Saturday, December 24, 2011

Honestly, what does it take to dismiss the "Big Lie?"

Joe Nocera at the New York Times has a must read post (see here) about the continued false claim that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac caused the Great Recession.  How often must a falsehood be exposed and discredited before people stop perpetuating it?  I don't know and it is very discouraging.  Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are not my favorite organizations and they deserve plenty of criticism.  But to argue they "caused" the Great Depression is absurd.  Yet it gets repeated everyday.  Well, kudos for Mr. Nocera for taking on the task of dispelling the claim one more time.  In part he says (but go read the entire essay),


So this is how the Big Lie works. 

You begin with a hypothesis that has a certain surface plausibility. You find an ally whose background suggests that he’s an “expert”; out of thin air, he devises “data.” You write articles in sympathetic publications, repeating the data endlessly; in time, some of these publications make your cause their own. Like-minded congressmen pick up your mantra and invite you to testify at hearings. 

You’re chosen for an investigative panel related to your topic. When other panel members, after inspecting your evidence, reject your thesis, you claim that they did so for ideological reasons. This, too, is repeated by your allies. Soon, the echo chamber you created drowns out dissenting views; even presidential candidates begin repeating the Big Lie. 

Thus has Peter Wallison, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, and a former member of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, almost single-handedly created the myth that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac caused the financial crisis. His partner in crime is another A.E.I. scholar, Edward Pinto, who a very long time ago was Fannie’s chief credit officer. Pinto claims that as of June 2008, 27 million “risky” mortgages had been issued — “and a lion’s share was on Fannie and Freddie’s books,” as Wallison wrote recently. Never mind that his definition of “risky” is so all-encompassing that it includes mortgages with extremely low default rates as well as those with default rates nearing 30 percent. These latter mortgages were the ones created by the unholy alliance between subprime lenders and Wall Street. Pinto’s numbers are the Big Lie’s primary data point. 

Allies? Start with Congressional Republicans, who have vowed to eliminate Fannie and Freddie — because, after all, they caused the crisis! Throw in The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page, which, on Wednesday, published one of Wallison’s many articles repeating the Big Lie. It was followed on Thursday by an editorial in The Journal making essentially the same point. Repetition is all-important to spreading a Big Lie. 

In Wallison’s article, he claimed that the charges brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission against six former Fannie and Freddie executives last week prove him right. This is another favorite tactic: He takes a victory lap whenever events cast Fannie and Freddie in a bad light. Rarely, however, has his intellectual dishonesty been on such vivid display. In fact, what the S.E.C.’s allegations show is that the Big Lie is, well, a lie.

1 comment:

  1. They played as big a role as Wall Street. They made guaranteed loans on a huge scale on immprudent terms that put the tax payer at risk. Furthermore, the management profited personally in terms of compensation from their uneconomic decisions. Finally, since they are a basically a public enterprise, there is a political dimension and without going further now, that makes the story even darker and wider.

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