superfreddy
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I've read this argument in many online discussions. Nobody has been able to provide a good argument regarding why. The follow up question is "how big is too big"
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It's a term made up by greedy executives who don't want to be regulated. There's no such thing as a company that's too big to fail.
I thought it was the government who originally used the term "too big to fail"
The government works for the executives.
Yes, many companies sell services to the government. But I'm talking about companies paying lobbyists to write legislation for the congresspeople they have on their payroll, and writing press releases that contain terms like "too big to fail".
Well, good. If you're going to talk about unrealistic fantasy worlds, I prefer C.S. Lewis.
I've read this argument in many online discussions. Nobody has been able to provide a good argument regarding why.
The follow up question is "how big is too big"
To big to fail broadly translates as "Due to it's size would case unacceptable collateral damage if it went down".
Banks like Citigroup are fundimental to the US economic system and the damage they would do (both through dirrect loses to depositors and loss of confidence in other institutions) would likely result in the near total destruction of the US finacial sector (I supose a few very specialised or localised institutions would survive) followed but much of the rest of the US and world ecomomly shortly afterwards.
To big to fail broadly translates as "Due to it's size would case unacceptable collateral damage if it went down".
Banks like Citigroup are fundimental to the US economic system and the damage they would do (both through dirrect loses to depositors and loss of confidence in other institutions) would likely result in the near total destruction of the US finacial sector (I supose a few very specialised or localised institutions would survive) followed but much of the rest of the US and world ecomomly shortly afterwards.
Depends on the sector the company is in.
Are you serious?
How do you think we ended up with banking deregulation? Corporations pay lobbyists to influence legislators, and legislators comply either through corruption or astounding naivete.
Yes.
Which has nothing to do with companies being "too big to fail."
Organization become "too big to fail" when the government -- or society -- become too dependent on a single source of (whatever) to be able to tolerate the loss of that single source. There are lots of historical examples, typically from wartime, where loss of a resource ended up threatening the survival of the controlling nation-state. A good example of that from the Napoleanic era is the potential loss of Swedish timber, which was the only source of suitable trees for masts for the Royal Navy -- which ended up directing much of H.M.G's foreign policy in the Baltic from the early 19th century to the rise of steamships.
There are a number of defense contractors that are "too big to fail" because they're the only ones (today) that know how to make key components for warheads. I already mentioned Lockheed-Martin. For a while in the 1980s, EDS was handling almost all data-processing operations for the United States government. More recently, AIG ended up underwriting and insuring almost all of the government's financial operations. While that might be a bad idea, it has nothing to do with bad regulations. The problem is that you shouldn't single-source anything crucial, as any MBA knows.
So, yes, I'm quite serious. And you're quite, QUITE wrong.
Wouldn't the market adjust to the fail in the long run?
Again, how big is "too big" in the financial sector?
And the decision to single-source was made by legislators, at the behest of lobbyists.
And the decision to describe a company as "too big to fail" is made by legislators, at the behest of lobbyists.
[adams]Wouldn't the market adjust to the fail in the long run?
To big to fail broadly translates as "Due to it's size would case unacceptable collateral damage if it went down".
Banks like Citigroup are fundimental to the US economic system and the damage they would do (both through dirrect loses to depositors and loss of confidence in other institutions) would likely result in the near total destruction of the US finacial sector (I supose a few very specialised or localised institutions would survive) followed but much of the rest of the US and world ecomomly shortly afterwards.
Depends on the sector the company is in.
In the long run, yes. But the long run can be quite long, and the road can be quite bumpy. Lockheed Martin (to re-use a good example) has been working on the F-22 fighter plane for more than 20 years; if Lockheed were to fail today, whatever contractor took over would probably not be able to deliver any planes until at least 2025.
So that would leave a hole in the US defense system (no fifth-generation frontline fighter) for at least fifteen years. Sure, "in the long run" we could patch the hole, but that probably wouldn't make the pilots killed in action in 2021 any happier.
It's not measured in dollars; it's measured in services delivered. A single contractor can be "too big to fail" if they have key skills or capacities that no one else can provide.
If they were allowed to fail the economy would take a hit, not only in the US but worldwide. However, humanity is very creative, and adaptive, and I think you'd find that new credit companies would form, granted not to the size and scope of groups like citi, but would certainly help ease the economic turmoil until new companies grew to the point of being able to provide stabilization.