The Canberra talk will now start at 7.30pm. The venue remains the same: ANU Emeritus Faculty Fellows Lane Cottage; building 3T.
For more information, contact the Nature and Society Forum at office@natsoc.org.au.
The Canberra talk will now start at 7.30pm. The venue remains the same: ANU Emeritus Faculty Fellows Lane Cottage; building 3T.
For more information, contact the Nature and Society Forum at office@natsoc.org.au.
There has been a change of venue for the Per Capita lunch talk. The details now are:
A speaking tour of Melbourne, Adelaide and Canberra has been arranged for me by a number of groups. I’ll be speaking on Australia (and the OECD’s) debt bubble–the phenomena, analysis of how they came about, and what we might expect when they burst.
The details are:
The current turmoil on the Stock Market—and especially the sudden collapse of many once high-flyers—has taken a lot of people by surprise.
One person who, were he alive today, wouldn’t be the least bit surprised, is Hyman Minsky, who predicted that events like this would be a regular feature of a deregulated financial system.
He developed what he called “The Financial Instability Hypothesis”, and anyone who wants to understand today’s events needs to know about it.
The following is an extract from an article by Minsky in Challenge in 1977—well before even the 1987 Stock Market Crash—that provides a nutshell-sized precis of his theory.
The revelation in the minutes of the RBA’s February meeting that debate focused, not on whether there should be a rise, but on whether it should be 0.25 or 0.5 per cent, shows that the RBA wagers that the threats to the Australian economy are upside ones–tighter labor markets and higher inflation–rather than downside ones–a global slowdown as asset markets collapse during a credit crunch. The February minutes implied that the RBA might really throw its cards on the table at the March meeting, with a 0.5% rise being a distinct possibility.
On March 28, I’ll be launching Eric Aaron’s latest book Market versus Nature: The social philosophy of Friedrich Hayek. The venue is:
Gleebooks – 49 Glebe Point Road
Time: 6pm for drinks before a 6.30pm start; finish by 8.30pm
Eric’s earlier books include What’s Left–which is a memoir, an evaluation of the failure of communism, and an attempt to discern what remains of merit in socialist thought after the collapse of communism in the 1990s–and What’s Right–which blended insights from political philosophy, economics and biology to put the case for a more ethical approach to the future of humanity.
Stuart Cameron’s new company Rife Media has started a Debtwatch Podcast page:
The Podcast will still be hosted here as well, but it will probably appear first on Rife Media’s page as Stu does the production.
Stu also produced a Podcast from the Fabian Society seminar on “Economic Challenges Facing the Rudd Government”, at which Saul Eslake, John Edwards and I spoke. All the speeches, Geoff Gallop’s introduction, and the Q&A session afterwards, are all captured there with quite high sound quality.
The Fabian Society has organised a talk on the above topic for this Wednesday at Gleebooks:
When: 6.00 for 6.30pm,
Where: Gleebooks, 49 Glebe Point Road, Glebe.
Cost: Non-Fabians $10/$7. Members are free — please show your membership card to obtain free entry.
Contact: Bookings essential – Gleebooks website – Book online at http://www.gleebooks.com.au or on 9660 2333.
Media Queries: Please contact Simon
Note to Subscribers: I have been on study leave in Europe for the last month, and get back to Sydney late on Monday February 4th. I will be available for comment from the morning of Tuesday February 5th.
Chart of the Month: Who’s having a housing bubble then?
A SMH article claimed that 17 out of 19 economists surveyed expected the RBA to increase rates in response to the January CPI figure:
I’m currently in Norway, and was invited to talk on the global debt crisis to a local discussion group. They videotaped the talk, and put it up on Google Video. The link is:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1375113008927627575
There is also a copy on my site–with the opening trivia about how I met my Norwegian host and fellow researcher Trond Andresen deleted:
http://www.debtdeflation.com/podcast/SteveKeenDebtTalkNorway20080131.mov
I give an overview of the debt situation, using the graphs that I customarily put into the Debtwatch Report, as well as explaining Hyman Minsky’s “Financial Instability Hypothesis”, which I regard as the only economic theory that can explain the current state of financial markets and the global economy.