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The Greatest Depression | 10/24/2008 6:00 am

Greenspan Shrugged? Did Ayn Rand Cause Our Financial Crisis?

By Deborah Jones Barrow, Editor-in-Chief, wowOwow
Photo illustration by wowOwow; Alan Greenspan, AP

"Those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholders’ equity, myself especially, are in a state of shocked disbelief."

So said former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan in his dramatic testimony before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, as he was grilled by committee members on the causes of the nation’s financial crisis. Greenspan, whose laissez-faire capitalist leanings led him to reject decades of calls for more robust government oversight of financial markets, was repeatedly interrupted by the lawmakers in a contentious exchange that clearly shows the gloves are off in regard to the former chairman’s legacy.

In his startling admission, the former head of the Federal Reserve reveals that his long-held and controversial notion that enlightened self-interest alone would prevent bankers, mortgage brokers, investment bankers and others from gaming the system for their own personal financial benefit has, as the English say, come a cropper. 

Bankers ruled by anything other than greed?

Where did Greenspan ever get that idea?

Ayn Rand.

To readers of Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand’s 1957 magnum opus, Greenspan’s hands-off philosophy of marketplace management sounds very familiar. At its core, the book supports a radically utopian political-economic system called Objectivism, which suggests that the morality of rational self-interest, as opposed to religious or government intervention, should be the foundation of the ideal political structure.

According to a short description of Objectivism given by Ayn Rand in 1962, "The ideal political-economic system is laissez-faire capitalism … In a system of full capitalism, there should be (but, historically, has not yet been) a complete separation of state and economics, in the same way and for the same reasons as the separation of state and church."

In other words,  Ayn Rand’s theory of the "morality of self-interest" exactly parallels Alan Greenspan’s testimony today about his now-shaken belief in the ability of "self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholder’s equity."

Early in his career, Alan was an avid Rand acolyte, a frequent guest at the Manhattan salon of the novelist and philosopher, and those who gathered to hear the litanies of like-minded notables were loosely known as "The Collective." It was there that the Rand philosophy of Objectivism was discussed in the context of current events, world markets and religion.

Today, 40 years after the heyday of those gatherings, Greenspan surprised many with his "Yes, I found a flaw" response to a grilling from the Committee. Responding to the clear failure of the notion of "enlightened self-interest" to stop the cascade of financial catastrophies that have roiled world markets, he said, "That is precisely the reason I was shocked, because I’d been going for 40 years or more with very considerable evidence that it was working exceptionally well.”

Greenspan’s critics have long charged that his refusal as Fed Chairman to impose greater government regulations on mortgage lenders is one of the causes of the sub-prime mortgage meltdown. 

Committee Chairman Harry Waxman (D-CA), in a heated exchange told the former Fed Chairman that he had "the authority to prevent irresponsible lending practices that led to the subprime mortgage crisis. You were advised to do so by many others, and now our whole economy is paying the price.”

