In the current economic crisis, it is vital to
remember that deregulation is a positive force and a democratic one. The
deregulation revolution got started
in the late 1970s during President Jimmy Carter’s term, when it became clear that private and public
monopolies were stifling economic growth and rationing goods and services.
Economists like Alfred Kahn at Cornell University, and George Stigler and Milton
Friedman at the University of Chicago, made the case for how deregulation could
bring the U.S. economy out of recession and better satisfy consumer needs. Under
President Ronald Reagan, deregulation accelerated in the U.S., and other
free-market nations followed suit – first in Europe, then in once heavily
bureaucratized economies like India, China, and Brazil.
Deregulation has provided consumers with access
to cheaper and more innovative services like cell phones, the Internet, and
budget airfares. It has thus played a decisive role in the unprecedented global
economic growth of the last 25 years. Financial deregulation – namely
securitization, now much maligned – has also played a positive role. Thanks to
the resulting division of risks, more public and private investments have been
made in and out the United States. Without securitization, innovative techniques
and emerging-market economies would not have obtained necessary
capital.
The current consensus among liberal politicians
is that deregulation went too far, and they blame it for the economic woes of
the last year. Their argument is not persuasive, however. For one thing, full
deregulation was never attempted. State bureaucracies remain intrusive and very
much in control. Besides, many financial regulations made the crisis worse,
forcing banks to sell their assets, which worsened the stock-market downturn.
Regulators are usually slower to spot problems in the market than financiers.
Bernie Madoff escaped scrutiny not because regulation was inadequate but because
regulators saw no signs of trouble.
It’s far from proven that financial
deregulation is the cause of the recession, and we would do well to remember
that economists still debate the events that led to the Great Depression of the
1930s. It seems presumptuous, then, to declare with such confidence the causes
of our current difficulties.
Deregulation is a convenient scapegoat for
politicians, who would rather have an easy target for blame than a scientific
explanation. But if we were to underline one among many causes of the crisis,
the Federal Reserve’s loose monetary policy since 2001 would be a much better
candidate – at least from an economic perspective, if not a political one. The
return to a regulated economy, mostly in the finance sector, is thus more of a
political statement than an economic solution: increased regulation means a
transfer of power from private entrepreneurs to the state
bureaucracy.
This does not imply that laissez-faire should
always prevail, however. Free markets cannot exist without the strict rule of
law. The law, however, should distinguish between regulation that gives power
only to regulators and stifles market forces, and regulation that brings more
power to consumers through increased transparency. The Obama administration’s
regulatory proposals, when they foster such transparency – as in the elimination
of fine print on mortgages and credit-card agreements – should be applauded by
free-market advocates.
Eventually, economic growth is always a
trade-off between the state and the market: the market is efficient, but
sometimes dangerous. The role of government is to make citizens aware of the
benefits and hazards of the market. Armed with such information, people can then
make decisions for themselves, without the tutelage of a nanny
state.










Deregulation is god.
Rédigé par: ETF | 27 juin 2009 à 01:00
Je trouve votre plaidoyer pour la dérégulation trop planant.
N'aurait-il pas fallu en introduction nous dire ce que vous entendez par dérégulation? Quelles mesures sont ainsi visées?
De ce fait, votre argumentation ne repose pas vraiment sur quelque chose de solide.
Cela ressemble plus aux habituelles prises de position libérales que vous prenez de temps à autre, comme pour vous convaincre que vous ne vous êtes pas trompé dans vos options économiques, mais qui ressortent plus de l'incantation, à laquelle j'avoue avoir été sensible pendant un temps.
Pour l'instant je suis plus sensible aux méfaits du grand casino financier,aux ravages du crédit illimité et au chômage qui touche tant de braves gens qui n'ont aucune responsabilité dans ce drame. La croissance a finalement reposé sur du vent et il va falloir des années pour remettre l'économie en état de marche, malgré les green shoots dont les médias nous abreuvent....
Rédigé par: El Oso | 27 juin 2009 à 12:12
Le poison de la mondialisation, 70% discount, deregulation it’s so good !
http://gsorman.typepad.com/guy_sorman/2009/06/httpwwwlesechosfrinfofrance4875670-quel-avenir-pour-le-liberalisme-htm.html?cid=6a00d834521ba869e20115706f7c91970c#comment-6a00d834521ba869e20115706f7c91970c
Rédigé par: Alain Soler | 27 juin 2009 à 16:18
Welcome back on the "right" track M Sorman. ;-)
YG
Rédigé par: Yannick Gagné | 29 juin 2009 à 03:31