| By Suzanne McGee, The Fiscal Times
Five years after the crisis peaked with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, it is still possible to hear bankers claim that Washington forced them to take risks. That claim simply doesn’t have much merit, however.
It all started with a house and a mortgage.
The first is a hallmark of American society, representing the ideal of home ownership: About two-thirds of our fellow citizens own the house or apartment in which they live, encouraged to do so by factors that include being able to deduct the interest on their mortgage payments. And it is the ready availability of those mortgages that has enabled them to buy those houses in the first place.
When the financial crisis brought the entire system to its knees five years ago, the heart of the problem wasn't some esoteric investment strategy but something fairly basic: poor-quality mortgage loans, repackaged by banks and other institutions in such a way as to temporarily mask their weakness. Banks had always made these subprime loans -- issuing mortgages to borrowers with poor credit quality, or financing purchases of homes for buyers who weren't putting anything down themselves. But that had been a fraction of their business, perhaps 8% of all new mortgages in a year. By 2006, the percentage had grown to 20% nationwide, and was far higher in some parts of the country, even as homeowners were taking on debt they simply couldn't afford.
As all the postmortems take place around the fifth anniversary of the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, one of the most significant questions boils down to whether it was the financial institutions that made these loans and then restructured and resold them that should bear the blame for the near-meltdown of the system. Or, as others argue, was the crisis the fault of Washington (a convenient code word for politicians, regulators and their rules)?
One of those on Wall Street now viewed as having been blind to the problems that were taking shape in the mortgage world, former Citigroup (C) CEO Charles Prince, may go down in history for his comment that "as long as the music is playing, you've got to get up and dance." That is, as long as the subprime mortgage lending market was moving along and generating big profits for the industry as a whole, no bank could afford to sit it out and allow all those gains to flow to its rivals.
In the wake of the crisis, however, those who believe the blame for the near-meltdown can be laid at Washington's door seized on Prince's phrase as a way to explain what they think happened. In their view, policies ranging from the Alternative Mortgage Transactions Parity Act (which greatly increased the ranks of lenders allowed to write adjustable-rate, interest-only and other kind of mortgages that became so popular among subprime lenders) to the Community Reinvestment Act (which tried to stop discrimination in lending, but which some argue forced banks to lend to home buyers with poor credit) were responsible for the dramatic increase in subprime loans and the increase in leverage in the years leading up to the crisis. Moreover, they argue, other policies resulted in inadequate regulatory supervision of the institutions taking those risks.
Around the first anniversary of the collapse of Bear Stearns, on St. Patrick's Day of 2009, the issue came up for a formal debate at an event organized by Intelligence Squared U.S. The ranks of those arguing that Washington was more culpable included historian Niall Ferguson, who suggested that if Chuck Prince and his fellow Wall Street CEOs were dancing to the music, "you have to ask yourselves … who was playing the music." It wasn't that Ferguson didn't blame banks, he insisted, just that he and his fellow debaters blame Washington more.
Balderdash.
Five years after the crisis peaked with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the forced merger of Merrill Lynch with Bank of America (BAC), and the near-implosion of many other institutions, it is still possible to hear bankers claim, with straight faces, that Washington forced them to take risks. That claim simply doesn't have much merit, however.
Let's first consider it from a common-sense perspective. How willing are banks to do things that they know in their gut are foolish or ill-conceived simply because the government wants them to? If anything, recent history has shown that they put their self-interest first -- and rightly so. Rock-bottom interest rates haven't sparked a flurry of new lending in the wake of the crisis; burned by the mortgage debacle, banks are guarding against credit risk more than they are abiding by the government's clear interest in seeing lending rise in order to fuel economic growth.
Historically, when banks haven't wanted to comply with a government rule or regulation, they have a tremendous track record in compelling whatever body is responsible to reverse the decision, PDQ. Remember that it was lobbying by banks, not by the government, that finally led to the collapse of the Glass-Steagall Act more than 60 years after it had been passed. If they could succeed in demolishing such a bedrock of financial regulation, could they really have been forced into acting against their best judgment by weaker, newer rules? It seems far more probable that these were rules they could live with or work around, or even rules that some of them believed would help make them more money.
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