98 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Lucinda Herbert
I’m with you Andrea. When will individuals accept personal responsibility for assuming debt they couldn’t afford? You don’t buy what you can’t afford. It came back to bite them.
By Lucinda Herbert on 10/24/2008 8:35 am
Sandbee (FB) 54
Just always expected Atlas to be better looking than that. Given up on wishing for better from the rest of it.
By Sandbee (FB) 54 on 10/24/2008 7:48 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Unlike Frank, who came to the conclusion after reading Ayn Rand that her theory was “nutzoid,” I was enthralled. This was back in the early sixties which was the start of an extremely heady time. We were suddenly catapulted into an era of individualism, free wheeling, narcissistic love of freedom and speeches. Soon we would be fighting against the Vietnam War, furious at the government, listening to “The White Album” and letting it all “hang out.” By the time it all came to an end the sobering truth was we all needed to settle down and face the music. I put Ayn Rand away with a lot of other things I thought at the time were going to change the world––or me. Below is a review of Atlas Shrugged which is a declaration of Rand’s philosophy of objectivism, much in vogue among conservative libertarians b Whittaker Chambers –––his first article for the National Review. “The book’s dictatorial tone is much its most striking feature…Out of a lifetime of reading, I can recall no other book in which a tone of overriding arrogance was so implacably sustained. Its shrillness is without reprieve, Its dogmatism is without appeal…From almost any page of A.S., a voice can be heard from painful necessity, commanding: ‘To a gas chamber–––go!’ Yes, Greenspan was very involved with Rand and her theory, but I thought that he finally turned his back on all that, but retained in belief in free markets unencumbered by regulation. He is shocked because he trusted that the system would work since as he said, “the smartest guys were in charge.” Decades ago we learned that the best and the brightest sold us down the river and since Greenspan is supposed to be one of the best and the brightest what does this tell us?
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 10/24/2008 8:53 am
EKA -
Oh, what a similar path we followed. As a sheltered, Catholic girl school teenager in the 60s, I discovered Ayn Rand and thought had found the Rosetta Stone. I devoured Atlas Shrugged and Fountainhead, rethought my entire philosophy of life, such as it was at 17, and set out to change the world. AND YET, something about her philosophy was so utopian, so unreachable, so self centered, she totally dismissed the fact that human society is messy and unpredictable, we do not all act in our self interest. I moved on. Alan Greenspan didn’t, he totally bought into the whole Objectivist philosophy, and his embrace of a deregulated free market economy is what got us into this mess today. It is nice to see him admit it ….. but it is a case of closing the barn door after the horses got out. I watched the hearing, and when he said there was no way of knowing this would collapse, it became very clear to me that his ivory tower , utopian mentality had no way of even recognizing what the average working class American was facing. That the average person grabbing at the slice of the American dream, using easy credit, was getting in over his head. “The smartest guys in charge” should have included some of the average, every day, smart guys. Her, and his philosophy has finally been sent to the dustbin, unfortunately too late for many of us. Last night Charlie Rose had Paul Krugman on, who just won the Nobel Prize in Economics. It is too soon to put a link up, but everyone who missed it should go to www.charlierose.com and watch it. He has such a good take on Greenspan and excellent recommendations on how to get out of this mess.
By EKA - on 10/24/2008 10:22 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
EKA––––––saw Krugman last night–––good discussion especially since Charlie had Paulson on the night before.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 10/24/2008 10:59 am
f p
Dictatorial arrogance and the glorification of greed is what I saw Phyllis when I first read her—lotta kids back then were enthralled by her—never did understand that awe.
By f p on 10/24/2008 10:53 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
You , Frank, were maybe a lot smarter than some of us who were searching for a guiding light and fell for something that sounded like the answer. It was a passionate theory––a gutsy one that at the time rocked our world as much as Jefferson Airplane. Rand’s first book, “The Fountainhead” had the same message, but was more nuanced and people still rave about the novel and the film starring Barbara Stadwyck & Gary Cooper. There is a film that was made some time ago starring Helen Mirren who plays Rand which is quite good––think it’s called “The Passion of Ayn Rand.”
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 10/24/2008 12:55 pm
f p
Phyllis, it was Patricia Neal not Stanwyck :-) No not smarter—just older I was 24 when I went to University, had been thru quite a bit and read her and said to myself and I remember this very clearly—thinly disguised Nietzchean BS and the concept of the superman —the Plane rocked me more than Rand ever could.
By f p on 10/24/2008 2:31 pm
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Frank, of course, Patricia Neal–––––how could I have forgotten that sultry look on top of the rock when looking down at Cooper. Interesting that I said Stanwyck–––I put both these women in the same category: sharp, powerful, beautiful and wonderful actresses. I’m glad you were rocked by the Plane instead of Rand––much more enlightening.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 10/24/2008 3:08 pm
EKA -
Yeah, Frank, You must have been one of the uber cool smart guys…. OR…… maybe it was Howard Roark who got Phyllis’s and my blood flowing, ya know, those idealistic, impressionable, repressed school girls ! But we saw the light :-)
By EKA - on 10/24/2008 2:25 pm
f p
NO comment lolol repressed schoolgirls? most of the ones I knew at the U went as unrepressed as one can get—oh boy ! waht a fun time :-)
By f p on 10/24/2008 2:37 pm
Maurine H
I’m with you, Frank. I read her books and concluded way back when she wrote ‘em that Ayn Rand was cuckoo. Saw her interviewed once by Johnny Carson and that reinforced my conclusion. Then her mentee, Nathaniel Branden, took over and I read some of his writing and once again thought, “these people are flat out greedy and goofy to boot.” I’ve never changed my mind.
By Maurine H on 10/24/2008 5:19 pm
Marjorie C.
Enjoyed reading your opinion.
By Marjorie C. on 10/24/2008 3:33 pm
Marjorie C.
Enjoyed reading your opinion. The above was directed at phyllis’ original comment on Ayn Rand.
By Marjorie C. on 10/24/2008 3:40 pm
DeBúrca obj
You want to hear crazy, scary stuff just listen to any spokesperson from the Ayn Rand Institute talk about the world as THEY envision it! I was screaming at my radio when I heard Greenspan make that statement about his “shock” that the lending institutions didn’t regulate themselves! People, very smart people, have been warning about this for years but have been ignored. And people like me with no financial background but an ability to think logically knew it too! Greenspan and his whole ideologically inclined crowd deserve to be taken to task public ally and the final nail put in the coffin of Laissez-Faire Capitalism and so-called “Trickle Down” Economics. Check out this book: Greenspan’s Fraud: How Two Decades of His Policies Have Undermined the Global Economy by Ravi Batra
By DeBúrca obj on 10/24/2008 10:21 am