- The Monster Mash; you gotta laugh, and this sendup of the whole financial crisis to the tune of the old Monster Mash song from the 50’s is a wonderful gem.
- In early March 2009, Jon Stewart at “Comedy Central” put together a masterful rip into the stock market spruikers on the CNBC network, exposing how their so-called expertise was little more than a blind exhortation to join in the euphoric excess of the bubble, and to keep it alive as it died an inevitable death.
It’s both informative and very amusing. Click here to watch it.
- On the topic of humour, this explanation of Central Banking by SBS’s Newstopia is well worth a look.
- And The Onion has hit the nail on the head with its call for a new bubble to get us out of the trouble caused by the old ones (thanks to Alan Kohler for pointing out this gem):
Congress is currently considering an emergency economic-stimulus measure, tentatively called the Bubble Act, which would order the Federal Reserve to† begin encouraging massive private investment in some fantastical financial scheme in order to get the nation’s false economy back on track.
Current bubbles being considered include the handheld electronics bubble, the undersea-mining-rights bubble, and the decorative office-plant bubble. Additional options include speculative trading in fairy dust—which lobbyists point out has the advantage of being an entirely imaginary commodity to begin with—and a bubble based around a hypothetical, to-be-determined product called “widgets.”
- The St Louis branch of the US Federal Reserve is maintaining a detailed timeline of the crisis.
- New York Times: Credit Crisis — The Essentials. The NYT is maintaining an updated list of all its articles on the crisis here.
- Centre for Policy Development InSight Special Edition | The Global Financial Crisis in Review. Articles by myself, John Quiggin, Richard ‘Estrange, James Murray and Ian Dunlop.
Steve Keen, Predicting the crisis: Medal winning analysts. “If they were to hand out medals for predicting the global financial crisis, the Gold Medal for having predicted the crisis must go to Irving Fisher, who in 1933 developed the “Debt Deflation Theory of Great Depressions” — a piece which remains the best description of what happens to an economy that succumbs to excessive debt in the context of low inflation. We are now reliving the horror he warned us against…
The academic economists who predicted this crisis were ignored because the mainstream of the economics profession follows what is known as neoclassical economics, which ignores debt and models the economy as if it is always in equilibrium. The contrarians were ignored because for so long, the way to make money was to “go with the herd”. Today, conventional neoclassical economics is being starkly proven wrong by this very crisis, while contrarians are now the only ones making money.”
- Robert Skidelsky (one of Keynes’s biographers), “Where do we go from here?”, Prospect.
“Any great failure should force us to rethink. The present economic crisis is a great failure of the market system… There were three kinds of failure. The first, discussed by John Kay in this issue, was institutional: banks mutated from utilities into casinos. However, they did so because they, their regulators and the policymakers sitting on top of the regulators all succumbed to something called the “efficient market hypothesis”: the view that financial markets could not consistently mis-price assets and therefore needed little regulation. So the second failure was intellectual… Behind the efficient market idea lay the intellectual failure of mainstream economics. It could neither predict nor explain the meltdown because nearly all economists believed that markets were self-correcting. As a consequence, economics itself was marginalised. But the crisis also represents a moral failure: that of a system built on debt…”
- January 1 2009, New York Times: Worldwide, a Bad Year Only Got Worse. “Stocks lost 42 percent of their value in 2008, as calculated by the MSCI world index, erasing more than $29 trillion in value and all of the gains made since 2003. Just about the only assets to prosper were government bonds of developed countries and gold, where prices rose as investors ran for cover. ”
- Portfolio.com special: The End: The era that defined Wall Street is finally, officially over. Michael Lewis, who chronicled its excess in Liar’s Poker, returns to his old haunt to figure out what went wrong; and
- What a Swell Party: a photographic timeline of two decades of Wall Street excess
- The Biggest Losers: Normally I say that this crisis is no time for Schadenfreude–the negative consequences for the whole species are just too great. But when it comes to the top twenty monkeys? I can’t help enjoying this tale of executive loss on The Business Sheet by Hilary Lewis.
- October 18 2008: Economies count the cost of derivatives. Adele Ferguson, The Australian
As total bank assets are $2.3 trillion, why do Australia’s banks have exposure to $13 trillion of derivatives positions? All banks hedge to reduce risk, but this is a great deal of hedging.
To put it in perspective, Australia’s GDP is about $1.3 trillion, our pool of investment fund assets is $1.2 trillion and the freely floated market capitalisation of the stock market is $1 trillion.
Right now, we are being told Australia’s banks are safe. Indeed, on Sunday night Prime Minister Rudd will front a television show with 100 Australians to answer questions about the financial system and try and quell fears that the wheels could fall off our banking system.
Hugh McLernon from litigation funder IMF, who has spent the past nine months looking at CDSs and CDOs as part of a case he is working on, said yesterday: “No matter who are the winners and losers out of this mess, it is a debacle which will be with us for the next decade, as the CDO and CDS transactions come to their full term.
“We engaged the piper and we have to pay,” Mr McLernon said.
The upshot is that 2008 and 2009 will go down in history as the Great Deleveraging.
- Glovernomics: saving the nation. Good one Richard Glover! “It now seems ages since the crisis first hit — that golden time when no one in Australia had even heard of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Even now, Fannie Mae sounds like an American version of Movember. I imagine myself in April, really looking forward to the commencement of festivities.”
For the benefit of any US readers who can’t understand why this is uproriously funny (to Australians): (a) “Movember” is an annual men’s health awareness event that requires participants to “Grow a Mo”–as in a moustache–for the month of November; (b) Check the final line of the Wikipedia disambiguation of the term Fanny: “Fanny is also a name used for the …”
- Top Gear’s Jeremy Clarkson: Vauxhall Insignia 2.8 V6: An adequate way to drive to hell. “I was in Dublin last weekend, and had a very real sense I’d been invited to the last days of the Roman empire. As far as I could work out, everyone had a Rolls-Royce Phantom and a coat made from something that’s now extinct…
Everyone appeared to be drunk on naked hedonism. I’ve never seen so much jus being drizzled onto so many improbable things, none of which was potted herring. It was like Barcelona but with beer. And as I careered from bar to bar all I could think was: “Jesus. Can’t they see what’s coming?”
I have spoken to a couple of pretty senior bankers in the past couple of weeks and their story is rather different. They don’t refer to the looming problems as being like 1992 or even 1929. They talk about a total financial meltdown. They talk about the End of Days…”
- January 15 2007: Gillian Tett, Financial Times: Should Atlas still shrug? The threat that lurks behind the growth of complex debt deals. This article, just brought to my attention by a blog reader, deserves an award for prescience: “At a glitzy dinner in a Mayfair hotel in London last week, prizes were awarded to the best capital markets performers in 2006. Strikingly, the group that grabbed the tag “best financial borrower” — meaning, most creative in raising funds — was not a bulge-bracket Wall Street or City name. Instead the honour went to Northern Rock, a lender to homebuyers, which is based in north-east England’s gritty Newcastle and has become an enthusiastic issuer of mortgage-backed bonds.”…
- January 3, 2009, FRANK RICH: A President Forgotten but Not Gone. This story has nothing to do with debt, but it’s too good not to link to: Frank Rich’s New York Times OpEd (with an abridged version on the SMH) on the narcissism that defines and maintains George W. Bush:
“The man who emerges is a narcissist with no self-awareness whatsoever. It’s that arrogance that allowed him to tune out even the most calamitous of realities, freeing him to compound them without missing a step. The president who famously couldn’t name a single mistake of his presidency at a press conference in 2004 still can’t.”
