Years ago, before I started my current job, there were a ton of ads for programmers who had a grasp of CDOs and CMOs. These are the same instruments that underlay the collapse of the mortgage market and much of the woe that currently underlies our financial market.
This had led me to the question: Could programmers have seen this coming and, having done so, helped prevent or ameliorate it? After all, nobody knew these models better than the people who implemented them into code. Nobody knew how they were priced better than the people who codified the pricing models.
Was there ever a time when a unit test should have picked up that tranches of CCC-rated mortgages can't magically become AAA-rated derivatives? And, if so, what could we have done about it?
I know that it's an uphill battle to convince management to sacrifice short-term gains in favor of long-term stability, but it's a battle we fight every day against "write once, fix forever." And, if it's too much to think that the coders who worked for the issuers would be able to pick up on this and do something about it, isn't it at least likely that a programmer who said, "We're going to lose our shirts buying these" could get himself taken seriously?
I'm not interested in laying blame here. There are plenty of greedy, stupid people who propagated this crisis. The question is if we could have stopped it. More importantly, if we find ourselves coding flawed models in the future, will we be able to stop the next train wreck?
