Schmidt said the possibilities [...]

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California, here we come! And we need your questions!

On Point is headed west!
No, no. Not for good. Only for one show. But it’s a very special show!  The NPR station in Thousand Oaks, California – KCLU – is celebrating their 15th anniversary. We’re lucky to have been on their airwaves for nearly seven years, and they invited us out west to host a live [...]

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