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Celerity

(55,324 posts)
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 08:42 AM 8 hrs ago

Greenspan Was the Creator of His Own Disaster


The former Fed chair, who died at the age of 100 this week, deliberately engineered financial markets to be faster and looser. Then they blew up.

https://prospect.org/2026/06/24/alan-greenspan-creator-of-his-own-disaster/


As Federal Reserve Board chairman, Alan Greenspan testifies on Capitol Hill, January 25, 1995, before the Senate Finance Committee. Credit: John Duricka/AP Photo

Alan Greenspan’s obituary writers want to credit him with a single, flattering flaw: that he trusted markets too much. That charge is too generous, because Greenspan never left markets to run themselves. He used the power of the Fed to cultivate and reward financial innovation, making the financial system more fragile for it. Often misunderstood as an Ayn Rand acolyte, Greenspan was not a true libertarian. His creed was not “leave the market alone” as much as it was to use the tools of the government to make the market faster and more inventive—and then stand by to catch it when it falls.

Those actions fueled the soaring inequality and the economic crash of 2008. Greenspan was no bystander watching markets obey some ineffable logic. His obsession with financial innovation set the stage for the crisis. Foundational to Greenspan’s outlook was the idea that financial innovation is the engine of the American economy: The easier it is to buy and sell an asset, the truer its price. Risk itself could be sliced up and sold off until, in theory, nobody was holding too much of it. “No market is ever truly unregulated,” he said. “The self-interest of market participants generates private market regulation.” Perhaps the clearest expression of the Greenspan belief that government must be mobilized to support financial innovation is the case of derivatives.

In the spring of 1998, the heaviest hitters in American economic policy crowded into a conference room at the Treasury to gang up on one woman. Brooksley Born ran the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and she had committed the sin of noticing that the market in derivatives, custom bets whose value rides on the value of another asset, had swollen from roughly $4.5 trillion to $28 trillion within four years, with essentially no one watching. She didn’t want to ban them, but she did want basic rules to make the market more stable. Greenspan, Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, his deputy Larry Summers, and SEC chair Arthur Levitt shut her down.

Greenspan played the ideologue: Regulation would smother innovation. “You can’t put the cork back in the bottle,” he told the room. He had once informed Born over lunch that he saw no need even for laws against fraud, since a crook would lose his customers soon enough. Born left with nothing to show for her concern. Summers later phoned Born, by her account, with a warning: “I have 13 bankers in my office and they say if you go forward with [derivatives rules] you will cause the worst financial crisis since World War II.” She resigned the next year, and Congress promptly passed a law stripping her agency of any authority over the exact instruments that would detonate in 2008. Five months after the meeting, a hedge fund called Long-Term Capital Management blew up on those very derivatives and needed a Fed-brokered rescue.

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no_hypocrisy

(55,709 posts)
2. One can't discount the strong influence of Ayn Rand on Greenspan.
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 08:47 AM
8 hrs ago

She operated a cult where she presided over her combination of fascism and an aberration of capitalism. Greenspan was in the cult and bought the entire package. Her glorification of ruthless ambition and the pursuit of wealth laid the ideological groundwork for the modern "culture of greed" and neoliberal capitalism.

Mean Girl: Ayn Rand and the Culture of Greed (American Studies Now: Critical Histories of the Present)
https://www.amazon.com/Mean-Girl-American-Critical-Histories/dp/0520294777

Celerity

(55,324 posts)
4. a counterpoint from the article in re Greenspan, Rand, & his actual actions as Fed chair that were not truly ''Randian':
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 09:04 AM
7 hrs ago
Often misunderstood as an Ayn Rand acolyte, Greenspan was not a true libertarian. His creed was not “leave the market alone” as much as it was to use the tools of the government to make the market faster and more inventive—and then stand by to catch it when it falls.

cachukis

(4,180 posts)
10. He was in charge of the Fed when the PPT, Plunge
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 09:58 AM
6 hrs ago

Protection Team was established. Some claim Greenspan's Put policy was market intervention to rescue the economy.

hatrack

(65,356 posts)
3. Easily in the Top Ten of modern history's "Most Overrated" list . . .
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 09:00 AM
7 hrs ago

Maybe even the Top Five.

UpInArms

(55,633 posts)
6. Glass Steagal was destroyed and
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 09:07 AM
7 hrs ago

Wendy Gramm (wife of Phil Gramm) became the chair of the CFTC

disaster was assured

Celerity

(55,324 posts)
8. Plus the passing of the horrid Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 (which ensured that over-the-counter (OTC)
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 09:21 AM
7 hrs ago
derivatives remained unregulated).

That legislation was, along with other things (such as the gutting of Glass-Steagall that you already mentioned) passed under Clinton (with his support), massively key structural pieces that helped (along with plenty of aid from the Rethugs and the banksters themselves) construct the path that led to the global financial crisis of 2007-2009.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commodity_Futures_Modernization_Act_of_2000

malaise

(299,540 posts)
7. 100% correct
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 09:10 AM
7 hrs ago

I did laugh when one M$NOW host was full of praise and mentioned that her husband could not believe they were on his Christmas card list.
Rec

BH liberal

(193 posts)
9. More than any other single individual...
Wed Jun 24, 2026, 09:29 AM
7 hrs ago

Greenspan was responsible for the 2008 Crash and Great Recession.

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