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:

Neoclassical Wage Restraint Madness

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It had to hap­pen: neo­clas­si­cal econ­o­mists are now advis­ing that the antic­i­pat­ed reces­sion will be much milder if only work­ers would accept wage cuts.

When I saw this cri­sis was immi­nent in Decem­ber 2005, one major fac­tor that moti­vat­ed me to go pub­lic with my analy­sis was the cer­tain­ty that, when the cri­sis hit, neo­clas­si­cal econ­o­mists would either blame it on wages being too high (”the abo­li­tion of Work Choic­es caused the Depres­sion!”), or would sug­gest that wages should be cut to reduce the imbal­ance between the sup­ply of and demand for labour.

Ponzi Maths–Part 3

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This is get­ting a bit like Star Wars, but I promise–this will be the last post in this series. In the pre­vi­ous two, I con­struct­ed a mod­el of a pure cred­it econ­o­my in which the mon­ey sup­ply and eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty can expand smooth­ly of time.

Of course, that’s not the real world. As we know from the bit­ter expe­ri­ence of the finan­cial cri­sis that is this blog’s rai­son d’e­tre, finance char­ac­ter­is­ti­cal­ly desta­bilis­es an oth­er­wise healthy econ­o­my. Part of the rea­son for that is the exis­tence of Ponzi Financing–something that the recent Bernie Mad­off scan­dal has thrown into $50 bil­lion high relief.

Ponzi Maths–Part 2

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In the pre­vi­ous post, I out­lined my basic mod­el of a pure cred­it econ­o­my, in which a sin­gle ini­tial loan allowed a con­ti­nous flow of eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty (at a con­stant lev­el) over time. The basic flowtable of that sys­tem was:

 

Type 1 -1 -1 -1
Account Firm Loan (FL) Firm Deposit (FD) Bank Deposit (BD) Work­er Deposit (WD)
Inter­est on Loan +A      
Inter­est on Deposit   +B -B  
Pay Inter­est on Loan -C -C +C  
Pay Wages   -D   +D

Ponzi Maths–Part 1

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This is an unplanned post that part­ly pre-empts what I’ll be writ­ing in the Feb­ru­ary Debt­watch Report, where I will explain in full my the­o­ry of mon­ey cre­ation in a pure cred­it econ­o­my. So this is some­what out of sequence, and will undoubt­ed­ly be bad­ly explained com­pared to what I put togeth­er for Feb­ru­ary. 

I will also have to fin­ish this in a lat­er post–probably in the first cou­ple of days of the New Year–because Syd­ney’s fire­works beck­on, and we have to be on board the cruis­er we’re watch­ing them from at 7pm.  But what is here is part of a long-promised expla­na­tion of my mod­el of mon­ey cre­ation. In a cou­ple of days I’ll pub­lish the punch line, which is a new­ly devel­oped mod­el of a Ponzi Scheme.

Debunking Economics eBook available

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Click here to buy the Debunking Economics eBook from Mobipocket

Click on the cov­er to buy the eBook

Debunk­ing Eco­nom­ics was first pub­lished in 2001 by Plu­to Press (Aus­tralia) and Zed Books (UK). There has been renewed inter­est in it since I began warn­ing of the impend­ing finan­cial cri­sis, and I decid­ed to release the book in elec­tron­ic for­mat to make it more acces­si­ble (the hard copy can still be pur­chased, if your book­shop will order it, from Zed Books UK, or online from Ama­zon).

I have gone with the (free) Mobipock­et Read­er format–which runs on PCs and PDAs as well as eBook Read­ers like Ama­zon’s Kin­dle. The eBook priced at US$10 (about a third of Ama­zon’s paper­back price).

The World’s Biggest Ponzi Scheme?

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Two days ago the FBI indict­ed Bernie Mad­off, prin­ci­pal of Bernard L. Mad­off Invest­ment Secu­ri­ties LLC, on secu­ri­ties fraud. Though the case has yet to run, in the indict­ment the FBI report­ed that Mad­off con­fessed that his was “basi­cal­ly a giant Ponzi Scheme”  that may have lost some extreme­ly high net worth indi­vid­u­als over US$50 bil­lion.

Mad­of­f’s firm was famous for return­ing con­stant pos­i­tive results, even on a month by month basis, for decades. As Hen­ry Blod­get on Yahoo’s Tech Tick­er reports below, many Wall Street pro­fes­sion­als were incred­u­lous of these results, but invest­ed in his firm anyway–because they thought his returns must be com­ing from him exploit­ing his “mar­ket mak­er” role on the Nas­daq to do insid­er trad­ing.

How the ‘Experts’ Missed the Crash: Philosophical Flaws, No Sense of History

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Uni­ver­si­ty of Texas Eco­nom­ics Pro­fes­sor James Gal­braith is a son of the great US Insti­tu­tion­al econ­o­mist John Ken­neth Gal­braith, and a lead­ing non-ortho­dox econ­o­mist in his own right. He has devel­oped high­ly inno­v­a­tive meth­ods to mea­sure eco­nom­ic inequal­i­ty that are well doc­u­ment­ed here; he is a stri­dent crit­ic of con­ven­tion­al eco­nom­ics; and he has been as active in the USA as an ana­lyst of and com­men­ta­tor on this finan­cial cri­sis as I have in Aus­tralia. His many inter­views on the top­ic are linked from this site.