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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

Phil Waste
Time to invest in America and Americans Open letter to Barack Obama campaign. I have a few suggestions that I would like to share with you. We have to invest in the infrastructure of America and one way I see that we can do that is start a completely new project that would put thousands of Americans to work across America and create a project that would help Americans and wean us off foreign oil. What I’m suggesting is a national high speed railroad with dedicated tracks with no crossings to cause accidents. It would not carry freight only passengers. This railroad would follow highways 10, 20, 40, 80, 5, 95 and so on and would connect with feeder line from large cities. It would be built with steel made only in America. It would be an American project entirely made in the United States. If we no longer have capacity to make or build a component we will have to restart or begin a new company to do so. It would not start in one place but in every major city and work both directions from there. This project would create jobs and provide us with a system that would eliminate the need to import oil. These high speed trains would be powered with electricity which could be generated solely for the system with new nuclear plants situated throughout the system. It is time to cut off the balls of the oil men and do this without their help. We have been screwed for years so they could sell more cars and oil. We have to stand up against them and do what is right for America and Americans. We won’t have many more chances to do anything to save ourselves. I hate to put so much pressure on you Obama but you really are our last hope for a great country. I hate to give credit to a conservative but this is the plan that was talked about by Rand when she wrote about Reardon steel. With a few minor changes it would work. We just can’t let the fat cats get a hold of it or it will be screwed up beyond help. This is a big project that can only be run by our government just like the moon landing. You could create a new agency like NASA or even use NASA they could do the job. To bad all the old NASA engineers are gone but we could train new ones. We don’t have to reinvent the wheel here all the technology has been used before all we have to do is adapt it to our needs. I certainly hope you consider these ideas as we have to do something.
By Phil Waste on 10/27/2008 6:50 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Ayn Rand talked about the effect of first-rate talent, and the people who came up with this madness were definitely second- or third-rate greedy, arrogant bastards. So, no, the question itself is absurd.
By Mugsy Peabody on 10/28/2008 5:07 am
starry Nite
Mugsy, Ayn Rand - You are so right greed caused this mess.
By starry Nite on 10/28/2008 9:05 pm
patrick wilber
In the sixties, Greenspan wrote in support of free markets, sound money (anyone here know what that is?) and didn’t see the use of a centralized bank when measured against a sovereign country. He sold out to his international banking cronies, jumped ship and ramped up the printing and borrowing of paper money. “Allow me to issue and control a nation’s money and I care not who writes its laws!” Amshell Rothschild This article distorts reality almost as much as the Fed has distorted the economy.
By patrick wilber on 10/29/2008 3:51 pm
Bill Hippert
This crisis had nothing to do with Alan Greenspans policies. It had everything to do with the people valuing the houses. When the house prices were headed skyward, the banks were eager to loan money thinking that what they were lending against was going up in value. This led them to think that even if there was a default, the market was so hot that they couldn’t lose.
By Bill Hippert on 10/29/2008 5:20 pm
Joe Dunn
Regarding Ayn Rand and Alan Greenspan article - the free market society as Ayn Rand would support - does NOT include bailouts - if you are irresponsible and greedy and lose sight of decent honest business - you should fail and NOT be bailed out. AIG, car makers, banks, should be responsible for their business practices and if they take risk and lose - they lose - NO bailouts - the early industries in this country - when they made bad business decisions - they failed and are no longer - that is what Ayn Rand believed in - not this government intervention. The precedent set for bailouts - has hurled us into a communist government run society - we will never be the same. Joe
By Joe Dunn on 01/30/2009 9:31 am