The bank meltdown marks a turning point in our thinking about how the
world works writes the Nobel Laureate. In some ways this is the biggest
crisis in eighty years.

by Joseph Stiglitz

New Statesman (October 16 2008)


Make no mistake: we are witnessing the biggest crisis since the Great
Depression. In some ways it is worse than the Great Depression, because
the latter did not involve these very complicated instruments - the
derivatives that Warren Buffett has referred to as financial weapons of
mass destruction; and we did not have anything close to the magnitude of
today's cross-border finance.

The events of these weeks will be to market fundamentalism what the fall
of the Berlin Wall was to communism. Last month in the United States
almost 160,000 jobs were shed - making more than three-quarters of a
million this year. My guess is that things will get considerably worse.
I have been predicting this for some time, and so far, unfortunately, I
have been right.

There are several reasons for my pessimism. The extreme credit crunch is
a result of the banks having lost a lot of capital. And there is still
uncertainty about the value of the toxic mortgages and other complex
products on their balance sheets. The US economy has been fuelled by a
consumption binge. With average savings at zero, many people borrowed to
live beyond their means. When you cut off that credit you reduce
consumption. This, in turn, will dampen the US economy, which helps keep
the global economy growing. The American consumer has not only sustained
the US economy, he has sustained the global economy. The richest country
in the world has been living beyond its means and telling the rest of
the world it should be thankful because America fuelled global economic
growth.

There are further reasons for my pessimism about short-term economic
prospects, in America and Europe. In the second quarter of this year,
growth in the US would have been negative were it not for the growth in
exports. But with the slowdown in Europe and problems in Asia it is
difficult to see how we can maintain net export growth. The
strengthening of the dollar - due not to greater confidence in the US
but to reduced confidence in Europe - will make matters worse. The fall
of energy prices will help a little, but not enough.

Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson has now come up with a new bailout
scheme. The original plan - buying up the thousands of "troubled assets"
(read: bad loans and complex products based on them that Wall Street
created) - was badly designed and rife with problems. How would they
have been priced? Call in the same Wall Street experts who got us into
the mess and mispriced risk before? It is a heads I win, tails you lose
situation.

The worry is that the taxpayer will be left holding the short end of the
stick.

The British approach, which Paulson seems to be following, is far
better, involving capital injections into banks, with preferred shares
to protect against losses and warrants to share in some of the upside
potential. This is the approach that I - along with most US economists
and people with good street sense, like George Soros - had been saying
America should adopt.

Ironically, though Paulson wouldn't listen to us, he seems to have
listened to Gordon Brown.

Many of the problems our economy faces today are the result of the use
of misguided models. Unfortunately, too many took the overly simplistic
models of courses in the principles of economics (which typically assume
perfect information) and assumed they could use them as a basis for
economic policy. Many central banks use the notion of inflation
targeting - that they should focus exclusively on inflation, raising
interest rates when inflation increases. But I would argue that central
banks have a broader responsibility; they are supposed to ensure the
stability of a country's economy. While monetary authorities in the US
and elsewhere focused on price stability, they allowed the financial
system to undertake risks that put the whole economy in jeopardy.

This crisis is a turning point, not only in the economy, but in our
thinking about economics. Adam Smith, the father of modern economists,
argued that the pursuit of self-interest (profit-making by competitive
firms) would lead, as if by an invisible hand, to general well-being.
But for over a quarter of a century, we have known that Smith's
conclusions do not hold when there is imperfect information - and all
markets, especially financial markets, are characterised by information
imperfections. The reason the invisible hand often seems invisible is
that it is not there. The pursuit of self-interest by Enron and WorldCom
did not lead to societal well-being; and the pursuit of self-interest by
those in the financial industry has brought our economy to the brink of
the abyss.

No modern economy can function well without the government playing an
important role. Even free marketeers are now turning to the government.
But would it not have been better to have taken action to prevent this
meltdown? This is a new kind of public-private partnership - the
financial sector walked off with the profits, the public was left with
the losses. We need a new balance between market and government.

_____

Professor Joseph E Stiglitz is chair of the Brooks World Poverty
Institute at the University of Manchester and a 2001 Nobel prizewinner

http://www.newstatesman.com/business/2008/10/economy-world-crisis-financial 






This message has been scanned for malware by SurfControl plc. 
www.surfcontrol.com
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to