Inside The Meltdown Documentary
The documentary is indeed very well narrated to an extent one can even think that they are indeed part of it. Even though who were not there during the period when there was this economic meltdown, and the bursting of the market bubble will indeed appreciate the fact that this is indeed very informative. The issue role of policymaking and policy implementation of policies in the occurrence of the financial crises was indeed a huge factor in the things that were being seen. The decline by the Federal Reserve to give the loans to JP Morgan Bank was indeed a huge reason that perpetuated the continuous challenges and the systemic risks that the American economy was being subjected to. Other key interesting things were the issue of the volatility of investments. This is the case when it comes to issues such as mortgages. By the time the US congress leadership was being told of the dire situation, there was a need to manage it effectively to ensure that the public will not be able to understand what was going on.
To ensure they were not going to be worried or scared of the challenges, they were facing. The moral hazards prevented many of the financial institutions from bailing out some of the banks for they did not want to go through the same thing with the assumption that they would be bailed out. The mortgages were indeed toxic and were propelled out of the financial bubble. From the documentary, it is clear that the problem started from the greed of a few individuals who wanted to push the housing bubble mortgages to make huge profits devoid of the systemic risks that this would eventually have on the rest of the American economy as well as the regional economy. There had been so much deal-making as a result of the housing bubble and this affected people, and it also leads to the collapse of the Lehman Brothers as well as AIG. The documentary has highlighted effectively that systemic risks cannot be solved by simple bailouts such as this that wanted $700 billion bailouts.