Alan Greenspan's Great Bailout Machine


<p>Alan Greenspan has died at the ripe age of a hundred.</p>
<p>Greenspan&rsquo;s passing set off a tsunami of tongue-bath OpEds how the &ldquo;Maestro&rdquo; centrally planned the American economy for close to 20 years.</p>
<p>In reality, Greenspan turned the Fed into a permanent bailout machine that gets worse with each passing decade.</p>
<h2>The &ldquo;Maestro&rdquo; at the Helm</h2>
<p>Just 69 days after taking office in 1987, Greenspan was blindsided by a market crash that he used to turn the Fed from alleged economic referee into a bailout machine where the bankers keep the wins and taxpayers &ndash; and dollar holders &ndash; eat the losses.</p>
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<p>This became known as the &ldquo;Greenspan Put&rdquo; &mdash; put means insurance in finance. And it&rsquo;s the reason Boomers &mdash; and bankers &mdash; own everything while 40-something Millennials live in Mom&rsquo;s basement.</p>
<p>Greenspan ran that machine for 20 years, all the way through 2006 when he lit his last boom-bust bomb, ending in the 2008 Financial Crisis that nearly set off a Second Great Depression.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, the bailout machine Greenspan built is now a permanent feature, with every subsequent Fed chair forced to pump til it breaks then bail out what&rsquo;s left at your expense.</p>
<h2>From Counterfeiter to Bailouts</h2>
<p>So the Fed was created by bankers &mdash; the infamous Jekyll Island putsch &mdash; as a counterfeiting cartel that prints money, but not so fast the inflation puts voters on pitchforks.</p>
<p>Like a gasoline thief who siphons the neighbor a quarter-gallon at a time instead of draining tanks, which would get him caught.</p>
<p>The way central banks do this is by guaranteeing bailouts for commercial banks&mdash;so-called &ldquo;lender of last resort.&rdquo; This lets those banks lend money they don&rsquo;t have &ndash; they literally create the loans from thin air. This is why you need to open an account to get a mortgage&mdash;the bank created the money.</p>
<p>Then central bankers limit the printing to tidy quarter-gallon siphons using interest rates, which determine how much loans cost.</p>
<p>Lower rates mean cheaper loans &mdash; and more of them. This artificially boosts growth, generates fees for Wall Street, and makes it cheap for the federal government to spend more than it has.</p>
<p>Everybody wins. Except pleb taxpayers and dollar-holders.</p>
<p><img class="mx-auto p-3" src="https://www.moneymetals.com/uploads/content/commercial-and-industrial-loans-all-commercial-banks-chart-800×418.jpg&quot; alt="Commercial and Industrial Loans | All Commercial Banks (Chart)" width="800" height="418" loading="lazy" /></p>
<p>The problem with having a giant counterfeit machine is like Frodo&rsquo;s ring: It attracts pressure to cut rates too far &ndash; which causes boom-bust inflation and recession.</p>
<p>And the even more insidious pressure from Wall Street to use that lender of last resort function to bail out not just boom-bust but speculation.</p>
<p>Because an iron law of finance is that more risk means more return. If you tell gamblers they keep the wins but you&rsquo;ll cover the losses they&rsquo;ll go all in all the time.</p>
<p>And that&rsquo;s where Greenspan comes in. Starting with that 1987 stock crash &ndash; Black Monday &ndash; Greenspan flooded the banking system with money, promising to keep flooding til every banker was solvent.</p>
<p>The Greenspan Put was born.</p>
<h2>The Wall Street Greenspan Built</h2>
<p>Bankers went from conservative portly men in glasses to the 1980s sharks fueled by hookers and blow.</p>
<p>Sharks who went on to fuel near-annual financial crises under Greenspan, from the S&amp;L crisis and Tequila crises to the dot-com bubble. The 1994 bond market massacre. The 1997 Asian financial crisis. The 1998 hedge-fund bailouts.</p>
<p>The mother of housing bubbles in the early 2000&rsquo;s.</p>
<p><img class="mx-auto p-3" src="https://www.moneymetals.com/uploads/content/us-sectoral-financial-crises-1987-2006-800×441.jpg&quot; alt="US Sectoral Financial Crises (1987-2006)" width="800" height="441" loading="lazy" /></p>
<p>In every case, the sharks made billions. And in every case taxpayers and dollar holders got shafted.</p>
<p>When the smoke cleared finance quadrupled to become the third largest industry in America.</p>
<p>Worse, it put Wall Street on a risk house of cards that every Fed chair now must feed.</p>
<p>Our new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has already bumped up against that, apparently ditching promises to reduce inflation by pawning Fed assets since Wall Street is now like orchids in a greenhouse that cannot survive in the wild.</p>
<p>Greenspan may be gone, but the bailout machine he built keeps growing. Fixing it is easy: Just announce the Fed won&rsquo;t bail anybody out, if a bank fails it&rsquo;s sold for scrap to more prudent banks.</p>
<p>Of course that would set off an instant 2008 crisis. Meaning it won&rsquo;t happen.</p>
<p>The best Warsh can do is try and limit bailouts. But he&rsquo;s locked in a straitjacket Alan Greenspan wove.</p>

      



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