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    Greenspan Goes on Defensive: His Legacy Tarnished

    This man has no shame!

    His Legacy Tarnished,
    Greenspan Goes on Defensive

    Future of U.S. Financial Reform
    Is at Stake; 'I Am Right'

    By GREG IP
    April 8, 2008; Page A1

    WASHINGTON -- Alan Greenspan's reputation is under siege, and he's incredulous.

    Hailed three years ago as "the greatest central banker who ever lived," the retired chairman of the Federal Reserve now is being criticized for his management of the U.S. economy before he retired in 2006. The Fed's low rates and laissez-faire regulatory oversight during his final years are widely blamed for sowing the seeds of today's financial crisis -- one that began in the U.S. housing market and is now battering banks, stock markets, borrowers and consumers around the world.


    Former Fed chief Alan Greenspan calls some of the criticisms of his tenure 'quite unfair.'
    For much of his 18 years atop the world's most-influential economic institution, Mr. Greenspan was lionized for the economy's performance. Now, he notes, he's being second-guessed for it.

    "I was praised for things I didn't do," Mr. Greenspan said during one of three interviews at his sun-drenched office in downtown Washington, D.C. "I am now being blamed for things that I didn't do."

    Now 82 years old, Mr. Greenspan wants to set the record straight before the ink dries on the first draft of the financial crisis' history. The former Fed chief doesn't deny that he cares about his reputation. But the larger issue at stake, he says, is getting the lessons of the crisis right.

    "The [wrong] evaluation of this period -- and how to avoid the problems associated with it -- will give you the wrong answers and the wrong policies," he says.

    The scrutiny of Mr. Greenspan's record has taken on urgency now that the Bush administration and congressional Democrats are skirmishing over how to overhaul U.S. financial regulation. If Mr. Greenspan's critics prevail, then financial companies will likely face tighter oversight and less freedom in the products they offer. If Mr. Greenspan's views carry the day, the trend toward self-policing will continue. A repudiation of Mr. Greenspan's monetary policies could tempt the Fed to raise interest rates relatively quickly after the current crisis passes, and even attempt to deflate future bubbles with higher interest rates.


    Once called "the greatest central banker who ever lived", Alan Greenspan, retired chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, is now under fire for the current economic crisis. WSJ's Greg Ip discusses Greenspan's response to his critics.
    Mr. Greenspan says he doesn't regret a single decision. In his view, many critics are ignoring evidence in his favor and failing to assess the process by which he made decisions. To prove his point, he draws on texts of old speeches and news clippings and even a letter, written by a now-deceased colleague, downplaying a policy disagreement the two once had.

    His tone modulates between earnest, bemused and dismayed. No stranger to controversy, he easily brushes off the comments of longtime antagonists. He chuckles at political cartoons, such as one likening his recent memoir, "The Age of Turbulence," to O.J. Simpson's "If I Did It."

    'Where's the Evidence?'

    The criticisms that get under his skin are those from friends and former colleagues, many of them respected economists who backed his policies at the time but now say, in hindsight, that the calls were wrong. "I do take it seriously if my peers think I have misstated the facts," he says. "But where's the evidence? Too many people make accusations by assertion. I think it's improper."

    Mr. Greenspan still has many admirers. His memoir has sold about a million copies. He collects six-figure fees to answer questions for audiences, typically assemblies of financial professionals. He has signed consulting contracts with three firms, including Germany's biggest bank, Deutsche Bank AG; the world's biggest bond-fund manager, Pacific Investment Management Co.; and Paulson & Co., a hedge fund that made billions betting against housing. Sen. Hillary Clinton recently called for his inclusion on a panel to advise on the foreclosure crisis.
    The prevailing view among critics faults Mr. Greenspan on two main counts.

    GREENSPAN ON...


    Decision making:

    "Monetary policy is process based on probabilities. I don't remember a case when the process by which the decision making at the Federal Reserve failed. Events often did not proceed as we anticipated, but that resulted from a lack of foresight, not from a flawed decision-making process."
    Low interest rates:

    "I'm an old 19th-century liberal who is uncomfortable with low interest rates. My inner soul didn't feel comfortable."
    Regulation:

    "Omniscience is not given to us. There is no way to predict how innovative markets will develop. All you can do is set a general strategy. The choice is between a lightly or tightly regulated economy. The former is highly competitive, innovative, and dynamic -- but periodically visited by wrenching crises. The latter is more stable, but slower growing."
    The housing bubble:

