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Exaggerated demise of Anglo-Saxon capitalism
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The gloating didn’t last long. This fall, German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck proclaimed “Anglo-Saxon capitalism” is “finished.” Steinbrueck stuck it to the hated Anglo-Saxon capitalists just in time — before he got too distracted by the exigencies of managing a $681 billion program to re-finance distressed German banks.
Germany’s second-largest commercial real estate lender, Hypo Real Estate, apparently didn’t realize risky practices during the great credit bubble were inherently un-Germanic. Its loans exceeded its deposit base by 8-1 or more, and the German government had to swoop in with a $67 billion rescue.
The same kind of overleveraging, risky loans, toxic securities and real-estate bubble that has rocked the American financial system infected Europe, which is why European schadenfreude quickly turned to desperate and (until now) poorly coordinated attempts to shore up Europe’s banks. So far, only one country has been taken down by the financial crisis, and that is poor little Iceland, brought to its knees by bank failures. The end of Norse capitalism?
The rush to declare the death of the system of sophisticated finance and robust free-market economics pioneered in Britain and exemplified by the United States has many motives. Euro-bureaucrats have always hated its out-of-control dynamism. Democrats here pile on in hopes of creating an overweening Euro-style regulatory state, while conservatives proclaim the advent of socialism in shock and horror at the scale of government intervention in this crisis.
All of this isn’t socialism, however, but emergency measures to preserve credit, the lifeblood of capitalism. The Wall Street axiom that “the markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent” applies particularly to banks, which can’t exist without confidence. The architect of the American economic system, Alexander Hamilton, acted just as aggressively to prop up the banks during a panic in 1792, although on a much smaller scale. In so doing, he saved the U.S. financial revolution that fueled the young country’s economic rise. By the 1820s, the United States caught up to England in per capita output.
Financial panics aren’t new — as economic historian John Steele Gordon has noted, they’ve occurred about every 20 years throughout American history. Neither are financial bailouts. The savings and loan and the Long Term Capital Management bailouts didn’t denote the end of American capitalism. If the Treasury and the Fed, along with their counterparts around the globe, have acted quickly and boldly enough, they will have forestalled economic calamity.
Then, we will still face a sharp recession, but we have weathered those before. We can return swiftly to economic growth, as long as the necessary post-crisis regulatory tune-up doesn’t lurch into suffocating overkill. The daily dose of dire news shouldn’t obscure the fact that open, dynamic capitalism gave us a quarter-century of nearly uninterrupted economic growth. It is the system that most accords with individual freedom and — over the long term — creates the most efficient and productive use of resources.
Just wait. We’ll be back, and through gritted teeth, the Europeans will watch the “Anglo-Saxons” rise again.
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