From Business  Week.com:
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan  Greenspan said the central bank and other U.S. regulators “failed”  during the financial crisis because they became too complacent about  risks.
“Even with the breakdown of private  risk-management, the financial system would have held together had the  second bulwark against crisis -- our regulatory system -- functioned  effectively,” Greenspan said in the text of a speech at a Brookings  Institution conference today. “But, under crisis pressure, it too  failed.”
Greenspan echoed comments he made in  a paper released yesterday citing the central bank’s failures to rein  in the housing bubble and growth of the largest U.S. banks. Greenspan,  84, who ran the central bank from 1987 to 2006, said low interest rates  weren’t to blame for inflating the bubble, placing the blame instead  on regulators.
“Even though for years our largest  10 to 15 banking institutions have had permanently assigned on-site  examiners to oversee daily operations, many of these banks still were  able to take on toxic assets that brought them to their knees,” Greenspan  said.
The former central bank chief said he and others at the Fed didn’t fully understand the extent of the housing bubble and its ramifications for the economy. In October 2008 testimony before Congress, he said free-market ideology may be flawed in the wake of a “once-in-a-century credit tsunami.”