    "I'm surprised it went as far as it did. I am having the same problem now with surging prices of oil and food. Are they bubbles?"
    The role of adjustable-rate mortgages in the housing crisis:

    "Adjustable-rate mortgages were the cheapest way they could finance home purchases. But if they were not available, home purchases arguably would have been financed with fixed-rate mortgages. There's no evidence of which I'm aware that says that price would be importantly less if adjustable-rate mortgages had been less."
    Failure of market self-regulation:

    "There were far more failures here than I expected. I've been chagrined at how badly some of the judgments of very sophisticated investors have been with respect to risks...It's all human psychology with which we're dealing, not institutions. The argument, therefore, is not to discard counterparty surveillance, but, essentially, to patch it back together."
    His early disbelief at the surge in subprime lending:

    "When in 2005 I first ran across the sharp spike in subprime-mortgage originations estimated by a private vendor, which was later confirmed, I said, "This makes no sense." Markets don't move that fast."
    • Read more from Greenspan's discussion with the JournalFirst, they say, his Fed lowered rates too much from 2001 to 2003 to cushion the economy from the bursting dotcom bubble. Then it took too long to raise them again. Low rates fueled mortgage borrowing, driving home prices to unsustainable heights.

    Second, they say, the Fed was lax in its regulatory role. The central bank failed to press for stiffer rules for underwriting mortgages to people who ultimately couldn't afford them, they say. Also, they say, the Fed failed to anticipate banks' exposure to risky home buyers, leaving them with too little capital to absorb the eventual losses on those mortgages.

    At the time, Mr. Greenspan expected his policy to boost housing because the rest of the economy was relatively unresponsive to lower interest rates. Based on decades of his own research, he believed a buoyant housing market would spur consumers to borrow against home values and spend more. This would not produce a housing bubble, he predicted, because it was difficult to speculate in homes and the memory of the 2000 tech-stock bust remained fresh.

    Mr. Greenspan now admits he was wrong about the improbability of a housing bubble. Yet he has long maintained that bubbles are an unavoidable feature of a dynamic economy. He pulls out a 1999 speech and shows, underlined in green marker, passages in which he warned of recurring but unpredictable patterns of overconfidence followed by investor panic. He does not share some foreign central bankers' belief that their job is to defend against excessive asset-price inflation: No sensible policy, he maintains, could have prevented the housing bubble.

    "I am reasonably certain that I am right here," Mr. Greenspan says. If proved wrong, he says, "I will change. I do not have a vested interest in holding wrong ideas."

    Dour Inflation Fighter

    Mr. Greenspan was born in New York in 1926. An acolyte from an early age of the libertarian philosopher Ayn Rand, he was convinced that private self-interest regulates markets and businesses better than government can. He ran an economic-consulting firm and served as an economic adviser to Presidents Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan. In 1987, President Reagan appointed him chairman of the Federal Reserve.

    Mr. Greenspan's first years were rocky. He was credited with swiftly responding to the 1987 stock-market crash. But his slowness to lower rates in the early 1990s led to frequent clashes with President George H.W. Bush. He was seen as a dour inflation fighter quick to snuff out strong economic growth.

    But in the 1990s, economic expansion lengthened and the U.S. successfully negotiated several financial crises. Admiration for Mr. Greenspan grew. Some accused him of being a cheerleader for the stock-market boom of the late 1990s. But his aggressive interest-rate cuts in response to the bursting bubble, and the mildness of the recession in 2001, restored his luster.

    The unlikely popularity of this central banker -- known for inscrutable comments and idiosyncratic syntax -- became the stuff of satire. When the journalist Stephen Glass, later discredited for fabricating stories, spun a tale about an investment firm that had erected a shrine to Mr. Greenspan, it seemed plausible. The Onion, a satirical Web site, wrote of him in 2001: "Several thousand excited young Japanese fans mobbed and tipped over his tour bus after a speech."

    When Mr. Greenspan left the Fed in January 2006, the economy was strong, inflation was low and prices of stocks and houses were buoyant.

    But seeds of crisis began to germinate a few months later. Home prices stopped rising. House construction turned down. Delinquencies mounted on subprime mortgages, home loans made to borrowers who didn't qualify for, or weren't offered, regular mortgages. That triggered the collapse of several mortgage lenders and hedge funds.

    In August 2007, the troubles spread to banks in Europe and the U.S. In September, Mr. Greenspan released his memoir. As discussion of the book saturated newspapers and television, his successor, Ben Bernanke, delivered the first of six interest-rate cuts to date aimed at countering the crisis.

