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Learning From Financial History: An Academic Never Forgets, David J. Reiss
Learning From Financial History: An Academic Never Forgets, David J. Reiss
David J Reiss
Those with short-term memories have been dominating our debate over the future of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. They argue that the financial industry has learned its lesson and they point to a more rational marketplace today. But the Bureau was designed to regulate the subprime mortgage market and other consumer credit markets through the credit cycle. A strong Bureau should be built today to deal with the inevitable irrational exuberance of lenders and consumers once the cycle rises from its current depths to the heights of tomorrow.
Book Review: The Subprime Virus: Reckless Credit, Regulatory Failure, And Next Steps, David J. Reiss
Book Review: The Subprime Virus: Reckless Credit, Regulatory Failure, And Next Steps, David J. Reiss
David J Reiss
John Godfrey Saxe’s 19th century poem, “The Blind Men and the Elephant,” opens with six learned men
Who went to see the Elephant
(Though all of them were blind),
That each by observation
Might satisfy his mind.
The financial crisis is the Elephant of our time. Over the last couple of years, more than six wise men and women have written books purporting to explain the financial crisis and many more such books are surely in the works. Most of these wise ones suffer from the same limitations as the poem’s learned men. As each reaches out, he or she …