About Steve Keen

I am Professor of Economics and Head of Economics, History and Politics at Kingston University London, and a long time critic of conventional economic thought. As well as attacking mainstream thought in Debunking Economics, I am also developing an alternative dynamic approach to economic modelling. The key issue I am tackling here is the prospect for a debt-deflation on the back of the enormous private debts accumulated globally, and our very low rate of inflation.

Debtwatch 27 October 08: The Failure of Central Banks

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Just two years ago, Cen­tral Banks appeared tri­umphant. Infla­tion, the scourge of the 1970s and 80s, appeared dead, the finan­cial cri­sis of the Tech Wreck had been con­tained, economies world­wide were boom­ing, and stock mar­kets and house prices were spi­ralling ever upwards.

Then along came the Sub­prime Cri­sis, and we received a rude reminder of why Cen­tral Banks were cre­at­ed in the first place: to ensure that the world would nev­er again expe­ri­ence a Great Depres­sion.

Curses! Foiled Again!

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You all know the movie plot: the Evil Sci­en­tist has laced the town’s water sup­ply with a poi­son. All will die unless The Anti­dote is added, and he holds the city to Ran­som. All seems lost until the Hero rides to the Res­cue with The Anti­dote. The Hero puts the Evil Sci­en­tist behind bars, and all is well (until The Sequel any­way).

Are there any par­al­lels here with Paulson’s cur­rent­ly ter­mi­nat­ed Wall Street bailout?

Why it can’t work–Crikey follow up

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In my col­umn in Crikey yes­ter­day (see below) I promised to pro­vide some “back of the enve­lope” cal­cu­la­tions on why the Paul­son plan can’t work.

It’s not my usu­al stan­dard or style of analysis–just a sim­ple text-only flow­chart map­ping out of the pos­si­ble con­se­quences of a US$2 tril­lion bailout, financed by either bond issues or print­ing money–but a promise is a promise, so here it is. Since the images are quite dif­fi­cult to read, I’ve attached the Pow­er­point file as well.

Pow­er­point Flow­charts

Images from the two relevant slides

The Plan with bond issuance, as it will probably be carried out

We’ve only just begun

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I’ve had a cou­ple of very enjoy­able chats this week with Red Symons, on the ABC Break­fast Show in Mel­bourne, and some friends have been try­ing to get me to throw some old Sky­hooks song lines into the conversation–such as “Hor­ror Movie” and the like (for any non-Aus­tralian and/or non-“Living in the Sev­en­ties” read­ers, Red was a guitarist–and played drums on the one occa­sion I saw them live, at Syd­ney Uni­ver­si­ty’s Union Build­ing in the ear­ly ’70s–and lyri­cist; here is a link for the lyrics).

Welcome aboard the FF Titanic

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I pub­lished this com­men­tary on Crikey and in the New­cas­tle Her­ald yes­ter­day; I will prob­a­bly expand on this for my Octo­ber Debt­watch Report, but here’s a “heads up” before next month–after all, with the speed with which events are unfold­ing, some­thing else might sup­plant this top­ic by then.

Welcome aboard the FF Titanic

Anoth­er day, anoth­er finan­cial col­lapse. The effec­tive nation­al­i­sa­tion of Fan­nie Mae and Fred­die Mac last week was ini­tial­ly greet­ed by the mar­ket, yet again, as The End Of The Cri­sis. Then Lehman Broth­ers teetered and final­ly fell into bank­rupt­cy. The cri­sis was, once again, alive and well.

Two good commentaries on The Panic

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I don’t have time to write a full blog on this myself, but here are some of the best com­men­taries to explain what’s going on that I’ve seen recent­ly.

On AIG:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/16/opinion/16lewitt.html

On Lehman, coun­ter­par­ty risk, and the dan­gers of a deriv­a­tives melt­down (which an AIG col­lapse might well pre­cip­i­tate:

http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/Issues.aspx?NewsletterEntryId=2234

Debate on Property Bubble on October 15

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The Our Finance Blogs site (http://ourfinanceblogs.com/forum/) is host­ing an online debate on “Prop­er­ty 2009: Crash, Boom or Stag­nate?!”. I will be one of the pro­tag­o­nists in the debate. If you’d like to take part, go to:

 http://ourfinanceblogs.com/forum/index.php?action=register

and sign in. Check:

http://ourfinanceblogs.com/forum/index.php?topic=7.msg9#msg9

for fur­ther details.

 

Click here to log access the debate

Click here to log access the debate

Podcasts 4–6 now functional–I hope!

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The pod­casts should now be func­tion­al. The prob­lem was sim­ple but obscure: my serv­er runs Lin­ux, which is case sen­si­tive, and the file names were all in low­er­case, but spec­i­fied with ini­tial cap­i­tals in the XML and HTML files.

I’ve suc­cess­ful­ly down­loaded and played them from the HTML. I would appre­ci­ate some­one try­ing the subcribe/iTunes update and see­ing whether they are now cor­rect there too.

SBS Dateline tonight with George Negus

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George negus is inter­view­ing me and Peter Schiff on Date­line tonight. The top­ic is the attempt­ed res­cue of Fan­nie Mae and Fred­die Mac, and what that may mean for the glob­al econ­o­my and Aus­tralia in par­tic­u­lar.

Date­line goes to air tonight (Wednes­day) at 8.30pm. It is also acces­si­ble on the web, the day after the pro­gram goes to air.

In oth­er news, the pod­casts are cur­rent­ly not func­tion­al, but I hope to fix them up tomor­row.