The 3 A.M. Call
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/29/opinion/29krugman.html?th&emc=th
It’s 3 a.m., a few months into 2009, and the phone in the White House
rings. Several big hedge funds are about to fail, says the voice on
the line, and there’s likely to be chaos when the market opens. Whom
do you trust to take that call?

I’m not being melodramatic. The bailout plan released yesterday is a
lot better than the proposal Henry Paulson first put out —
sufficiently so to be worth passing. But it’s not what you’d actually
call a good plan, and it won’t end the crisis. The odds are that the
next president will have to deal with some major financial
emergencies.

So what do we know about the readiness of the two men most likely to
end up taking that call? Well, Barack Obama seems well informed and
sensible about matters economic and financial. John McCain, on the
other hand, scares me.

About Mr. Obama: it’s a shame that he didn’t show more leadership in
the debate over the bailout bill, choosing instead to leave the issue
in the hands of Congressional Democrats, especially Chris Dodd and
Barney Frank. But both Mr. Obama and the Congressional Democrats are
surrounded by very knowledgeable, clear-headed advisers, with
experienced crisis managers like Paul Volcker and Robert Rubin always
close at hand.

Then there’s the frightening Mr. McCain — more frightening now than he
was a few weeks ago.

We’ve known for a long time, of course, that Mr. McCain doesn’t know
much about economics — he’s said so himself, although he’s also denied
having said it. That wouldn’t matter too much if he had good taste in
advisers — but he doesn’t.

Remember, his chief mentor on economics is Phil Gramm, the arch-
deregulator, who took special care in his Senate days to prevent
oversight of financial derivatives — the very instruments that sank
Lehman and A.I.G., and brought the credit markets to the edge of
collapse. Mr. Gramm hasn’t had an official role in the McCain campaign
since he pronounced America a “nation of whiners,” but he’s still
considered a likely choice as Treasury secretary.

And last year, when the McCain campaign announced that the candidate
had assembled “an impressive collection of economists, professors, and
prominent conservative policy leaders” to advise him on economic
policy, who was prominently featured? Kevin Hassett, the co-author of
“Dow 36,000.” Enough said.

Now, to a large extent the poor quality of Mr. McCain’s advisers
reflects the tattered intellectual state of his party. Has there ever
been a more pathetic economic proposal than the suggestion of House
Republicans that we try to solve the financial crisis by eliminating
capital gains taxes? (Troubled financial institutions, by definition,
don’t have capital gains to tax.)

But even President Bush has, in the twilight of his administration,
turned to relatively sensible people to make economic decisions: I’m
not a fan of Mr. Paulson, but he’s a vast improvement over his
predecessor. At this point, one has the suspicion that a McCain
administration would have us longing for Bush-era competence.

The real revelation of the last few weeks, however, has been just how
erratic Mr. McCain’s views on economics are. At any given moment, he
seems to have very strong opinions — but a few days later, he goes off
in a completely different direction.

Thus on Sept. 15 he declared — for at least the 18th time this year —
that “the fundamentals of our economy are strong.” This was the day
after Lehman failed and Merrill Lynch was taken over, and the
financial crisis entered a new, even more dangerous stage.

But three days later he declared that America’s financial markets have
become a “casino,” and said that he’d fire the head of the Securities
and Exchange Commission — which, by the way, isn’t in the president’s
power.

And then he found a new set of villains — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
the government-sponsored lenders. (Despite some real scandals at
Fannie and Freddie, they played little role in causing the crisis:
most of the really bad lending came from private loan originators.)
And he moralistically accused other politicians, including Mr. Obama,
of being under Fannie’s and Freddie’s financial influence; it turns
out that a firm owned by his own campaign manager was being paid by
Freddie until just last month.

Then Mr. Paulson released his plan, and Mr. McCain weighed vehemently
into the debate. But he admitted, several days after the Paulson plan
was released, that he hadn’t actually read the plan, which was only
three pages long.

O.K., I think you get the picture.

The modern economy, it turns out, is a dangerous place — and it’s not
the kind of danger you can deal with by talking tough and denouncing
evildoers. Does Mr. McCain have the judgment and temperament to deal
with that part of the job he seeks?

More Articles in Opinion » A version of this article appeared in print
on September 29, 2008, on page A21 of the New York edition.
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