    REAL TIME ECONOMICS



    • Read the latest news and analysis on the economy at WSJ.com's Real Time Economics blog.Opinions of Mr. Greenspan trended down with the economy. Last month, Sen. Chris Dodd -- a Connecticut Democrat who in 2005 said Mr. Greenspan commanded "tremendous respect" in the Senate -- laid the blame at his feet. Mr. Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, charged that Mr. Greenspan's policies have left "millions and millions of American consumers" facing foreclosure.

    Anti-Greenspan sentiment has cropped up on blogs such as The Mess That Greenspan Made and Greenspan's Body Count, the latter a tally of deaths purportedly linked to the real-estate bust. Hedge-fund manager William Fleckenstein's book "Greenspan's Bubbles: The Age of Ignorance at the Federal Reserve," released in January, is now in its fourth printing.

    Mr. Greenspan says many of the criticisms against him are unjust. He is particularly perturbed by attacks over a 2004 speech in which he suggested that more borrowers would benefit from adjustable-rate mortgages. Interest rates were at a historical low at the time, which means that those who held on to the mortgages would have seen rates adjusted upward.

    Mr. Greenspan says the speech merely pointed out that many people who get a 30-year mortgage move or refinance long before it matures. Eight days after giving the speech, he says, he clarified his comments to say he didn't mean to disparage 30-year fixed-rate mortgages. "I find it profoundly disturbing" that critics cite the recommendation and not the retraction, he says, tapping his fingers on the table in front of him. "In all seriousness, this is really quite unfair."

    Analyzing the Crisis

    DISCUSS



    How has your opinion of Alan Greenspan changed since he left the Fed? Vote and share your thoughts.He has also thrown himself into analyzing the current crisis, immersing himself in economic data as he did at the Fed -- though now without 200 Ph.D. economists to assist him. The questions his clients currently ask go to the heart of his own legacy: What drove the housing and mortgage bubbles? How far will they deflate? What will happen to the economy?

    Unable to find out how many homes are bought with subprime mortgages, Mr. Greenspan spent several months designing his own data system. Some of what he has learned is going into a new chapter for the paperback edition of his book, to be released Aug. 26. It will explain events after last June, when he finished writing the original.

    The biggest question mark over Mr. Greenspan's record is his decision to slash interest rates to 1% in 2003 and wait to raise them until 2004, and then only slowly. In this debate, Mr. Greenspan and his critics seem to speak different languages.

    Critics talk about the events that followed -- an overheated housing market and a rapid buildup of debt on Main Street and Wall Street, much of which is now painfully unwinding. Such critics are now in the majority: In a recent Wall Street Journal survey of 55 economists, 84% said the Fed was too slow to raise rates. Two members of the policy-making Federal Open Market Committee at the time -- William Poole and Robert Parry, presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks of St. Louis and San Francisco -- have both recently argued that, in hindsight, rates were too low for too long.

    Mr. Greenspan focuses not on events that followed the policy but on the thinking behind it. "I don't remember a case when the process by which the decision making at the Federal Reserve failed," he says.

    He says rock-bottom interest rates actually went against his "19th century" aversion to easy money. "My inner soul didn't feel comfortable," he says. He justified the policy by noting that at the time, inflation was falling persistently and the risk of deflation -- though small -- seemed real, despite his prior assumptions that it was impossible with a dollar unlinked to gold.

    To prevent deflation, the Fed spurred growth by keeping interest rates low. At the time, he notes, the only dissenting votes on the Fed policy committee were those who wanted to set rates even lower. The Fed, he said, initially raised rates gradually to give businesses and investors time to prepare. In 2004 and 2005, it raised rates faster than private economists expected.

    That judgment is now being questioned by Mr. Greenspan's peers, including Stanford University economist John Taylor. The Treasury Department's top international hand from 2001 to 2005, Mr. Taylor is famous in academic circles for his Taylor Rule, a formula the Fed and other central banks use as a guide to setting interest rates.

    At a 2005 Fed conference in Jackson Hole, Wyo., where the world's monetary elite gather each year, Mr. Taylor agreed with a study presented there by two Princeton economists who concluded that Mr. Greenspan was history's greatest central banker. Mr. Taylor credited Mr. Greenspan for the nation's "extraordinary economic performance," praising in part his "timely" rate cuts in 2001 to 2003 and, later, his "well telegraphed" rate hikes.

