1. Stereodude is right.
1.1 The Bush Administration's "ownership society" definitely was a prime contributor to this whole mess. They presided over the run up to the greatest bubble in all of history and they did everything the could to help it along.
1.2 If you go back even farther, Alan Greenspan's naive efforts to get the U.S. economy out of the Tech Bust just primed the pumps for yet another bust.
1.3 If you go back even farther the Government Sponsored Enterprises, Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac, we're also
terrible ideas over the long term. They increased the supply of credit & money, causing market forces to compensate by inflating prices.
Hell, even your tax exemption on the interest you pay on the mortgage on your home encourage people to invest beyond their means in Real Estate. (Good luck getting rid of this... could you imagine!)
Nearly every U.S. government structure related to housing is Fucktarded in hindsight (which several people predicted in advance).
2. Mercutio is right. The regulatory hammer needs to be dropped the fuck down.
2.1 You need --most critically-- honest, rational accounting rules for
all business entities. And you need them as fast as humanly possible. No more "marking to market". What is the maximum downside risk you're exposed to through derivatives contracts --no matter how improbable, if shit hits the fan, like it has, how much do you owe?
The reason they needed to stop shorting is that, because of the accounting BULLSHIT the U.S. government lets corporation get away with no one can even figure out if, on a fundamental basis, any of these financial companies are worth anything at all! They damn well should be shorted into oblivion, because their books can't prove that their solvent, and no one will own up to their liabilities!
2.2 All derivatives positions must be publically recorded in a central exchange aka NYSE or a Commodities Futures Market.
2.3 Lastly, no --under any circumstances-- hiding stuff in off balance sheet vehicles or Quasi Special Purpose Entities. Any potential liabilities
must be listed on a company's public books for their share holders. I guess you can leave off assets if you want... To shit day, Wall Street is fighting this modification tooth & nail and the accountants and congress have all backtracked on it.
In an era where public entities compete minute-to-minute for equity on stock markets, they will fix their books every which way if they're allowed.
2.4 The U.S. needs a financial transaction tax that encourages investors to pay attention to the fundamental value of an equity position. Way too much investing goes on in the States with no examination of value fundamentals. While this provides liquidity, it also destabilizes the markets and encourages large bubbles and crashes. A small transaction tax would moderate this effectively.
3. This isn't an either/or, false dichotomy situation.
3.1 This is a "let's blame everyone involved, because, well, they're all goddamned guilty and they all benefitted tremendously" situation. Everyone in the government is guilty. Everyone on Wall Street is guilty.
3.2. And two, let's smack them with every remotely reasonable restriction, let's disproportionately tax them in a way that targets speculators and anyone who invests in companies without requiring an analysis of their fundamental equity position, let's break their business models when it suits us --while the investment banking model was killed off just 2 days ago by the market itself, if we'd done it ourselves earlier we wouldn't be in this mess. It was
always a broken business model that was
designed to get around good and legitimate limitations on leverage for financially critical institutions.
On and on. There is tons of blame to go around and everyone who deserves it should get some, and there are tons of things that need to be done to make a financial system that works.
Most fundamentally, investors need to receive accurate books, and investors who don't care about books need to be told their capital is as dangerous as it is useful and that, consequently, we are going to
strongly discourage your mentally retarded, antisocial investment style by taking not-insignificant chunks of your capital and redistributing to infrastructure improvements and other more socially worth enterprises.
See
Dean Baker's proposed tax, or
Interfluidity's. Best quote:
If it's illegal to short in a "panic", we ask, why isn't it illegal to go long during obvious asset price bubbles? If you can tell a panic from a correction, then surely you can tell an asset bubble from a genuine boom, right Mr. Greenspan?
If you need to socialize losses and keep profits private the distinction makes sense...
P.S. I think it's going to take a violent revolution to fix your country. Accountability is way out of style in the U.S.A. The people that really need to be nailed, definitely won't be. People also need to to understand that being wrong means you get
punished. Damn Christians think good intentions or obliviousness are excuses. If you're in a position of responsibility, and you're
wrong you should be crucified, no messing around --whether it's on Global Warming, the amount of leverage Investment Banks should be allowed, Weapons of Mass Destruction... if you're wrong the citizenry
needs to tear you to pieces and put the pieces on display so that the next guy thinks twice. Being wrong is enough, no intent necessary, no good intentions excuse you; being wrong is the worst most evil thing if you're in a position of power or responsibility and it needs to be dealt with proportionately.