THE ECONOMY

Who Is To Blame?

Some point to Alan Greenspan. But his hands-off approach to the economy originated with Ayn Rand.

 
GALLERY
Hard Times

Think the current economic crisis is bad? Before you decide, take a look at the bubbles, panics and depressions of the past.

 
 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

SPONSORED BY
 

It's not easy being Alan Greenspan these days. As the former Federal Reserve chairman, he urged government regulators to take a light touch while banks like Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers buried themselves—and the economy more generally—under a mountain of debt. Now that his reputation is plummeting faster than the stock market, he's been forced to admit a "flaw" in his hands-off ideology.

My Take
Follow your favorite NEWSWEEK columnists

Customize the Newsweek homepage to feature the latest word from your favorite columnists.

Of course, things look entirely different to members of "free-market advocacy groups," as they like to be called. One such group is the Ayn Rand Institute, named after the matriarch of the movement, whose antigovernment and anti-regulation views are embodied in her best-selling novels "Atlas Shrugged" and "The Fountainhead." Indeed, Greenspan himself was a friend of Rand's, and a devotee of her extreme free-market philosophy, known as Objectivism. NEWSWEEK's Barrett Sheridan spoke with the head of the Ayn Rand Institute, Dr. Yaron Brook, about why he defends free markets while much of the rest of the world has turned away from them, and what he thinks of Greenspan today. Excerpts:

NEWSWEEK: Lack of regulation is being blamed for our current crisis, and free markets are in disrepute. Has Objectivism been dealt a deathblow?
Yaron Brook: No, not at all. From a public-relations perspective, it's been hurt. But in the long term there will be a backlash against what's going on in the markets today—the heavy government involvement, the nationalizations and the move toward socialism. If the free-market advocacy groups position themselves correctly, they can benefit from it.

How can they do that?
What we need to do is really make the case to the American people—and I think it's an easy case to make—that this is not a failure of free markets, this is not a failure of capitalism, but this is a failure of the exact opposite. It's a failure of the regulatory state. It's a failure of all the government policies of the last eight years. Actually, the last 95 years.

Why do you say the last 95 years?
I believe that the No. 1 cause of the current crisis is Federal Reserve policy. [The Federal Reserve was created in 1913.] The Federal Reserve, by necessity, creates economic problems; no matter how good a Federal Reserve chairman is, he's going to create cycles of booms and busts.

How did the Federal Reserve create today's mess?
The current crisis was caused by the housing bubble, and the primary cause of the housing bubble was the Federal Reserve keeping interest rates at 1 percent in 2003. They were asking people to borrow money, basically begging them. The financial problem we face today was a problem of overleverage, of too much debt—but that's exactly what Federal Reserve policy encouraged.

Label

Newsweek Top Stories
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution

Using emotion to convince people to change.

Heaven Can Wait
Heaven Can Wait

A new book promises proof of eternal life.

The World's Biggest Foods
The World's Biggest Foods

Monster edibles from around America.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: RodiKenley @ 05/04/2009 2:29:08 AM

    I'm also going to guess: those that go out to ball games, are poor but need a life, some bank problems with people's accounts, people from the internet or else that get into your account, those with little to no health insurance and others.

  • Posted By: RodiKenley @ 05/04/2009 2:24:38 AM

    Who's to blame for the financial crisis? I'm going to guess smokers, those that buy wine often and others.

  • Posted By: Ragnars spawn @ 04/15/2009 3:07:06 PM

    YashBudini.. while you are busy spouting off rhetoric and vitriol that accoplisheses nothing other that perhaps a to give youirself a sense of undesrved moral superiority and self righteousness, Libertarians are out there silently earning their keep and paying their way every day. They're too busy living their lives to be trying to tell others how to live theirs. The fact that that "old people " use the system they paid into all their life does not negate this fact or their contribution to that sytem any more than it would have if they put it into a trust fund for their retirement . You seem to forget the fact that IT WAS THEIR MONEY TO BEGIN WITH. AND IT WAS TAKEN FROM THEM WITHOUT THEIR CONSENTAT THE POINT OF A GUN ( which is what backs up all forms of government expropriation) The only difference being that along the way back to it's source , the greatest portion of that weath was redistributed to those who had not earned it.." for the betterment of mankind" for the good of society.. but certainly not for the good of the person who caused it to come into existence in the firstplace.. This is what today passes for justice and morality.. to take that what is deserved and give it to those who don't desrve it.. THIS IS WHAT WE CALL MORAL??? Would you also endorse the right oif af a holdup man to rob you of your weekly wages? Why then do we condone behaviour from our lawmakers that we refuse to tolerate in our law breakers? Every productive human being who wishes to earn the keep and refuses to ask for handouts is at heart a Libertarian.. they just don't know it.

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse

My Take

Customize the NEWSWEEK homepage
to feature your favorite columnists.

Customize Now
 
The Greediest People of All Time
From Bernard Madoff to AIG, Wall Street has reinvented excess. But the Masters of the Universe didn't invent greed. A look at the despots, robber barons and others who made our shortlist.


 
 
PHOTOS
What About Us?
Wall Street's problems have captured the attention of Congress, the White House and the media. But on the country's Main Streets ordinary folks are wondering if anyone is paying attention to them. A look at how Americans are coping with the economic crisis.