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Wall Street Vs. Main Street

October 15th, 2008 @ 1:30 pm

6 Comments

Categories: Work Life

Tags: Wall Street, Carlin Romano, Business Structures, Financial Accounting, Finance, Michael Fitzgerald

Want to know who’s to blame for the current financial mess? Read “Wall Street: America’s Dream Factory,” by Steve Fraser. It’s the first recommendation and focus of a review essay on Wall Street and Main Street by Carlin Romano. Romano gives Fraser’s book high praise, calling it both entertaining and edifying. He particularly likes how Fraser puts a face on the amorphous idea of “Wall Street.” Fraser does this by building his brief history around four well-known Street stereotypes: Aristocrat, Con Man, Hero and Immoralist.

Once you have your historical grounding, Romano recommends a few other things to read that aim to help us go beyond “Wall Street” as metaphor. He says Charles R. Morris’s “The Trillion Dollar Meltdown” is “the best technical explanation of what’s going on on now. Meanwhile, Charles Ellis’s “The Partnership: The Making of Goldman Sachs” is both an excellent look at the firm and, perhaps, the Wall Street that is no more. Romano says Ellis was able to avoid writing a fan letter to Goldman, despite its close cooperation with the book in the research phase.

The new anthology “Panic: the Story of Modern Financial Insanity,” edited by Michael Lewis, tries to show how the complexity of the market itself is now a major scourge — making it harder to point fingers. There may not be a Samuel Insull, or even a Long-Term Capital Management, in the current crisis.

Finally, in an effort to suggest that none of us are free from blame, Romano suggests the classic novel “Main Street,” by Sinclair Lewis.

Plus, reading the review will teach you the meaning of synecdoche.

Thanks to a loyal reader for the tip on the link.

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  •  
    1

    arvanro@...

    10/16/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Wall Street Vs. Main Street

    Romano lost me in the very first paragraph, when he says a term like "Washington" is a useless because it conflates the "bad" Republican executive branch with the "good" Democrat congress, that opposes that evil executive.

    His premises so plainly stated, the conclusions are foregone, and trite.

  •  
    2

    tulsaboyw

    10/16/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Wall Street Vs. Main Street

    He also ignores the reality.

    Reality that the mess was most of all mortgage meltdown that was specifically happened because 3 democrats who specifically blocked reform efforts that would have helped avoid this mess.

    Barney Franks is one specific one...who should be removed from office since he specificaly blocked reform efforts that were put forward by mostly republican efforts (but some democrats too).

  •  
    3

    Michael Fitzgerald

    10/16/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Wall Street Vs. Main Street

    I agree that the first full paragraph could have been eliminated and the review would have been improved. I'm sorry I didn't say to skip the top part and look what he says about the books.

    For that matter, Fraser's book is the only one he treats in depth. What he said about it made me interested in reading it. I also was intrigued by the Michael Lewis anthology, especially since it seems to disagree with Romano's main point.

    Main Street, the novel, is a classic. That said, Lewis couldn't write the same book today. That Main Street is gone, though it still informs our ideas about America.

    Michael

  •  
    4

    Michael Fitzgerald

    10/16/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Wall Street Vs. Main Street

    As for scapegoats, I think it's a little difficult to point at three politicians and say 'they did it.' This is not Clue, the Meltdown Edition.

  •  
    5

    Joe.enlight

    10/20/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Wall Street Vs. Main Street

    Actually, it's easy to pin this on two people. Their names are Black and Scholes. These two idiots got people to bleieve in the skinny tails of the normal curve when applied to real phenomena. This lead the CDS writers to underestimate the probability of default, which killed Lehman and $120B of AIG, and counting.

  •  
    6

    Michael Fitzgerald

    10/20/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Wall Street Vs. Main Street

    Now there's a good argument for two people who might really qualify as scapegoats. Although an awful lot of other people had to throw common sense out the window. We're obviously not as skeptical as when De Tocqueville was wandering through America.

    michael

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