whatever said:
Sorry, but you don't seem to understand what happened in the derivatives markets at all. The real problem was that it was completely unregulated. Derivatives were originally created to push off risk, but they became much more than that. They started to be used in ways that they were not intended. They could be used to bet that a company would fail. They could be bought without owning the underlying asset. It became a casino. All the companies that bought and sold these became interlinked. AIG couldn't be allowed to fail because they would have brought a lot of others down with them. Obviously there is not enough time or space here to go into all of this. There is plenty of info out there on it. Try: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/warning/view/ Again, your falling back on the lie that it was "too many people got loans in general that couldn't pay for them". Did this happen? Yes. Was it a bad thing? Yes. But it pales in comparison with the "bets" made by these investment bankers. To say it had nothing to do with the banks is to competely disregard reality. The deregulation that started with Reagan allowed investment banks to merge with commercial banks. This led to much freer lending as the assets could be sold off by the investment branch. |
Er... your still not getting it. Do you know the value of the deritivitives market? Do you know what a derivitive is? Do you know how one is created?
More importantly... do you know why they exist in the first place?








