Sunday, July 10, 2011

Sheila Bair

Today's NY Times Magazine has a noteworthy profile of Sheila Bair, the head of the F.D.I.C. during the financial crisis. Bair recently stepped down from her post and now appears more willing to speak openly about her opinions. Bair favored a tougher handling of the big banks than did her colleagues at the Federal Reserve and Treasury. She thought that bank bondholders should suffer haircuts if banks needed government aid. Indeed, that is how the F.D.I.C. handles troubled smaller banks on a regular basis. Depositors are covered by F.D.I.C. insurance and the creditors take a hit. Executive compensation can also be slashed because many of the bank's contracts are rendered null and void due to the insolvency. This occurs just about every week somewhere in America, but financial chaos does not result.

Proponents of the generous bailout terms offered to the biggest banks back in 2008-09 often said that such a process would not have been possible because the appropriate legislation did not exist. However, the government was engaged in various other bailout actions of questionable legality. And Congress was enacting major legislation - such as TARP - on a very tight schedule. Had the administration wanted to be tougher on banks, avoid financial chaos, and maintain market discipline by forcing losses on investors whose firms were insolvent, it could have done so. Unfortunately, Bair never really came out in public during the crisis and spoke as forcefully as she does in this NY Times interview. In the middle of the crisis, she argued that she favored an F.D.I.C style approach to the big banks in the future, but she failed to publicize the view that the government's current policy was deeply flawed, unfair, and unnecessary.

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