Final Word from Monday, March 16, 2009
Alan Greenspan said in the excellent new CNBC documentary "House of Cards" that the subprime mortgage crisis was a failure of the best and the brightest. "It's not that they weren't aware that the risks were there," he said. "It wasn't that these people were dumb. They knew precisely what was going on." If it hadn't been subprime mortgages, he suggested, it would have been something else, because such are the flaws in human nature. His message is clear: He was powerless to stop it, because human nature is too overwhelming. Contrast this with Václav Klaus, who told TV Nova last week that if the Fed hadn't allowed the mortgage boom, there wouldn't be a crisis today. Which raises an interesting question. Did Klaus and the CR's other "best and brightest" know that an imported crisis would allow them to absolve themselves of their own misdeeds in the past? Or was it just dumb luck?[Czech Republic Federal Reserve Bank United States of America]
Glossary of difficult words
foresight - the ability to predict what will happen or be needed in the future;
"House of Cards" - it is to be shown again in Europe on CNBC Europe at 22:00 CET on Wed., March 18, and Wed., March 25;
flaw - a fault or weakness in character;
Fed - Federal Reserve Bank;
to absolve of something - to set or declare someone free from blame, guilt or responsibility;
misdeed - a wicked or illegal act;
dumb luck - something that happens unintetionally and without planning.