- George Monbiot on Giselle’s circulating script scheme: A Better Way to Make Money.
“In Russell Hoban’s novel Riddley Walker, the descendents of nuclear holocaust survivors seek amid the rubble the key to recovering their lost civilisation. They end up believing that the answer is to re-invent the atom bomb. I was reminded of this when I read the government’s new plans to save us from the credit crunch. It intends — at gob-smacking public expense — to persuade the banks to start lending again, at levels similar to those of 2007. Isn’t this what caused the problem in the first place? Is insane levels of lending really the solution to a crisis caused by insane levels of lending?…
the projects which have proved most effective were those inspired by the German economist Silvio Gessell, who became finance minister in Gustav Landauer’s doomed Bavarian republic. He proposed that communities seeking to rescue themselves from economic collapse should issue their own currency. To discourage people from hoarding it, they should impose a fee (called demurrage), which had the same effect as negative interest. ”
- January 20th: John Kemp, Reuters: U.S. and UK on brink of debt disaster.
“The United States and the United Kingdom stand on the brink of the largest debt crisis in history.
While both governments experiment with quantitative easing, bad banks to absorb non-performing loans, and state guarantees to restart bank lending, the only real way out is some combination of widespread corporate default, debt write-downs and inflation to reduce the burden of debt to more manageable levels. Everything else is window-dressing.”
- Yahoo Finance: Microsoft resorts to first layoffs, cutting 5,000. Credit (pardon the pun!) where it is due: Ballmer is the first major CEO I’ve seen who has accurately diagnosed what is going on:
“We’re certainly in the midst of a once-in-a-lifetime set of economic conditions. The perspective I would bring is not one of recession. Rather, the economy is resetting to lower level of business and consumer spending based largely on the reduced leverage in economy,” said Chief Executive Steve Ballmer during a conference call. For consumers, that may mean less discretionary income to spend on a second or third home computer, he said.
Ordinarily I’d only file a report like this in the Rolling Parade section, but this is such a perceptive summary of the root of the crisis by such a prominent executive that it deserves highlighting. Maybe I’ll winge less about Microsoft products in future…
- 19 January: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Telegraph UK. Biblical debt jubilee may be the only answer. Finally, the scale of the problem, and the impossibility of solving it while still honouring all the debt, is starting to be acknowledged.
“There is no guarantee that the measures will succeed. The vast scale of government borrowing may exhaust the stock of global capital. Markets are already beginning to question the credit-worthiness of sovereign states. The Fed may find it harder than it thinks to disengage from colossal intervention in the bond markets. In the end, the only way out of all this global debt may prove to be a Biblical debt Jubilee. Creditors are not going to like that.”
- Aaron Task & Henry Blodget, Yahoo Finance Tech Ticker: Big Banks Hoarding TARP Funds: Why Not Just Nationalize Them?
“Nobody (or only a scant few) wants to see the government take control over the banking system, which would signal the end of market-based capitalism as we know it.
But the reality is we have a creeping form of nationalization going on already via the initial injection of capital into big banks, and the intense government oversight of how banks operate that is almost certain to accompany TARP II (and III and IV) funds.
Meanwhile, banks are mainly just sitting on the TARP funds, as The Wall Street Journal details…”
“The worst economic turmoil since the Great Depression is not a natural phenomenon but a man-made disaster in which we all played a part. In the second part of a week-long series looking behind the slump, Guardian City editor Julia Finch picks out the individuals who have led us into the current crisis.”
- January 3: MICHAEL LEWIS (author of Liar’s Poker) and DAVID EINHORN, New York Times. The End of the Financial World as We Know It.
“OUR financial catastrophe, like Bernard Madoff’s pyramid scheme, required all sorts of important, plugged-in people to sacrifice our collective long-term interests for short-term gain. The pressure to do this in today’s financial markets is immense. Obviously the greater the market pressure to excel in the short term, the greater the need for pressure from outside the market to consider the longer term. But that’s the problem: there is no longer any serious pressure from outside the market. The tyranny of the short term has extended itself with frightening ease into the entities that were meant to, one way or another, discipline Wall Street, and force it to consider its enlightened self-interest…
IT’S not hard to see why the S.E.C. behaves as it does. If you work for the enforcement division of the S.E.C. you probably know in the back of your mind, and in the front too, that if you maintain good relations with Wall Street you might soon be paid huge sums of money to be employed by it.”
- January 31: Clancy Yeates and Scott Rochfort, SMH. Drop the anchor and furl the sails, we’re going over the edge. Good to see my fellow bear Gerard Minack being given a solid run here. It’s not easy being sober when all around you are drunk, and Gerard raised the alarm before even I did, in his regular “Down Under Daily” reports for Morgan Stanley.
An economist at Morgan Stanley, Gerard Minack, also bluntly rejects any argument that Australia can avoid being dragged down with the rest of the world.
“The reason that Kevin Rudd’s GFC [global financial crisis] is hitting us is not because we were simply an island of innocence getting hit by evil offshore influences,” says Minack.
“The idea that we were a prudent, sensible country that never indulged in the reckless excesses that the rest of the world did — that is complete crap,” he says. “We partied as hard, if not harder.”
Brushed off for his bleak forecasts in the boom times by many in the market, Minack’s views have been taken more seriously in recent times.
Minack says our addiction to debt makes us just as vulnerable as the rest of the world to the melt-down in capital markets, and recent profit warnings are only the early stages in the downturn. Tumbling commodity prices will only make the trough deeper, he says.
- January 31: News Kontent Blog. Academic scans former Master of Universe.
“I had dinner last night with a guy whose career wandered through nearly a half-dozen major brokerages. He was at ground zero of the securitization and creation of the alphabet soup of the real estate market…
Wall Street and the banking system is every bit as nuts as we all think… You want leverage? Imagine a 20 billion dollar portfolio of mortgage backed securities with a capital base of $10k–literally 2 million-fold leverage. Imagine the shock of the inventor as he watches as his successors expand similar portfolios up to $900 billion…
So where are we now, and where are we heading? This is the bad part: I thought I was the pessimist. Sheesh. He was describing a system infected by flesh eating bacteria. Every day looks more dire than the previous day. The solutions being proposed look feeble, and the Fed looks both powerless and confused”
- 16 december 2008: News Kontent. My open letter to Prime Minister Rudd. The letter itself is worth a read, but what I’d prefer to highlight here is the comment from James Cumes that accompanies it, written prior to the election:
” In 1929, no one, least of all James Scullin and his ministers, had any idea that the world was about to crash into the greatest economic depression the world had known. They had even less idea of how they should react to any such crisis. Intriguingly, two of the key issues which confronted them were irresponsible debt and industrial relations.
