Paul Krugman fails to explain the reasons for the mortgage meltdown
Posted by: in Stocks Money NewsFiled under: Newspapers, Housing
In today’s New York Times, Paul Krugman offers an explanation for the cause of the mortgage meltdown. While I think he comes close to the mark, he misses an important point: bankers will respond to incentives.
I would love to have the talent that warrants the platform Krugman has — to opine on economic and political matters on the pages of the New York Times. Krugman uses that platform to suggest that the reason for the bad mortgage loans is that bankers “haven’t been forced to give back any of the huge paychecks they received before the folly of their decisions became apparent.”
My view differs from Krugman’s. There is no way bankers will give back their paychecks after they’ve negotiated their contracts just because Krugman wants them to. In my view, the real issue is that bankers are like any other person and they will respond to incentives. If their pay was linked to both the costs and benefits of the loans they made, then they would care about the risk that the loan might not be repaid.
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