All the Devils Are Here,
 by Bethany McLean and Joe Nocera, is a fascinating look at the 
principle players who brought about the financial crisis of 2008. It 
reveals the motives and mistakes made over the course of a decade by 
those who were entrusted with running the largest financial corporations
 of the world as well as those who were entrusted with regulating them. 
It explodes the myth that the market is self-regulating in a way that 
will result in what is best for all. It also explodes the myth that 
centralized regulation of huge corporate interests will protect the 
average citizen from corporate greed. I can’t imagine too many Austrian 
or Keyensian capitalists would truly like what is revealed in this work,
 for both sides can only defend their positions by ignoring half of what
 these authors have uncovered and presented for us.
One of the great myths of the subprime mortgage bubble was that it 
was brought about because of government regulation. Yes, it is true that
 there were regulations to put more low-income families into homes, but 
the vast majority of subprime activity did not fall into that category. 
Most of that activity was refinancing existing mortgages or home equity 
mortgages, and most was done in a way that was almost entirely 
unregulated.
Efforts were made to regulate this activity, particularly by the 
states that were overridden on the grounds that federal rules override 
state rules. The corporations fought against all efforts to impose 
federal regulations with the willing support of both Republican and 
Democrat legislators. The Fed, led by Alan Greenspan, believed in the 
promises of the Austrian school, especially that the market would best 
judge economic activity. There was an assumption that CEOs drawing seven
 or eight-figure incomes from multi-billion dollar companies knew 
economics better than anyone else.
Another prevalent myth is that sub-prime mortgages were the principal cause of the crisis. All the Devils Are Here
 reveals that the bundling of these mortgages into packages for trade on
 the market (CDOs) and betting on these packages (Credit Default Swaps) 
created a world-wide calamity. These practices were also almost 
completely unregulated.
The fact is that the warning signs of the economic collapse were 
abundant and there were those in the system—both in the government and 
in the corporations—who saw the signs and tried to warn them. They were 
ignored. There were also those who could have seen it, but were removed 
from the decision-making process because they were dismissed as cranks 
who were interfering with money-making. There were those for whom the 
apparent success of what was being done blinded them to the impact their
 decisions were having on the common citizen. I don’t mean that they 
deliberately ignored the bad effects, they just didn’t see them, they 
couldn’t see them from their lofty perches on top of their financial 
empires. There were also those who preyed on the hopes and dreams of the
 uninformed. It wasn’t just that they tricked people who couldn’t afford
 any kind of loan into buying a house, they tricked lots of middle-class
 people who already had homes into accepting new loans with terms that 
were much worse. There were examples of outright fraud in the process.
From the prospective of Distributism, All the Devils Are Here
 reveals the great danger of centralized power. Whether it be government
 or corporate, power too far removed from the lives of ordinary citizens
 doesn’t see (or ignores) the impact their decisions have on those 
lives. Centralized power considers the local issues to be inconvenient 
nuisances to their centralized planning and objectives. We believe that,
 when the scope of power is localized, the average local citizen can 
have a much greater impact on the policies—both government and 
corporate—and that will give us a truly free market, greater economic 
stability, and greater freedom overall.
 

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