(click link for full article)Feeling betrayed, Greenspan hits back
BARRIE MCKENNA
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
April 8, 2008 at 9:09 PM EDT
WASHINGTON — Alan Greenspan is mad as hell and he's not going to take it any more.
Tired of being blamed for inflating the credit bubble that triggered the current financial crisis, the 82-year-old former chief of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board has embarked on an international public relations blitz to set the record straight. In interviews and written responses to his critics this week, an unrepentant Mr. Greenspan complained he was often praised for things he didn't do at the Fed, and now he's being unfairly tarred for things he didn't do. The bottom line: He wouldn't undo a single decision in his 18-year tenure at the Fed.
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Critics have attacked Mr. Greenspan for pushing interest rates too low and keeping them down for too long in 2002-03, when the central bank's key rate remained at 1 per cent for 12 months.
Secondly, they blame the Fed for failing to control an explosion of risky subprime and adjustable-rate mortgages.
Mr. Greenspan acknowledged he didn't see the housing bubble or the mortgage meltdown coming.
But he said it isn't the job of central bankers to thwart or deflate bubbles.
Neither tougher regulation nor tighter monetary policy would have suppressed the real estate bubble, Mr. Greenspan added, taking an apparent swipe at those now intent on re-regulating Wall Street.
“I am reasonably certain that I am right here,” insisted Mr. Greenspan, an early admirer of libertarian philosopher Ayn Rand.
And if someone can prove him wrong, he's ready to take responsibility. “I do not have a vested interest in holding wrong ideas.”
So what is to blame for the credit crisis? Mr. Greenspan points the finger at a global savings glut that pushed interest rates everywhere to exceptionally low levels, in spite of his own efforts to push them higher in 2004. “We tried and we failed,” Mr. Greenspan told CNBC.
Secondly, the core of the subprime mortgage mess “lies with the misjudgments of the investments community,” he wrote on FT.com, the Financial Times website.
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Since leaving the Fed in 2006, Mr. Greenspan has written a best-selling book, The Age of Turbulence, and launched a successful career as a speaker and consultant to banks and hedge funds. He reportedly commands fees of up to $250,000 (U.S.) for his speeches.
What unmitigated gall, for him to be selling his wisdom for an astronomical price while simultaneously saying that he has "no interest" in defending his record.
Fucking Randroid; of course the subprime mess was due to the misjudgments of the investment community. That's why we need regulators, fucktard! Trusting greedy short-sighted people to have good long-term judgment is like trusting a drug addict to think of his future.