    Mr. Taylor struck a different note last August. Speaking at the same Jackson Hole event, Mr. Taylor used his own model to argue that rates were kept too low for too long, overheating housing prices and setting the stage for a bust. He repeated the charge before Congress in February.

    The critique is painful for Mr. Greenspan. The men have been friends since the mid-1970s, when Mr. Greenspan was chairman of President Ford's Council of Economic Advisers and Mr. Taylor was on staff. Mr. Greenspan later hired Mr. Taylor to work with his consulting firm, Townsend-Greenspan & Co.

    Vintage Greenspan

    Earlier this year, Mr. Greenspan invited Mr. Taylor to lunch at his office and challenged his former protégé's assessment. In Mr. Greenspan's view, if the Fed's policies were to blame, the housing bubble would have been mostly limited to the U.S. Yet, he argued, many other countries had housing bubbles, too. A better culprit, he suggested, was the glut of savings globally. Savers were competing to make loans, keeping long-term interest rates low in many countries and fueling housing demand.


    Mr. Taylor countered that there was no savings glut, citing data that showed world savings equaled world investment. Mr. Greenspan called Mr. Taylor's data "irrelevant." Interest rates are affected by intended investment rather than actual investment, Mr. Greenspan argued, adding that intentions are hard to measure.

    The discussion, if arcane, was vintage Greenspan. The former Fed chief has long differed from conventional economists in his disdain of models and his readiness to second-guess economic data. While that has given him insights that escape his peers, it has also created chasms in the ways he and they see the world.

    Mr. Taylor says he stands by his 2005 praise of Mr. Greenspan's tenure as a whole. "Monday-morning quarterbacking" of a few episodes, he says, "shouldn't change the overall assessment."

    Mr. Greenspan's regulatory record has also come under review. The Federal Reserve is charged with supervising banks and enforcing and interpreting consumer-protection laws such as the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act. Today, Mr. Greenspan's hands-off oversight is routinely cited for lax lending standards that steered many borrowers toward mortgages they ultimately couldn't afford.

    Mr. Greenspan says that on regulatory issues, he deferred to the Fed's staff or to the Fed governor in charge of consumer matters. Former Fed officials concur but some add that senior staff reflected Mr. Greenspan's distrust of regulation. Without a prod from its chairman, they say, the Fed was often slow to expand consumer protection.

    Mr. Greenspan scorns the notion that he intimidated others into falling in line. "What I find amusing is that history is being rewritten with me being portrayed as a force that overwhelms and persuades all these highly educated, very intelligent people to do my bidding," he says. "That's just silliness. It's a terrible rewrite of history."

    The Fed took several steps to tighten oversight of subprime lending, but until last year, none were aimed at the type of adjustable-rate subprime mortgages whose phenomenal growth in 2005-06 is at the root of the current crisis. Mr. Greenspan notes the Fed lacked good data on those mortgages.

    Fed Seal of Approval

    On at least one occasion, Mr. Greenspan did resist colleagues who urged further oversight. In 2000, then-Fed governor Edward Gramlich, who was in charge of the Fed's consumer affairs, proposed to Mr. Greenspan that the Fed's staff examiners look for abusive lending practices in banks' lightly regulated mortgage affiliates.


    In an interview with The Wall Street Journal last June, three months before his death, Mr. Gramlich said that at the time, he generally considered subprime loans a good thing. He didn't then know the extent to which the loans would become a problem, but he wanted the "Fed to be a leader" in cracking down on predatory lending.

    Mr. Greenspan recalls that he demurred, saying that the Fed shouldn't have oversight of these lenders. Shady operations could portray their Fed-regulated status as a seal of approval, he suggested, giving them unearned credibility with customers.

    Since the interview with Mr. Gramlich was published, it has been cited repeatedly as evidence of Mr. Greenspan's neglect. Asked about it, Mr. Greenspan draws a piece of paper from his desk. It is a letter in Mr. Gramlich's shaky handwriting, written a few days before his death last September.

    "You were a magnificent central banker and a great leader," Mr. Gramlich wrote. "I truly wish the press would stop kicking you around on this subprime supervision issue. What happened was a small incident."




    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1207603 ... iewed_day#

  2. #2
    Senior Member tencz57's Avatar
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    This shack of ____ needs to crawl back into his hole and die
    Nam vet 1967/1970 Skull & Bones can KMA .Bless our Brothers that gave their all ..It also gives me the right to Vote for Chuck Baldwin 2008 POTUS . NOW or never*
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