Today Tonight’s “Changing Times”

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Today Tonight’s James Thomas put togeth­er “Chang­ing Times”, an excel­lent pro­gram on what a Depres­sion is like, and the dan­ger that we may be fac­ing one today.

The cen­tre­piece of the sto­ry was an inter­view with Eric Aarons, who at almost 90, lived through the Great Depres­sion. His rec­ol­lec­tions frame an item that includes archival footage of the then Labor Par­ty Prime Min­is­ter Scullin describ­ing the tur­moil of 1929 with the words “Aus­tralia is fac­ing today the gravest finan­cial cri­sis in its his­to­ry”.

Plus ca change…

If you haven’t seen Chang­ing Times yet, please do so.

Fabulous attack on neoclassical economics by Anatole Kaletsky

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Economists are the forgotten guilty men

Academics — and their mad theories — are to blame for the financial crisis. They too deserve to be hauled into the dock”

So begins Ana­tole Kalet­sky’s essay in The Times for Feb­ru­ary 5 2009. He is spot on. Eco­nom­ic the­o­ry played a direct role in this cri­sis, by legit­imis­ing the dereg­u­la­tion of finance and encour­ag­ing the prof­li­gate lend­ing of finan­cial insti­tu­tions. There is much more that is wrong with the the­o­ry that dom­i­nates aca­d­e­m­ic economics–known as “neo­clas­si­cal economics”–enough to fill sev­er­al books. My Debunk­ing Eco­nom­ics : the naked emper­or of the social sci­ences was one such book; in it I tried to explain all the tech­ni­cal flaws in eco­nom­ic the­o­ry to a non-math­e­mat­i­cal audi­ence.

Talk Tonight & Today Tonight

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The Today Tonight seg­ment has been delayed till this evening (Wednes­day Feb­ru­ary 4th)–which is a pity in a way because I will also be speak­ing at a pub­lic forum tonight at Cir­cu­lar Quay organ­ised by the Prop­er­ty Knowl­edge Forum: An excerpt from the pro­mo­tion­al fly­er:

ARE WE HEADING FOR A DEPRESSION?

When will the bot­tom hit? Are we in store for 40% drops in prop­er­ty or has the recov­ery already begun?

Today Tonight on possibility of Depression

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Chan­nel Sev­en’s Today Tonight is doing a piece on whether we might face a Depres­sion, and if so what it might be like. It should go to air tomorrow–Tuesday Feb­ru­ary 3rd.

They have inter­viewed me for analy­sis, and Eric Aarons–who lived through the Great Depres­sion and at 90 is still a dynam­ic sculp­tor and author.

They also want to speak to any­one who has lost their job recently–specifically if pos­si­ble as a result of the glob­al finan­cial cri­sis.

So if any­one out there is will­ing to speak on cam­era about it, please con­tact the jour­nal­ist James Thomas:

Steve Keen’s DebtWatch No 31 February 2009: “The Roving Cavaliers of Credit”

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Click on Marx’s image to down­load this post in PDF for­mat

Talk about cen­tral­i­sa­tion! The cred­it sys­tem, which has its focus in the so-called nation­al banks and the big mon­ey-lenders and usurers sur­round­ing them, con­sti­tutes enor­mous cen­tral­i­sa­tion, and gives this class of par­a­sites the fab­u­lous pow­er, not only to peri­od­i­cal­ly despoil indus­tri­al cap­i­tal­ists, but also to inter­fere in actu­al pro­duc­tion in a most dan­ger­ous man­ner— and this gang knows noth­ing about pro­duc­tion and has noth­ing to do with it.” [1]

A China Tale

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I’ve just been inter­viewed for an SBS News piece on Chi­na (for non-Aus­tralian read­ers, SBS is Aus­trali­a’s mul­ti­cul­tur­al tele­vi­sion sta­tion, and its news has a strong inter­na­tion­al focus).

Ordi­nar­i­ly I don’t com­ment on Chi­na, because I don’t know enough about their econ­o­my right now–except to deride the belief that was pop­u­lar in Aus­tralia last year that our exports to Chi­na would insu­late us from the glob­al down­turn. “Decou­pling” they called it–China was sup­posed to have its own inter­nal growth dynam­ic that would mean it would con­tin­ue grow­ing and buy­ing our raw mate­ri­als even as the OECD tanked. This theory–ironically spout­ed by the same peo­ple who once tout­ed that the world is now glob­alised and every­thing affects (and ben­e­fits) every­thing else–is now rather less pop­u­lar as Chi­na’s growth has slowed.

Ballmer Gets “It”

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Ordi­nar­i­ly I’d sim­ply post a link to a media report in either my Gems or Brick­bats page. But this quote from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer shows that he real­ly under­stands what is going on now, in a way that no oth­er per­son in author­i­ty seems to have done as yet. The full report can be found at:

Microsoft resorts to first lay­offs, cut­ting 5,000

Ballmer’s per­cep­tive analy­sis of what is going on is:

Debwatch on a new ISP

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I have just moved the blog to a new ISP after my pre­vi­ous provider IXWeb­host­ing proved to have intractable prob­lems with mal­ware.

The new host­ing is being pro­vid­ed pro bono by Cyanide Web Host­ing, which I great­ly appre­ci­ate.

Some posts may have been lost in the process, but that was prefer­able to putting up with a site that dis­trib­uted virus­es to all and sundry. So if you have made a post and it has­n’t turned up here, please re-sub­mit.

Bernanke an Expert on the Great Depression??

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Note: This post has been mod­i­fied ni the light of com­ments that the ini­tial ver­sion quot­ed Bernanke out of con­text.

A link to this blog from a US legal advi­so­ry web­site the Prac­tis­ing Law Insti­tute’s In Brief ( “DEFLATION IN THE REAL WORLD”) remind­ed me of  Bernanke’s book Essays on the Great Depres­sion, which I’ve been aware of for some time but have yet to read. I’ll make amends on that front ear­ly this year; for­tu­nate­ly, an extract from Chap­ter One is avail­able as a pre­view on the Prince­ton site (I could­n’t locate the promised eBook any­where!; in what fol­lows, when I quote Bernanke it is from the orig­i­nal jour­nal paper pub­lished in 1995, rather than this chap­ter).

A Couple of Gems

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One blog par­tic­i­pant brought a post by George Mon­biot to my atten­tion. I fre­quent­ly com­ment that the finan­cial regime ini­ti­at­ed after WWII omit­ted key ideas that Keynes proposed–in par­tic­u­lar, a new cur­ren­cy for inter­na­tion­al trade and con­trols on the behav­iour of sur­plus nations as well as those run­ning deficits. Mon­biot pro­vides the his­toric detail of these pro­pos­als and their defeat. It is well worth a read.

A link to my site from anoth­er blog alert­ed me to anoth­er post, from the oppo­site end of the spec­trum, which is a cert for my “Brick­bats” page–both for its con­tent and its tim­ing. On Jan­u­ary 19, 2007, Ger­ard Bak­er of The Times edi­to­ri­alised that “His­to­ri­ans will mar­vel at the sta­bil­i­ty of our era”. An excerpt for you: