Questions which always have arisen are whether regulations or political leadership had the ability to avert crisis that come from decisions made in private industry and in private boardrooms. One argument regarding Argentina is that loans given to The Argentine and other countries by international creditors place complete onus on the borrower to assume ALL risk in the transaction. As with small business loans in many financial markets, the tradition of incorporation and all of its legal rights for an investor to be separate from the company with separate legal identities is signed away, leaving all risk in the transaction on the head of the borrower. The problem with this on a micro level reflects that of the macro level, leaving all risk on the borrower, but not placing any onus on the lender to make a business decision on their clients in order to avert losses to the company. Like with international lending, risk is always taken by the borrower, so when there is a problem in the relationship, bad business decisions by the lenders result in a situation where gains are taken as profit, but if there are losses the borrowers must go well beyond reasonable measures to pay back a loan that might have been given without consideration to risk, as lending in the modern era has been able to avoid the Invisible Hand of the market as poor economic decisions have little effect on irresponsible lenders who see no ill effects from giving bad loans to people and countries who have no rights to shield themselves from the market.
Regulation and government intervention must be considered, as with such a unique industry which relies heavily on non-risk and government regulation and bail outs, the market forces on the financial industry must invite regulation in order to maintain its non-risk positions and insure losses by way of the national reserves despite poor decision making by those in the industry themselves. The root of financial industry theory is that the market will determine the right course of action for people, but that regulation is needed to insure that losses will not create a catastrophe in the process. In Argentina, the failure of the economy forced banks to literally lock people out of their private savings so that a run on the currency would not create a collapse. Luckily the US does have reserves to cover the losses, but did the crisis comes from regulation impeding the free market, or does the free market simply not work? I would argue that since risk and consequence is the result of any business transaction, an industry which prohibits other industries from growing without giving sensible risk to the lender cannot vent its problems on regulation and a government that is insuring any and all mistakes made as a result of poor decisions collapsing their industry as a whole. Regulation is a key issue as it allowed mortgage lenders to sell their risk into wider financial markets and is the reason why the current catastrophe has echoed worldwide, but the same regulation also is there to keep the US out of the chaos of Argentina, namely, to maintain confidence in the US economy that risk of losses is low and that the market is strong. So is regulation a barrier to the free market and caused the current problems, to some degree it did allow for problems to arise, but mostly due to an industry making decisions without consequence and giving the risk to the public in many forms with no constructive losses to financial companies or threats of real losses to their own private companies.
Leadership, while likely the most media friendly issue and less complicated than the equations needed to understand the Bail Out, has done little to address the true need for proper regulations, the true market effects of the financial industry and creating laws which protect consumers. They have done little to protect the national reserve and provide that economic decision making should bear consequence on those decision makers in private industry and remove the corporate veil for larger financial companies as is the case with many business borrowers and consumers of the financial industry which need those companies to help grow their local economies and communities. As debated by Mr. Obama in last night's debate, the financial crisis we have to date is the final legacy of the Bush Administration, but while a Bail Out may make this issue last week's news, the massive amount of borrowing from lenders in cash rich China, Dubai and other wealthy emerging economies in the last eight years and the economic alienation of US allies in the process in places like Europe, Canada and Latin America may take a process of normalization of investment trends from the US to the world into a situation where those new lender countries will be on par with the US immediately. It was thought by writers like Zakaria and Khanna that over a course of 15-35 years, the US will become one of many economic superpowers in the globe, but due to poor leadership and a financial industry which has chosen to give the death kneel to the American Empire of the 20th Century, measured predictions by those authors will likely come true before the paperbacks of their recently published books become available. The next President, whoever he is, will likely be a better choice than anyone in the last 20 years, and will spend the better half of the next four years cleaning up America as he bears the responsibility for cleaning up everyone else's mess. Like the formidable Cristina Kirchner of Argentina, charm can only go so far when you are the caretaker of a crisis from the past. Suffering politically from chaos which she cannot end and did not create, Obama or McCain will inherit one of the worst jobs you can have in the financial industry, the country's official risk bearer.