The same seems to be true of the prospective Rudd Government. He has proclaimed himself to be a “conservative economist.” He has spoken, during the campaign, mainly about interest rates and housing costs in conventional terms. He will amend industrial legislation to be more acceptable to workers. He says it all in the obvious expectation that the next few years – the next ten years perhaps – will be much the same as the last ten years under Howard.
There is not the slightest possibility that they will be…
Unless the incoming government – let’s assume it will be a Rudd Government – is extremely lucky, the crash will become manifest in the next few weeks or latest by March 2008. The United States is almost certainly in recession already – concealed only by spurious official statistics – the dollar has fallen sharply and almost certainly will fall further and faster as the weeks go by. Household, corporation and public debt is monstrous, unprecedented and all those adjectives that we thought we would never have to use. Consumer and asset inflation is high. Credit is tight and getting tighter – largely because, in the casino world that the global economy has become, too many have already lost their shirts and far too many more fear that the shirt hangs far too loosely on their own back and on the backs of those who already do or might want to owe them money…
With those prospects, Labor – and Kevin Rudd — might be well advised to disdain any offer of power to govern and so avoid going down in history as another well-meaning but feckless Scullin-type Government. Let Howard and his retinue take the blame and just opprobrium for a catastrophe to which they have contributed with such unbridled generosity.
It won’t happen of course. On the night of 24 November 2007, Labor, led by Rudd, will probably be declared the victor and they will confront their unenviable destiny. For Australia, it won’t be any worse than having Howard’s Coalition as the victor. Indeed, it might be rather better. However, whoever is the victor, I – as one who grew up in the last Great Depression – can only offer a prayer and express a hope. That hope is that we Australians may come through this new and even more terrible challenge, with the same spirit and fortitude that we did seventy years and more ago.”
- January 2, 2009: Risk Mismanagement, New York Times
There are many such models, but by far the most widely used is called VaR — Value at Risk. Built around statistical ideas and probability theories that have been around for centuries, VaR was developed and popularized in the early 1990s by a handful of scientists and mathematicians — “quants,” they’re called in the business — who went to work for JPMorgan. VaR’s great appeal, and its great selling point to people who do not happen to be quants, is that it expresses risk as a single number, a dollar figure, no less.
VaR isn’t one model but rather a group of related models that share a mathematical framework. In its most common form, it measures the boundaries of risk in a portfolio over short durations, assuming a “normal” market. For instance, if you have $50 million of weekly VaR, that means that over the course of the next week, there is a 99 percent chance that your portfolio won’t lose more than $50 million.
BUT…
That $50 million wasn’t just the most you could lose 99 percent of the time. It was the least you could lose 1 percent of the time.
- February 5: David Hirst, The Age. US gambles freedom on risky printing press policy. I wouldn’t have chosen the title, tone or slant of this article myself, but the data is unmistakeable: Bernanke is putting into practice his “logic of the printing press” analogy (se e Debtwatch No. 31).
Keen, who last week was interviewed by The Wall Street Journal and is fast becoming a world-recognised economic authority, outlined in his recent Debt Watch Report that Bernanke’s famous “helicopter drop doubling of base money will be impotent against the US’s credit crunch”.
Most economists believe the US and China are bound irrevocably by US debt and China’s continued purchase of that debt. They assume the US, with 46 states insolvent or approaching insolvency, will suffer immediate MAD if China ends the long financial arrangement.
But with the US entering a period of deflation, its economic leadership appears to be doing the unthinkable — going it alone and letting the electronic printing presses take care of the huge sums required to keep the nation afloat. The consequences for the world economy are incomprehensible as China’s purchases of US treasuries underwrite the US’s unquenchable demand for money to service its multitrillion-dollar public debt, which President Obama said recently would reach $US11 trillion ($A17 trillion) this year.
Faced with the huge sinkhole created by the financial meltdown and the prospect of deflation, US Fed boss Ben Bernanke has been printing money so rapidly that the US is being flooded with liquidity. This is beyond unprecedented.
Many Americans believe printing money can free the country from the suffocating embrace of mutual dependence with China. In his blog earlier this week, Brad Setser from the US Council on Foreign Relations, and one of the world’s most respected China commentators, outlined the US position: “Exchange rate policies can also influence the allocation of resources across sectors. China’s de facto dollar peg is an obvious example … it is hard for me to believe that as much would have been invested in China’s export sector if China had had a different exchange rate regime …
“Those who attribute the growth of the past several years solely to the market miss the large role the state played in many of the world’s fast growing economies.”
Setser and others close to policymakers are realising the boom in China may not be a rerun of the Japanese and German postwar economic miracles but more akin to the creation of a giant sweatshop for the benefit of Western companies and the Chinese Communist Party. But this required US consumers to play their role as the linchpins. Now the linchpin has broken. There is no way the old arrangement can continue and the US is realising the system will end. By reverting to the printing press it can free itself from dependency on China.
- February 6: Andrew Boughton with Michael West, SMH and The Age. Wanted: A new economic theory.
Now that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has hailed in his “Monthly’ essay a new political era of ”social capitalism” and embarked on another stimulus package it merely remains to find an economic theory to accompany it.
Economics has failed manifestly to see the global financial crisis coming. Only those once derided as doomsayers and crackpots were anywhere near the mark. An entire generation of richly-remunerated experts got it wrong, once again
A few years ago, University of Western Sydney’s Professor Steve Keen took up the cudgels for real estate and finance, supported by the theories of Minsky and colleagues back at the Merewether Building at Sydney University, having long held an interest in the mathematics of political economy.
Keen, whose predictions of reckless leverage and speculation in recent years have been vindicated overall through the present credit crisis, declared this week that Australia was bound for a Japanese-style experience of drawn out recession. Stimulus measures were not resolving the problem, he said, simply adding to the Government debt.
The same theme was current in Boughton’s earlier work, along with other correspondents in the United States such as Charles R Morris and Lowell Bryan, though he differs from Keen on the role of government.
While citing Marx on the proclivity of the ”parasites”, the banks, to ”periodically despoil industrial capitalists” and ”interfere in actual production”, Keen noted that he did not expect capitalism to collapse.
- February 6: Jim Manzi, Stimulus predictions: put up or shut up. Jim calls on economists who are making predictions about what Obama’s stimulus package will or won’t do to present their models on which these predictins are based. In part, he says:
So here’s what we would need to falsify a prediction. Anyone who claims to know the impact should escrow a copy of the source code of the econometric model that is used to make the prediction, along with a stated confidence interval, operational scripts, and assumptions for all required non-stimulus inputs that populate the model with a named third-party. Upon reaching the date for which the prediction is made, the third-party should run the model with the actual data for all non-stimulus assumptions and compare the model result to actual. Any difference would be due to model error. We actually still would not be able to partition the sources of error between “error in predicting causal impact of stimulus” and “other”, but at least we would have a real measurement of model accuracy for this instance.
Of course, I sincerely doubt this will happen. I wonder why not?
- Feb 12th: Irving Fisher–Out of Keynes’s shadow, The Economist.
“As parallels to the 1930s multiply, Fisher is relevant again. As it was then, the United States is now awash in debt. No matter that it is mostly “inside” or “internal” debt—owed by Americans to other Americans. As the underlying collateral declines in value and incomes shrink, the real burden of debt rises. Debts go bad, weakening banks, forcing asset sales and driving prices down further. Fisher showed how such a spiral could turn mere busts into depressions. In 1933 he wrote:
Over investment and over speculation are often important; but they would have far less serious results were they not conducted with borrowed money. The very effort of individuals to lessen their burden of debts increases it, because of the mass effect of the stampede to liquidate…the more debtors pay, the more they owe. The more the economic boat tips, the more it tends to tip.”
- Feb 12th: America’s Banking Crisis–Worse than Japan?, The Economist.
This crisis, like most others in rich countries, emerged from a property bubble and a credit boom. The scale of the bubble—a doubling of house prices in five years—was about as big in America’s ten largest cities as it was in Japan’s metropolises. But nationwide, house prices rose further in America and Britain than they did in Japan (see first chart). So did commercial-property prices. In absolute terms, the credit boom on top of the housing bubble was unparalleled. In America private-sector debt soared from $22 trillion in 2000 (or the equivalent of 222% of GDP) to $41 trillion (294% of GDP) in 2007 (see second chart).
Judged by standard measures of banking distress, such as the amount of non-performing loans, America’s troubles are probably worse than those in any developed-country crash bar Japan’s. According to the IMF, non-performing loans in Sweden reached 13% of GDP at the peak of the crisis. In Japan they hit 35% of GDP. A recent estimate by Goldman Sachs suggests that American banks held some $5.7 trillion-worth of loans in “troubled” categories, such as subprime mortgages and commercial property. That is equivalent to almost 40% of GDP.
- Feb 12: RBA faithful banking on policy power, Stephen Long, ABC. “Last week an economist in Sydney was briefing his colleagues from the bank’s dealing room about the Reserve Bank’s latest forecasts. One of the screen jockeys cut him short. “I don’t take anything the RBA or the Treasury says seriously anymore,” he said. “They’ve been wrong too many times.””
- February 9, 2009: Now is the time for a revolution in economic thought. Anatole Kaletsky, The Times.
These are just a few examples of the creative thinking that has started again in economics after 20 years of stagnation. But the academic establishment, discredited though it is by the present crisis, will fight hard against new ideas. The outcome of this battle does not just matter to academic economists. Without a better understanding of economics, financial crises will keep recurring and faith in capitalism and free markets will surely erode. Changes in regulation are not sufficient after this financial crisis — it is time for a revolution in economic thought.
- February 13: Dodgy loans, unjust contracts and the public interest, Richard Ackland, SMH. This reports the failure on appeal of the Cooks case that initially motivated me to raise the alarm about excessive debt. Unfortunately it appears that, as Richard summarises below, “The public interest can be a step too far for some judges.”
Acting Justice Patten, who initially heard the case, found that the contract was unjust. The lender, Permanent Mortgages, should have been aware on making the most perfunctory of inquiries that the Cooks were incapable of servicing this debt.
The judge rewrote the loan so as to remove the default interest rate. The appeal was about whether the Cooks’ equity in their home should be restored and the interest debt cancelled. Parliament has said that contracts can be unwound where they are unfair, and one of the considerations to be taken into account is “the public interest”.
There was evidence before the court that the loans to the Cooks were of the “equity-stripping” species — the lenders did not care whether the money could be repaid, as long as the property could be sold.
Economists gave evidence that these transactions could be categorised as “Ponzi loans” — which could only ever be repaid by taking out a larger loan or by selling the asset.
There was evidence that, were the practice of Ponzi loans to become widespread, “it would substantially increase the tendency of the Australian financial system to asset bubbles and subsequent financial crisis”, Professor Steve Keen told the court — something, you might think, that would be a matter of “public interest”. Invariably, though, the phrase is subjected to mauling at the hands of the judiciary. And so it was here. The appeal judge Roger Giles said in a narrowing flourish: “I have some difficulty in seeing that the health of the economy falls within the public interest to which regard may be had in determining injustice of the particular transaction.”
The public interest can be a step too far for some judges.
- Tuesday, 10 February: Nigel Morris, Deputy Political Editor, and Sean O’Grady, Economics Editor, The Independent (UK). This is the worst recession for over 100 years. Ed Balls, the PM’s closest ally, warns that downturn is ferocious and says impact will last 15 years.
In an extraordinary admission about the severity of the economic downturn, Ed Balls even predicted that its effects would still be felt 15 years from now. The Schools Secretary’s comments carry added weight because he is a former chief economic adviser to the Treasury and regarded as one of the Prime Ministers’s closest allies.
Mr Balls said yesterday: “The reality is that this is becoming the most serious global recession for, I’m sure, over 100 years, as it will turn out.”
He warned that events worldwide were moving at a “speed, pace and ferocity which none of us have seen before” and banks were losing cash on a “scale that nobody believed possible”.
The minister stunned his audience at a Labour conference in Yorkshire by forecasting that times could be tougher than in the depression of the 1930s, when male unemployment in some cities reached 70 per cent. He also appeared to hint that the recession could play into the hands of the far right.
- Sunday, February 15: Matthew Richardson and Nouriel Roubini. Nationalize the Banks! We’re all Swedes Now, Washington Post.
The U.S. banking system is close to being insolvent, and unless we want to become like Japan in the 1990s — or the United States in the 1930s — the only way to save it is to nationalize it.
As free-market economists teaching at a business school in the heart of the world’s financial capital, we feel downright blasphemous proposing an all-out government takeover of the banking system. But the U.S. financial system has reached such a dangerous tipping point that little choice remains. And while Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s recent plan to save it has many of the right elements, it’s basically too late.
- February 2009: The Crisis of Credit Visualized. It’s not perfect and blames the crisis solely on subprimes–ignoring the long run up of debt beforehand–but this visual portrayal of the crisis is still pretty good.
- February 22, 2009: Paul Krugman, New York Times. Banking on the Brink.
Comrade Greenspan wants us to seize the economy’s commanding heights.
O.K., not exactly. What Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman — and a staunch defender of free markets — actually said was, “It may be necessary to temporarily nationalize some banks in order to facilitate a swift and orderly restructuring.” I agree…
The Obama administration, says Robert Gibbs, the White House spokesman, believes “that a privately held banking system is the correct way to go.” So do we all. But what we have now isn’t private enterprise, it’s lemon socialism: banks get the upside but taxpayers bear the risks. And it’s perpetuating zombie banks, blocking economic recovery.
- 24 Feb 2009: Alex Mitchell. Financial Crisis: Do Not Resuscitate.Note to economics writers: your beloved free market is dead. Now tell us the real story about the global financial crisis.
For many years it was my conscientious belief that the worst practitioners in the media were celebrity reporters who did little more than rewrite press handouts supplied by agents for limelight-seeking B‑grade actors and pop stars.
I’ve now revised my views and am convinced that the media’s bottom-feeders are the economics writers.
In so-called normal times, these erudite commentators wrote very little and not very often. Indeed, they rarely came to work and weren’t seen around newsrooms. They sat at home in their book-lined studies mousing their way through international websites looking for ideas for something to write about.
- February 23: Recipe for Disaster: The Formula That Killed Wall Street, Wired Magazine.
David X. Li, it’s safe to say, won’t be getting that Nobel anytime soon. One result of the collapse has been the end of financial economics as something to be celebrated rather than feared. And Li’s Gaussian copula formula will go down in history as instrumental in causing the unfathomable losses that brought the world financial system to its knees.
How could one formula pack such a devastating punch? The answer lies in the bond market, the multitrillion-dollar system that allows pension funds, insurance companies, and hedge funds to lend trillions of dollars to companies, countries, and home buyers.
- February 27: Economy shrinks at fastest pace in 26 years, Yahoo Finance.
- 27 Feb: Christopher Joye, Business Spectator. Dismantle and start again. Christopher and I frequently find ourselves on opposite sides of an economic argument, but he reached some very interesting conclusions about the causes of the credit bubble during his recent trip to the USA.
I began to realise that there is a fundamental frailty that rests at the heart of the US financial architecture, which sets it apart from almost all other developed countries, and which has been largely responsible for both precipitating the current crisis and subsequently propagating it around the rest of our increasingly interconnected world.
In spite of all the (usually conservative) rhetoric about the problems with the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, I have heard no discussion of this much more far-reaching flaw sitting in the foundations of the US credit creation system.
The problem is a simple one: the vast bulk of all home loans in the US (around 70 per cent) are funded not using the balance-sheets of large transnational banks, and in turn the regionally diversified deposits of their customers, but via the far more complex, unstable and sometimes conflicted process of “securitisation”…
My advice to President Obama, Timothy Geithner, Shaun Donovan, and Austin Goolsbee is that merely applying myopic bandages to the symptoms of these problems, and reinvigorating the GSEs, is emphatically not the long-term answer. The entire system of housing finance needs to be transformed to a bank-based balance-sheet focus…
- February 28, 2009: US stocks plumb 12-year lows.
“US stocks fell and the S&P 500 closed at a 12-year low on Friday, after the government said it will take a large stake in Citigroup’s common shares, fanning fears it will increase its role in other major banks.
The decline closed out a grim month on Wall Street, with the Dow industrials hitting the lowest level since May 1997 as the blue-chip index fell for a sixth straight month.”
- February 28: The great repression by Niall Ferguson, The Australian.
“There is something desperate about the way people on both sides of the Atlantic are clinging to their dog-eared copies of Keynes’s General Theory. Uneasily aware that their discipline almost entirely failed to anticipate the crisis, economists seem to be regressing to macro-economic childhood, clutching the multiplier like an old teddy bear.
The harsh reality that is being repressed is this: the Western world is suffering a crisis of excessive indebtedness…”
“The idea of modifying mortgages appalls legal purists as a violation of the sanctity of contract. But, as with the principle of eminent domain, there are times when the public interest requires us to honour the rule of law in the breach. Repeatedly in the course of the 19th century, governments changed the terms of bonds that they issued through a process known as conversion. A bond with a 5 per cent coupon would simply be exchanged for one with a 3 per cent coupon, to take account of falling market rates and prices. Such procedures were seldom stigmatised as default. Today, in the same way, we need an orderly conversion of adjustable rate mortgages to take account of the fundamentally altered financial environment.
No doubt those who lose by such measures will not suffer in silence. But the benefits of macro-economic stabilisation will surely outweigh the costs to bank shareholders, bank bondholders and the owners of mortgage-backed securities.
Americans, Churchill once remarked, will always do the right thing — after they have exhausted all the other alternatives. But if we are still waiting for Keynes to save us when Davos comes around next year, it may well be too late. Only a Great Restructuring can end the Great Repression. It needs to happen soon.”
- March 2: Henry Blodget, How Low Can The Market Go?
There were four massive stock bubbles in the 20th Century: 1901, 1929, 1966, and 2000. During each of these bubble peaks, the S&P 500 neared or exceeded 25X on professor Robert Shiller’s cyclically adjusted P/E ratio.* After the first three of these peaks, the S&P 500 PE did not bottom until it hit 5X-8X. We’re still in the middle of the last one.
The most recent bubble peak, 2000, was by far the most extreme we have ever experienced. In 2000, the S&P 500 by prof. Shiller’s measure exceeded 40X (it had never before exceeded 30X). With the S&P 500 hitting 700 today, the PE has now fallen back to 12X. (See chart above.)
- March 4: Recession fear as GDP shrinks, Chris Zappone, SMH. Reality finally bites, a day after the RBA decided to keep rates on hold.
”This is inevitably the first quarter of Australia’s recession, that it’s currently in,” said Matt Robinson of Moody’s Economy.com.
”It makes a mockery of the comment from RBA yesterday that Australia hasn’t seen the sizeable contraction in demand that other economies have seen.”
- March 12: Madoff’s Bail Revoked After Guilty Pleas to All Charges, New York Times.
In recounting how he began the fraud, whose collapse erased as much as $65 billion that his customers thought they had in their accounts, Mr. Madoff said: “I believed it would end shortly and I would be able to extricate myself and my clients from the scheme. However, this proved difficult, and ultimately impossible.”
He continued, stumbling slightly over the word order in his prepared remarks, “As the years went by I realized this day, and my arrest, would inevitably come.”
This week, the government said Mr. Madoff had 4,800 client accounts at the end of November, supposedly containing $64.8 billion in customer savings. But the government said Mr. Madoff’s business “held only a small fraction of that balance.”
March 12: Debate–Is Madoff Wall Street’s Greatest Villain?, New York Times. With a comment by Mitchell Zuckoff, the author of the superb history of Charles Ponzi, Ponzi’s Scheme: the True Story of a Financial Legend.
More important, there was a widespread perception that the affected investors were the sort of people who are usually insulated from huge reversals. Put another way, for once the tornado wiped out the houses on the hill and missed the trailer park in the valley…
When Charles Ponzi pulled off his scheme in 1920, he tapped into a widespread belief that prosperity was a new American birthright. When it collapsed, the public’s outrage was as much about the fear that some people would always be denied the brass ring as it was about the money he lost. After years of Americans believing that the stock market was a rising tide that would lift all boats, Bernard Madoff is living proof that the tide has gone out…
When the music stops — which it invariably does — there’s an understandable need to reaffirm the boundaries between good and bad capitalism, between the Madoffs of the world and the rest of us. And that’s what is going on now. While that sense of boundaries may be reassuring to us, let us not lose sight that Mr. Madoff had plenty of company in recent years.
- March 17: China flexes, and the US catches a chilly reminder. Peter Hartcher, SMH. I don’t often put posts from Peter here, but this was a very good and perceptive piece. The USA is not in a position to reneg on its own debts, whatever it might ultimately be forced to do about private debt.
The Chinese premier, Wen Jiabao, expressed concern about his country’s $US1 trillion ($1.5 trillion) holdings of US government bonds.
“We’ve lent a huge amount of capital to the US, and of course we’re concerned about the security of our assets. And to speak truthfully, I am a little bit worried.”
That was all it took.
It marked a threshold moment in relations between the current superpower and the potential one — Beijing demonstrated that it is prepared to use its financial power over the US as an instrument of pressure.
US officials, including Barack Obama himself, hastened to reassure the Chinese over the weekend. “Not just the Chinese Government, but every investor can have absolute confidence in the soundness of investments in the US.”
Wen’s remark was not random. It was made in answer to a pre-approved question at his annual news conference. It came just as his Foreign Minister, Yang Jiechi, was in Washington to negotiate with the US the approach the two countries would take to the Group of 20 summit in London on April 2.
And it emerged a few weeks after Hillary Clinton went to Beijing and explicitly called on the Government to keep buying US bonds — the Obama Treasury is hoping to sell the world another $1.7 trillion in treasuries this year to pay for the US Government’s deficit.
- March 18: Japan’s lost decade is a lesson for us all, Peter Costello. Costello is quite right here: a stimulus package or a dozen won’t solve this crisis–though the first one might soften the initial blow of a very severe downturn. But you can’t solve a problem caused by too much (private sector) debt by adding more (public sector) debt.
Then the Japanese property bubble burst. Japanese banks were swamped by bad debts. The value of their securities plummeted. The Japanese government announced a stimulus plan. When it didn’t do much good, it concluded that the first plan hadn’t been large enough. It announced a second, larger plan. When that failed, a third plan larger again was announced. Over the decade from 1990, Japan had at least 10 stimulus plans which in total amounted to about 30 trillion Yen. There were at least three recessions during the decade — a decade described as a lost decade for Japan. Japan emerged with crippling government debt — greater than the size of its GDP.
No one thinks Japan is the likely global economic super power of tomorrow.
Now, the United States has seen a property bubble collapse, its banks are riddled with bad debts and it is in recession. It has reacted with massive stimulus packages. When Japan was receiving this treatment in the 1990s, the Clinton administration was in office. Two of the key figures urging Japan on to large budget stimulus were Larry Summers and Tim Geithner. Now they are key advisers in the Obama Administration.
But the spend, spend, spend mantra is meeting some resistance in Europe, particularly from Germany. Perhaps the Germans remember the Japanese experience of the 1990s. Fiscal stimulus is no answer to structural problems in an economy. It’s the structural problems that have to be dealt with.
When all the stimulus packages are over, the debt is still there. And it has to be borrowed from someone. And when confidence returns to the market, and there are higher competing returns on offer, the interest rate to service that debt will be so much higher.
- March 4, 2009: Ivory Tower Unswayed by Crashing Economy,PATRICIA COHEN, New York Times.
For years economists who have challenged free market theory have been the Rodney Dangerfields of the profession. Often ignored or belittled because they questioned the orthodoxy, they say, they have been shut out of many economics departments and the most prestigious economics journals. They got no respect…
That was before last fall’s crash took the economics establishment by surprise…
Yet prominent economics professors say their academic discipline isn’t shifting nearly as much as some people might think. Free market theory, mathematical models and hostility to government regulation still reign in most economics departments at colleges and universities around the country. True, some new approaches have been explored in recent years, particularly by behavioral economists who argue that human psychology is a crucial element in economic decision making. But the belief that people make rational economic decisions and the market automatically adjusts to respond to them still prevails…
To Mr. Galbraith and L. Randall Wray, an economist at Missouri, the two thinkers whose work is most relevant today are John Maynard Keynes, who argued that the government should spend its way out of the Great Depression, and Hyman Minsky, who maintained that financial institutions could prompt ruinous crashes by taking on too much risk. Neither, Mr. Galbraith said, is part of the core curriculum in most economics graduate programs.
When asked why graduate students don’t study Keynes or Minksy, Mr. Reny replied that graduate students work on subjects — like real models of business cycles — that are at the frontier of the field; by contrast Keynes and Minsky are not on the frontier anymore.
Mr. Wray prefers to call such mathematical modeling “the frontier of nonsense.” For more than a decade Mr. Wray has asserted that both the theory and the models used by risk-rating agencies are wrong. He has been invited to speak at the University of Chicago, he said, but by social science graduate students, not by the economics department.
- March 23 2009: Galbraith says Geither’s Plan “Extremely Dangerous”. Part I of an excellent interview with Professor James Galbriath by Henry Blodget and Aaron Task on Yahoo’s Tech Ticker (video).
We think Geithner is suffering from five fundamental misconceptions about what is wrong with the economy:
The trouble with the economy is that the banks aren’t lending. The reality: The economy is in trouble because American consumers and businesses took on way too much debt and are now collapsing under the weight of it…
The banks aren’t lending because their balance sheets are loaded with “bad assets” that the market has temporarily mispriced. The reality: The banks aren’t lending (much) because they have decided to stop making loans to people and companies who can’t pay them back…
Bad assets are “bad” because the market doesn’t understand how much they are really worth. The reality: The bad assets are bad because they are worth less than the banks say they are…
Once we get the “bad assets” off bank balance sheets, the banks will start lending again. The reality: The banks will remain cautious about lending, because the housing market and economy are still deteriorating…
Once the banks start lending, the economy will recover. The reality: American consumers still have debt coming out of their ears, and they’ll be working it off for years…
- March 23, 2009: Galbraith Interview Part II: Geithner, Obama Kowtowing to “Massively Corrupted” Banks, Galbraith Says.
Like it or not, many people seem to be resigned to the idea there’s no alternative to the public-private investment fund scheme Treasury Secretary Geithner detailed this morning. (Click here for part one of our discussion of the plan.)
That’s hogwash, says University of Texas professor James Galbraith, author of The Predator State. Of course there’s an alternative: FDIC receivership of insolvent banks.
- March 23, 2009: “Happy Talk” Won’t Solve Crisis, Galbraith Says: Much More Govt. Action Needed, Yahoo Finance Tech Ticker.
From Obama to Geithner to Bernanke, policymakers are like doctors dealing with a “mildly ill” patient vs. treating one who is “gravely” ill, says James Galbraith, University of Texas professor and author of The Predator State.
The economist fears the economy is in terminal condition requiring much more intervention than already prescribed. He believes government “doctors” are engaged in a lot of “happy talk” about recovery based on a “fundamentally flawed model,” hinged on the idea the economy is self-healing and only needs a booster shot before it “naturally” returns to trend growth and unemployment in the 5% range.
March 5, 2006: AMSTERDAM HOUSE: This Very, Very Old House. New York Times. The Herengracht Canal House Price Index.
From the time the Herengracht was developed in the early 17th century, however, it has been Amsterdam’s prime real estate, the place where power brokers — 17th-century merchants dealing in spices and slaves or 21st-century bankers and international consultants — have chosen to base themselves. Looking at real-estate transactions over four centuries on this canal on which Pieter Fransz built his home gives a quality constant of unparalleled duration.
This is what attracted Piet Eichholtz, a professor of real-estate finance at Maastricht University in the Netherlands, to study the Herengracht in the 1990’s. Eichholtz’s work — the so-called Herengracht index — has become a touchstone in recent discussions about real-estate prices. He began with a sense of frustration. “If you look at most research on real-estate markets,” he said, “papers will typically say they are taking ‘a long-run look,’ and then they go back 20 years. I wasn’t impressed with that. I thought you had to go back further to get a really good picture of what a housing market performs like.”
- APRIL 6, 2009: From Bubble to Depression? STEVEN GJERSTAD and VERNON L. SMITH, Wall Street Journal.
Excellent analytic overview of the crisis by a non-orthodox winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics.
Bubbles have been frequent in economic history, and they occur in the laboratories of experimental economics under conditions which — when first studied in the 1980s — were considered so transparent that bubbles would not be observed.
We economists were wrong: Even when traders in an asset market know the value of the asset, bubbles form dependably. Bubbles can arise when some agents buy not on fundamental value, but on price trend or momentum. If momentum traders have more liquidity, they can sustain a bubble longer.
But what sparks bubbles? Why does one large asset bubble — like our dot-com bubble — do no damage to the financial system while another one leads to its collapse? Key characteristics of housing markets — momentum trading, liquidity, price-tier movements, and high-margin purchases — combine to provide a fairly complete, simple description of the housing bubble collapse, and how it engulfed the financial system and then the wider economy.
In just the past 40 years there were two other housing bubbles, with peaks in 1979 and 1989, but the largest one in U.S. history started in 1997, probably sparked by rising household income that began in 1992 combined with the elimination in 1997 of taxes on residential capital gains up to $500,000. Rising values in an asset market draw investor attention; the early stages of the housing bubble had this usual, self-reinforcing feature.
The 2001 recession might have ended the bubble, but the Federal Reserve decided to pursue an unusually expansionary monetary policy in order to counteract the downturn…
The causes of the Great Depression need more study, but the claims that losses on stock-market speculation and a monetary contraction caused the decline of the banking system both seem inadequate. It appears that both the Great Depression and the current crisis had their origins in excessive consumer debt — especially mortgage debt — that was transmitted into the financial sector during a sharp downturn.
What we’ve offered in our discussion of this crisis is the back story to Mr. Bernanke’s analysis of the Depression. Why does one crash cause minimal damage to the financial system, so that the economy can pick itself up quickly, while another crash leaves a devastated financial sector in the wreckage? The hypothesis we propose is that a financial crisis that originates in consumer debt, especially consumer debt concentrated at the low end of the wealth and income distribution, can be transmitted quickly and forcefully into the financial system. It appears that we’re witnessing the second great consumer debt crash, the end of a massive consumption binge.
- Friday, 9 January 2009: Hugh Pavletich (Demographia co-author): Housing Bubbles And Market Sense.
Recently — Professor Paul Krugman of Princeton University wrote within a brief New York Times article Bubble Blindness: “The big mystery is the (economists) failure to see the housing bubble. The data screamed “bubble”even in real time. And there was no excuse for thinking that such things don’t happen in efficient markets, not with the dead body of the dot-com bubble still warm.”
“So why did so few people point out the obvious? One answer may be that macroeconomists, in particular, didn’t want to go up against bubble denier Alan Greenspan, which might get them blackballed from Jackson Hole and all that. But overall, the failure to see the most obvious bubble in my lifetime remains a puzzle.”
This inexcusable failure is not a “puzzle” Professor Krugman.
Within a recent Boston Globe article Paradigm Lost, Drake Bennett wrote –
“But academic economists are (experts). And with very few exceptions, they did not predict the crisis either. Some warned of a housing bubble, but almost none foresaw the resulting cataclysm. An entire field of experts, dedicated to studying the behavior of markets, failed to anticipate what may prove to be the biggest economic collapse of our lifetime. And now that we are in the middle (or is it the start?) of it, many admit they are not sure how to prevent things from getting worse.”
“As a result, there’s a sense among some economists that, as they try to figure out how to fix the economy, they are also trying to fix their own profession”.
By no means however, did the economics profession have a monopoly on “housing bubble blindness”…
- 6 April 2009: A Tale of Two Depressions, by Barry Eichengreen and Kevin H. O’Rourke.
This is an excellent statistical/graphical comparison of the severity of this crisis versus the Great Depression. On almost every metric, this one is much worse–as I’ve been arguing here for some time, with the cause (excessive debt levels relative to GDP) at least twice as bad as last time, the disease will in all probability be at least as bad–allowing that perhaps “Big Government” will soften the blow to some degree, as Minsky used to argue.
“Often cited comparisons – which look only at the US – find that today’s crisis is milder than the Great Depression. In this column, two leading economic historians show that the world economy is now plummeting in a Great-Depression-like manner. Indeed, world industrial production, trade, and stock markets are diving faster now than during 1929–30. Fortunately, the policy response to date is much better…”
7 April 2009: The Financial War Against Iceland, by Michael Hudson.
Iceland is under attack – not militarily¬ but financially. It owes more than it can pay. This threatens debtors with forfeiture of what remains of their homes and other assets. The government is being told to sell off the nation’s public domain, its natural resources and public enterprises to pay the financial gambling debts run up irresponsibly by a new banking class. This class is seeking to increase its wealth and power despite the fact that its debt-leveraging strategy already has plunged the economy into bankruptcy. On top of this, creditors are seeking to enact permanent taxes and sell off public assets to pay for bailouts to themselves…
In Iceland – but nowhere else – home mortgages have a uniquely bad twist. Creditors have managed to protect the weight of their claims on debtors by indexing mortgage loans to the nation’s consumer price inflation (CPI) rate. Each month the debt principal is increased by the CPI increase – and so is the interest charge. During 2008 that index rose by 14.2%, so a 100,000-euro mortgage at the start of 2008 would have grown to 114,230 euros by yearend. These monthly adjustments also would added an entire percentage point onto the interest payment – an extra 100 euros to be paid to creditors monthly, in addition to the growing principal to be amortized. Talk about making money without effort …!
Such heavy debt charges would shrink any economy, and that is what is happening in Iceland. Prices for real estate declined by an estimated 21 percent for housing in 2008. So in the above example, the market price of the house worth 100,000 euros at the beginning of the year would have been worth only 79,000 at yearend, while the mortgage would have grown by 14% to 114,230. This would have plunged the homeowner 35,000 euros into negative equity – a remarkable 35% change.
- April 14, 2009: Financial engineers tarred and feathered but still seeking fees on road to oblivion. Ian Verrender, SMH.
Just as it is difficult to conceive why sane people throughout Europe staked their fortunes on tulips in the late 1630s, heads will one day shake at the naivety of those who were seduced into putting their money into heavily indebted trust structures that nominally owned toll roads, airports and the like.
In the past decade, infrastructure became the fodder for a Ponzi scheme — an elaborately constructed and complex one, but a Ponzi scheme just the same. BrisConnections was merely one of the last and more brazen, and the one to implode most spectacularly.
The idea was fairly simple. Buy something, anything, for a ridiculous amount of money, using a raft of overly optimistic assumptions stretching out for decades. Borrow almost all the purchase price. Sell it into a tax-effective trust. The higher the price, the bigger the fees. When the business doesn’t generate enough income to cover the interest, borrow even more so you can pay investors a dividend and maintain interest payments.
- April 2009: Goodbye, homo economicus. Anatole Kaletsky, prospect.
The economics profession must bear a lot of the blame for the current crisis. If it is to become useful again it must undergo an intellectual revolution—becoming both broader and more modest.
The scandal of modern economics is that these two false theories—rational expectations and the efficient market hypothesis—which are not only misleading but highly ideological, have become so dominant in academia (especially business schools), government and markets themselves. While neither theory was totally dominant in mainstream economics departments, both were found in every major textbook, and both were important parts of the “neo-Keynesian” orthodoxy, which was the end-result of the shake-out that followed Milton Friedman’s attempt to overthrow Keynes. The result is that these two theories have more power than even their adherents realise: yes, they underpin the thinking of the wilder fringes of the Chicago school, but also, more subtly, they underpin the analysis of sensible economists like Paul Samuelson.
- April 11, 2009: Mr. Soddy’s Ecological Economy. ERIC ZENCEY, New York Times
Frederick Soddy, born in 1877, was an individualist who bowed to few conventions, and who is described by one biographer as a difficult, obstinate man. A 1921 Nobel laureate in chemistry for his work on radioactive decay, he foresaw the energy potential of atomic fission as early as 1909. But his disquiet about that power’s potential wartime use, combined with his revulsion at his discipline’s complicity in the mass deaths of World War I, led him to set aside chemistry for the study of political economy — the world into which scientific progress introduces its gifts. In four books written from 1921 to 1934, Soddy carried on a quixotic campaign for a radical restructuring of global monetary relationships. He was roundly dismissed as a crank.
He offered a perspective on economics rooted in physics — the laws of thermodynamics, in particular. An economy is often likened to a machine, though few economists follow the parallel to its logical conclusion: like any machine the economy must draw energy from outside itself. The first and second laws of thermodynamics forbid perpetual motion, schemes in which machines create energy out of nothing or recycle it forever. Soddy criticized the prevailing belief of the economy as a perpetual motion machine, capable of generating infinite wealth — a criticism echoed by his intellectual heirs in the now emergent field of ecological economics.
- April 16, 2009: A Minsky Meltdown: Lessons for Central Bankers. Presentation to the 18th Annual Hyman P. Minsky Conference on the State of the U.S. and World Economies—“Meeting the Challenges of the Financial Crisis”, Organized by the Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, New York City
By Janet L. Yellen, President and CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
It’s a great pleasure to speak to this distinguished group at a conference named for Hyman P. Minsky. My last talk here took place 13 years ago when I served on the Fed’s Board of Governors. My topic then was “The ‘New’ Science of Credit Risk Management at Financial Institutions.” It described innovations that I expected to improve the measurement and management of risk. My talk today is titled “A Minsky Meltdown: Lessons for Central Bankers.” I won’t dwell on the irony of that. Suffice it to say that, with the financial world in turmoil, Minsky’s work has become required reading. It is getting the recognition it richly deserves. The dramatic events of the past year and a half are a classic case of the kind of systemic breakdown that he—and relatively few others—envisioned…
[This speech by a Federal Reserve President eating humble pie, and eulogising Minsky, so it belongs here on Gems. But it is also on the Brickbats page. Why? Because her understanding of Minsky is so flawed. Reading this was rather like reading Hicks’s “Mr Keynes and the Classics” (1937), in which the deeply neoclassical young John Hicks completely mangled Keynes’s arguments in the General Theory to argue that Keynes was compatible with neoclassical thought:
“Income and the rate of interst are now determined together at P, the point of intersection of the curves LL and IS. They are determined together; just as price and output are determined together in the modern theory of demand and supply. Indeed, Mr. Keynes’ innovation is closely parallel, in this respect, to the innovation of the marginalists.” (p. 153)
Yellen didn’t claim anything quite as brazen as this, but her unintentional emasculation of Minsky’s argument was, to me breathtaking.
- April 21 2009: Timmy Testifies, We Take Notes. Dirk van Dijk, CFA
This morning, Secretary of the Treasury Tim Geithner testified before the Congressional Oversight Panel (COP) headed by Elizabeth Warren. In general, the questions were excellent; unfortunately, the answers were not forthcoming.
One excellent question was, “How does protecting the common shareholders of Citigroup © help the economy?” There was no real answer to that question — just a dance about how it was not appropriate for him to talk about any individual financial institution. The true answer to the question is: it doesn’t.
He said in response to questioning about the asymmetric risks and returns in the Public Private Investment Plan (PPIP) that if you had to sell your house immediately but there were no mortgages available, you would not get a very good price. I think that this is fundamentally the wrong analogy to use, and it reflects a flawed assumption that underlies the PPIP program — namely that the buyers in the market are wrong.
It assumes that the reason that there is no volume in the market for these “legacy assets,” the new term for “toxic assets,” is that there are no buyers, rather than that there are no sellers. This is an unproven assumption at best, although one of the better features of the PPIP is that it should help answer the question of a lack of buyers vs. a lack of sellers.
A better analogy (or at least one that is equally valid) is: suppose you wanted to sell your home, but it has suffered major water damage and is now infested with termites. However, you owe $500,000 on it, and no buyer is willing to pay more than $250,000 for it, and you cannot afford to sell it at that price. Simply because mortgages are available at reasonable interest rates will not make buyers want to buy your house for anything like $500,000.
END