Reading over the coverage of
JPMorgan Chase’s $2 billion fiasco, it’s impossible not to be reminded
of the heady early days of the Lesser Depression. Not because the scale
or risk is equivalent, but because the naked hubris, incompetence and
greed on display have once again stirred up a regulatory fervor among
large swaths of the media.
All of a sudden pundits and editorial boards
are sounding less like Paul Ryan and more like Paul Krugman. There are
also the predictable right-wing hacks who claim this episode somehow
makes the case against the Volcker Rule, the part of Dodd-Frank that
bans commercial banks from engaging in speculative bets to increase
their own profits, known as “proprietary trading.”
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