[
I also agree that one study doesn't prove or disprove socialism. Human behavior is quite complex and mysterious.
]
But the biggest issue with capitalism is that it's too successful, and those are the issues we have to deal with.
Capitalism is doomed to failure without significant checks and balances. We saw that in 2008.
The real cause of 2008 wasn't capitalism, but rather the government intervening in the market.
No, the meltdown occurred because the failure of the market to self-regulate when the Bush administration failed to police the market to prevent the bad behavior that they knew was going on.
The Bush administration told the world that they were not going to enforce the regulations covering banks as a measure to reduce "red tape." Google "cutting red tape with a chainsaw." High in the hits should be this
article by a journalist who covers the housing market. And this coverage of the
testimony of Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Fed, saying that they failed to act because they thought that the market would self-regulate, "a humbled Mr. Greenspan admitted that he had put too much faith in the self-correcting power of free markets and failed to anticipate the self-destructive power of wanton mortgage lending."
You have been pointed to these many times and yet you persist in making incorrect and unsupported statements as you have here.
The financial markets are inherently unstable because they can make money in unstable markets. People panic sell resulting in bargains in equities and in overpriced bonds.
The bankers knew the loans were shit, but so long as the government would keep buying them up they were happy to make and sell them.
I assume that you mean the mortgage repurchasers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. They are corporations with their own stockholders chartered by the Federal government to provide liquidity to the mortgage market. They sell bonds and buy mortgages from the originating banks to provide the banks with money to lend out again. They are a bank to banks.
The charters of these private corporations severely limit the number of sub-prime loans that they can buy. They both violated the limits in their charters at the urging of their stockholders who wanted the repurchasers to reap what turned out to be the imaginary profits of turning subprime mortgages into securities with no chance of losing money because everyone knows that home prices never go down.
I don't know how you construe this statement of fact about these repurchasers into the government did it. If it is because the government chartered the corporation, the government charters the private banks, too.
The repurchasers purchase mortgages with "warranties and representations" that the bank did their due diligence that the borrowers would be able to pay back the loans and that the home is worth the value that the mortgage is based on. If this turns out to not be the case the repurchaser can force the bank that originated the mortgage to buy back the loan.
The volume of the problem in 2008 and the number of bad banks and bad mortgages meant that they would have bankrupted almost every bank in the country if they had exercised this option. So then the only entity that could do it, the federal government, stepped in and then bought the bad mortgages. If this is what you meant by the government did it I ask, at that time what was the option?
The reason that the government bailed out the banks and the repurchasers and a large number of wealthy CDS investors is that we need a stable banking system. It is required for an economy, especially a capitalistic one. The alternative to having a private banking system is to have a publicly owned banking system. I don't think that you want that.
Logically we would separate consumer and business banking from investment banking. This is how the system was until some free market idiots deregulated the system, allowing investment banks to own consumer banks where they could create money.
Bankers believe that their job is to make as much profit as they can. It isn't. Banks create money out of thin air when they make loans, money the economy needs to operate.
The only other entity that can create money out of thin air is the Federal government, when they run a budget deficit, like now, the aim of running the deficit being to further fill the pockets of the already wealthy, a goal that you heartily endorse.
Reason would dictate that the banks would be heavily regulated because the power to create money coupled with the desire to make as much profit as possible is a dangerous mix. And there are many regulations that limit what banks can do with this power to create money. But there is a flaw in this system of regulation. The regulations have to be enforced. No one foresaw that we wouldn't enforce the regulations, but that is what happened.
There are deluded people who believe that the banks and the financial sector, in general, would self-regulate in their quest for profits, that they would voluntarily give up profits in the name of maintaining a stable banking and financial system. These deluded people were elected into office and appointed like-minded deluded people to enforce the banking regulations. Not too surprising they didn't enforce the regulations. They went further and announced to the world that they wouldn't enforce the regulations which they termed to be useless red tape.
============== continued below ==============