
Archive for January, 2010
Cleansing and Reforming our Financial System |
Why don’t we just admit that the current financial and regulatory system is dysfunctional? We face two fundamental problems. First, we need to clean the financial system — close weak banks more aggressively, encourage bankruptcies/foreclosures, and free good assets held by poorly financed owners. Small and medium sized businesses with quality projects are not getting loans. This problem will not be solved by tax breaks or targeting some incentives. We need structural change. Second, the current regulatory system failed us. It needs to change. Our system is comprised of three federal agencies: the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve, as well as 50 state banking departments! I am not even including the Office of Thrift Supervision and all of the Savings and Loan Institutions nor the National Credit Union Administration which supervises all the credit unions. There are state chartered banks as well as national chartered banks. As a result of the historical maze of changing regulations, we have over 7,000 banks. There is no economic reason for 7,000 banks. It is inefficient both for the bank in providing the lowest cost and highest quality services to their customers. It is a nightmare to regulate. What is most alarming is that none of our leaders have stepped up with bold proposals to revamp our financial and regulatory system. |
Navigating the Jobs Morass |
The SpinIt is amazing that most jobs stories featured upfront the revision to November’s Non-Farm Payrolls. November was revised to +4,000 from the original -11,000. A net gain. However, October was revised downwards – a complete wash. The fact is that we lost a surprising 85,000 Non-Farm Payroll jobs. A widely respected economic consulting group expected +50,000. The market expectation was about flat. I am convinced the situation is much worse than we are led to believe. |
Avoiding Paralaysis by Analysis |
Professor Ralph Keeney is helping Freakonimics blog readers learn to make better decisions. Check out the Freakonomics site for Keeney’s guidance on how to make good decisions and minimize regret. |


