Looting

David Leonhardt has a good piece in the New York Times on the roots of the economic crisis. In it, he recounts the work of two economists who wrote a paper sixteen years ago, called “Looting.” And, no, it was not about the LA riots:

The economists were George Akerlof, who would later win a Nobel Prize, and Paul Romer, the renowned expert on economic growth. In the paper, they argued that several financial crises in the 1980s, like the Texas real estate bust, had been the result of private investors taking advantage of the government. The investors had borrowed huge amounts of money, made big profits when times were good and then left the government holding the bag for their eventual (and predictable) losses.

In a word, the investors looted. Someone trying to make an honest profit, Professors Akerlof and Romer said, would have operated in a completely different manner. The investors displayed a “total disregard for even the most basic principles of lending,” failing to verify standard information about their borrowers or, in some cases, even to ask for that information.

The investors “acted as if future losses were somebody else’s problem,” the economists wrote. “They were right.”

Given this logic, Alan Greenspan’s comments to Congress last Fall were, well, weak:

Do you remember the mea culpa that Alan Greenspan, Mr. Bernanke’s predecessor, delivered on Capitol Hill last fall? He said that he was “in a state of shocked disbelief” that “the self-interest” of Wall Street bankers hadn’t prevented this mess.

He shouldn’t have been. The looting theory explains why his laissez-faire theory didn’t hold up. The bankers were acting in their self-interest, after all.

The term that’s used to describe this general problem, of course, is moral hazard. When people are protected from the consequences of risky behavior, they behave in a pretty risky fashion. Bankers can make long-shot investments, knowing that they will keep the profits if they succeed, while the taxpayers will cover the losses.

This form of moral hazard — when profits are privatized and losses are socialized — certainly played a role in creating the current mess. But when I spoke with Mr. Romer on Tuesday, he was careful to make a distinction between classic moral hazard and looting. It’s an important distinction.

With moral hazard, bankers are making real wagers. If those wagers pay off, the government has no role in the transaction. With looting, the government’s involvement is crucial to the whole enterprise.

And the most disturbing implication of all?

Either way, the bottom line is the same: given an incentive to loot, Wall Street did so. “If you think of the financial system as a whole,” Mr. Romer said, “it actually has an incentive to trigger the rare occasions in which tens or hundreds of billions of dollars come flowing out of the Treasury.” (my emphasis)

Funny, though. Looters following riots get rounded up and put in jail if they’re caught. These looters, by contrast - they just get their billions.

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3 Responses to “Looting”

  1. [...] in LA in 1992. The kind that  wealthy white bankers usually engage in. Two economists explain how it works. TAGS: financial crisis, Looting Share and [...]

  2. Gabriel Ben-Ami says:

    How can I get my hands on the article “Looting”. Could you send me the reference or (hopefully) a pdf version?

  3. admin says:

    Gabriel

    The best I can do is provide this abstract:

    http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=227162

    There is contact information for the authors at the bottom.

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