If you haven't seen this one yet, here is a report from Elizabeth Warren:

At a Harvard panel discussion 
<http://video2.harvard.edu:8080/ramgen/AAD-PAN/FinMktsPanel.rm> yesterday, 
economics professor Ken Rogoff 
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenneth_Rogoff> made an interesting point: 
The liquidity crisis isn't real. Or, to restate it: Any liquidity crisis 
is caused by the promise of a government bailout. Ken said that his many 
friends in investment banking said that there is plenty of money to 
invest in financial services, but right now it is "sitting on the 
sidelines." Why? Because the financial services industry does not want 
to pay the terms demanded. As he put it, why do business with Warren 
Buffett who will negotiate a tough deal, if you believe that the 
government will ride in soon with cheaper cash? 

Ken also talked about the need to shrink the financial services sector. 
He thinks it is good that the investment banking houses are failing and 
many people on Wall Street are losing their jobs because, in his view, 
we have an oversupply in that sector and our economy just can't support it. 

Ken's background with the IMF and on the Board of the Federal Reserve 
add a certain credibility to his assessment of conditions on Wall 
Street. If he is right, the $700 bailout is saving some investment 
bankers' jobs in the short term, but overall it is making the financial 
system worse.

It was a terrific panel: Nobel winner Robert Merton 
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_C._Merton>, Dean of the Harvard 
Business School Jay Light 
<http://drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=bio&facEmId=jlight>, 
Harvard economist and Chair of the President's Council of Economic 
Advisers-2003-05 Greg Mankiw 
<http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/mankiw>, Harvard Business 
School Prof and long-time Goldman Sachs partner Robert Kaplan 
<http://drfd.hbs.edu/fit/public/facultyInfo.do?facInfo=bio&facEmId=rokaplan&loc=extn>,
 
and me. It might be worth listening to the webcast.

If you tune in, don't miss Ken's talk (he is fifth of the six of us). He 
is calm and funny, but there is no too-big-to-fail talk. Instead, he 
makes the whole rush-to-bailout look like a very bad idea.


Regards,

-- 
Kevin B. O'Brien         TANSTAAFL
[EMAIL PROTECTED]      Linux User #333216

"It does not matter how slowly you go so long as you do not stop." -- 
Confucius

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