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1 1 (September 2018)

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Key  Points

  *  Survey data collected before the 2008 financial crisis show that Americans have long
     had doubts about Wall Street, banks, and financial institutions, even though they
     recognize that these institutions are necessary for the US economy to flourish.
  *  The 2008 crash profoundly affected people's views of Wall Street, the economy, and
     their family's prospects. For example, in a November 2009 Gallup poll, the view that it
     was a good time to find a quality job dropped to its lowest level ever, 8 percent.
  *  There has been a small recovery in the major confidence-in-institutions indicators, and
     most Americans do not feel the economic system is more secure today than it was
     before the financial crisis.


In a March 13,2018, interview, the host of the popular
radio program Marketplace, Kai Ryssdal, asked Timothy
Geithner, Henry Paulson, and Ben Bernanke what
their regrets were about the actions they took during
the 2oo8 financial crisis. Former Treasury Secretary
Geithner spoke first, noting, among other things,
the huge loss of confidence in public institutions.
His predecessor Paulson answered that life for anyone
in their positions in the future would be much harder
because what we did was so unpopular.... I was
never able to make the connection between what it
is this financial system does for the average American.
... We weren't doing this for Wall Street.2 The former
Fed Chairman Bernanke added, We didn't make that
case.3 Marketplace described the interview this way:
In a historic conversation, Timothy Geithner, Ben
Bernanke, and Henry Paulson talk about how they
lost the country when they saved the economy.4
   With the distance of a decade, we review how
the public reacted to the crash in 2008 and what
has changed since that time. Did these government


leaders lose the country? Have Americans' views about
the economy  and their own prospects recovered?
Who  did Americans blame, and how has public opinion
about banks and Wall Street and regulation of these
institutions changed? Do people believe our financial
system is more secure today?

Revisiting  2008:   The  Country

Reviewing the polls from 2008 provides a vivid
reminder of the impact the crash had on the American
people. Concern about the economy was already high
early in 20o8. In March, Gallup reported that the
percentage of people mentioning the economy as
the most important problem facing the country had
almost doubled since January.s In April, the organ-
ization reported that optimism about the future
direction of the economy had plunged.6 An early
September Associated Press/Yahoo online poll found
that 61 percent said the economy was extremely
important to them personally, and another 29 percent


AMERICAN   ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE

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