| Why would they fix the problem. Every crash is a redistribution of wealth. When there's a recession, if you're wealthy and have diversified assets you can buy everything at a discount rate during a stock crash and sell when the recession recovers. Meanwhile, the poor and middle class often find themselves unemployed, their savings accounts massively depleted and in a constant crush for cash. If you're wealthy AND you have the ability to create risk in the market, then even better. You can actually help trigger more "stock discounting" events, and dominate any emerging technology company with your bootstrapped companies while everyone is dying for credit. |
Nassim Taleb's suggestion is to simply deny institutions the option of growing large enough that their demise would threaten the system. Once an entity gets too large to fail it should be split so that the remaining pieces can fail individually without dragging entire system with it. This would get rid of the moral hazard "heads I win, tails someone else loses".