With the financial crisis biliking out billions of dollars of investors wealth by the day, Thomas Friedman in his op-ed for the NY Times writes:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have no sympathy for Madoff. But the fact is, his alleged Ponzi scheme was only slightly more outrageous than the “legal” scheme that Wall Street was running, fueled by cheap credit, low standards and high greed. What do you call giving a worker who makes only $14,000 a year a nothing-down and nothing-to-pay-for-two-years mortgage to buy a $750,000 home, and then bundling that mortgage with 100 others into bonds — which Moody’s or Standard & Poors rate AAA — and then selling them to banks and pension funds the world over? That is what our financial industry was doing. If that isn’t a pyramid scheme, what is?
Far from being built on best practices, this legal Ponzi scheme was built on the mortgage brokers, bond bundlers, rating agencies, bond sellers and homeowners all working on the I.B.G. principle: “I’ll be gone” when the payments come due or the mortgage has to be renegotiated.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Wall Streets Legal Ponzi Scheme
Labels:
Capitalism,
Economy,
Financial Crisis,
Financial Jargon,
Free Markets,
US
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment