-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Patrice Riemens
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 10:43 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: <nettime> Edouard Challe: The rent of the financial industry has
been captured by the highest salaries.



For the amateurs/ connoisseurs of 'rent', enjoy!
p+3D!



from: Le Monde, Dossier Economie, Tuesday May 17, 2011.

Edouard Challe (EC): "The rents of the financial industry have been captured
by the highest salaries" Interviewed by Antoine Reverchon (AR)

AR:  Together with Pierre Calhuc, you have researched the linkages between
financial bubbles and income distribution. What are the outcomes?

EC:  Economic research has shown a worldwide trend for the very high incomes
to rise over the past twenty years. This includes not only capital incomes,
but also the highest salaries, and top level bonusses. The further you are
into the highest 10%, 1%, 0,1% slabs of income, the greater this rise has
been.

There are two traditional ways to explain this phenomenon. The first is to
say that technological progress exert an upward pull to the remunerations of
the most qualified personel, as they master the knowledge of information and
communication technologies, which are the vectors of this progress - whereas
the Industrial Revolution tended to favorise the masses of non-qualified
labour. Conversely, in the second explanation, globalisation drags down the
salaries on non-qualified labour, as it must compete with the low cost
labour in emerging economies.

But when one takes a much closer look at the precise structuration of the
highest salaries, one discovers that these are mostly distributed among
corporate lawyers, CEOs, 'celebs' in sports and show business, and ...
financial sector jobs. It is there that the rise has been at its most
spectacular. Thus, the managers of the 5 biggest American hedge funds earn
more together than all the CEOs of the SP500 index!


AR:  But aren't such high levels of earnings justified by the very high
level of qualification demanded by the growing complexity and sophistication
of the financial sector's produces and services?

EC:  Not at all, since earnings, at the same level of qualification, are far
higher in the financial sector than everywhere else. They are principaly
linked to the ability of finance professionals to capture a rent within the
economic activity, this thanks to the monopoly status and the asymetry in
information which is characteristic of the industry. Financial relationships
are by nature non-competitive, as they are based on two-sided trust,
something that is conducive to the development of rent. During speculative
bubbles, as we have seen them over the past twenty years, like the dot.com
boom, followed by the real estate bubble, this accumulation of rent takes
place at an extraordinary scale.


AR:  But seen in absolute numbers, does not the level of these remunerations
simply reflect the amounts of money that are currently being handled by the
financial industries, and which qre supposed to benefit investments in other
sectors of the economy?

EC:  IF markets were efficient, then for sure a redistribution of the rent
through investments would take place. But this rent is actually captured (by
the very highest incomes -PR) in the form of remunerations, and this has two
major consequences. First, there is a further increase in the overall
inequality of incomes. Second, human resources are ineficiently distributed
across the labour market. The financial sector sucks in the most qualified
people, at the expense of other sectors of the economy. Three times as many
Harvard graduates go to finance than was the case twenty years ago. The same
happens in Europe as well.


AR:  But if the financial sector creates value and jobs in numbers
traditional industries are not any longer able to as they are being
delocalised - where is the problem?

EC:  To believe that the financial sector is conducive to economic growth is
illusory, as its own growth is based on speculative bubbles. And there is no
room on this planet for more than two global financial centres like London
and New York. In the long run, the ill-advised allocation of human resources
in favor of finance will lead to macro-economic inneficiencies.


AR:  Can these tendenties be corrected then?

EC:  YES, if, as consequence of the crisis, we would have embarked into a
real re-regulation of the financial industry, in which case one could have
hoped for a re-allocation of resources of qualified labour. But this is not
the sort of policy options that are being followed, especially not in the
U.S. Bubbles are therefore here to stay, and the lure of very high salaries
in the financial sector will continue to disrupt the labour market and
enhance inequalities.


Edourd Challes is professor of economiccs at the Ecole Polytechnique and
senior research fellow with the CNRS.

Antoine Reverchon is economist.


Q&D translation by Patrice Riemens
Cotignac, May 19, 2011.


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