I think it has more to do with being able to make money off nothing that was the problem.
These guys who sell the loans to people for housing aren't even bankers, they're salesmen. They get paid according to how many loans they can sell. Just how is that supposed to bring about any sort of responsible loan policy?
This was an article written in 2005 about such an individual:
http://www.realestatejournal.com/buysell/mortgages/20050721-anders.html
It just shows you what kind of person sells these loans and how. And it was written before the crisis hit. You be the judge of how this is responsible lending.
Bror, have you even been understanding what I'm getting at?
And no, what you say is not necessarily true. It is true when there is a lot of competition and the supply outstrips the demand. But when demand far exceeds the supply, the scarcity of the product compells companies to in fact drive prices up and the quality down. That's why a government alternative is important, because it gives a limit as to how bad the quality to price ratio can be for the private sector.
An example would be Microsoft which charges OUTRAGEOUS prices on its products because it practically monopolizes the market. I just hope that an alternative OS can be successful. I don't use Microsoft Office if I can help it, rather I use Open Office. Yes, it's produced by Sun Microsystems, but a government funded project for a free Office Software could have also been successful and could have given small businesses a great alternative to the overpriced Microsoft Office. Whereas these kinds of free software depend on a company to suddenly pump out something for one reason or another, government funding for free alternatives or cheap alternatives for things people use every day can work well as well. Do I expect this government funded software to be better than Microsoft Office? Hell no. But if Microsoft Office's price is hiked far too high, I would have a decent alternative to turn to which is free.
Another example would be the privatization of water in Bolivia:
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20050214/shultz
"In Cochabamba five years ago, the water contract with Bechtel and the Abengoa Corporation of Spain paved the way for rate increases of double and more for poor water users.Those steep and sudden price hikes, needed in part to finance the 16 percent annual profit demanded by the companies, led to citywide protests and eventually to Bechtel's and Abengoa's ouster.The Bolivian government declared martial law in an effort to save the companies' contract, leaving one teenage boy dead and more than 100 people wounded."
It was a major World Bank **** up and showed what happens when the most basic needs are controlled by a for profit business.
Do I think that everything should be government planned? Hell no. The government is not that smart and like you said, it is inefficient and quite wasteful (again, for the reasons I explained earlier). But it is stable, gives people more options (if used with along with the private sector, not as a replacement of it) and certainly keeps private companies from conducting ridiculous price hikes.