New York Times. November 2, 2008
Economic View
Challenging the Crowd in Whispers, Not Shouts
By ROBERT J. SHILLER

Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman, acknowledged in a
Congressional hearing last month that he had made an "error" in
assuming that the markets would properly regulate themselves, and
added that he had no idea a financial disaster was in the making.
What's more, he said the Fed's own computer models and economic
experts simply "did not forecast" the current financial crisis.

Mr. Greenspan's comments may have left the impression that no one in
the world could have predicted the crisis. Yet it is clear that well
before home prices started falling in 2006, lots of people were
worried about the housing boom and its potential for creating economic
disaster. It's just that the Fed did not take them very seriously.
For example, I clearly remember a taxi driver in Miami explaining to
me years ago that the housing bubble there was getting crazy. With all
the construction under way, which he pointed out as we drove along, he
said that there would surely be a glut in the market and, eventually,
a disaster.

But why weren't the experts at the Fed saying such things? And why
didn't a consensus of economists at universities and other
institutions warn that a crisis was on the way?
The field of social psychology provides a possible answer. In his
classic 1972 book, "Groupthink," Irving L. Janis, the Yale
psychologist, explained how panels of experts could make colossal
mistakes. People on these panels, he said, are forever worrying about
their personal relevance and effectiveness, and feel that if they
deviate too far from the consensus, they will not be given a serious
role. They self-censor personal doubts about the emerging group
consensus if they cannot express these doubts in a formal way that
conforms with apparent assumptions held by the group.

Members of the Fed staff were issuing some warnings. But Mr. Greenspan
was right: the warnings were not predictions. They tended to be
technical in nature, did not offer a scenario of crashing home prices
and economic confidence, and tended to come late in the housing boom.

A search of the Federal Reserve Board's working paper series reveals a
few papers that touch on the bubble. For example, a 2004 paper by
Joshua Gallin, a Fed economist, concluded: "Indeed, one might be
tempted to cite the currently low level of the rent-price ratio as a
sign that we are in a house-price 'bubble.'" But the paper did not
endorse this view, saying that "several important caveats argue
against such a strong conclusion and in favor of further research."

One of Mr. Greenspan's fellow board members, Edward M. Gramlich,
urgently warned about the inadequate regulation of subprime mortgages.
But judging at least from his 2007 book, "Subprime Mortgages," he did
not warn about a housing bubble, let alone that its bursting would
have any systemic consequences.

>From my own experience on expert panels, I know firsthand the
pressures that people — might I say mavericks? — may feel when
questioning the group consensus.
I was connected with the Federal Reserve System as a member the
economic advisory panel of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from
1990 until 2004, when the New York bank's new president, Timothy F.
Geithner, arrived. That panel advises the president of the New York
bank, who, in turn, is vice chairman of the Federal Open Market
Committee, which sets interest rates. In my position on the panel, I
felt the need to use restraint. While I warned about the bubbles I
believed were developing in the stock and housing markets, I did so
very gently, and felt vulnerable expressing such quirky views.
Deviating too far from consensus leaves one feeling potentially
ostracized from the group, with the risk that one may be terminated.

Reading some of Mr. Geithner's speeches from around that time shows
that he was concerned about systemic risks but concluded that the
financial system was getting "stronger" and more "resilient." He was
worried about the unsustainability of a low savings rate, government
deficit and current account deficit, none of which caused our current
crisis.

In 2005, in the second edition of my book "Irrational Exuberance," I
stated clearly that a catastrophic collapse of the housing and stock
markets could be on its way. I wrote that "significant further rises
in these markets could lead, eventually, to even more significant
declines," and that this might "result in a substantial increase in
the rate of personal bankruptcies, which could lead to a secondary
string of bankruptcies of financial institutions as well," and said
that this could result in "another, possibly worldwide, recession."
I distinctly remember that, while writing this, I feared criticism for
gratuitous alarmism. And indeed, such criticism came.

I gave talks in 2005 at both the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency and at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, in which I
argued that we were in the middle of a dangerous housing bubble. I
urged these mortgage regulators to impose suitability requirements on
mortgage lenders, to assure that the loans were appropriate for the
people taking them.

The reaction to this suggestion was roughly this: yes, some staff
members had expressed such concerns, and yes, officials knew about the
possibility that there was a bubble, but they weren't taking any of us
seriously.

I based my predictions largely on the recently developed field of
behavioral economics, which posits that psychology matters for
economic events. Behavioral economists are still regarded as a fringe
group by many mainstream economists. Support from fellow behavioral
economists was important in my daring to talk about speculative
bubbles.
Speculative bubbles are caused by contagious excitement about
investment prospects. I find that in casual conversation, many of my
mainstream economist friends tell me that they are aware of such
excitement, too. But very few will talk about it professionally.

Why do professional economists always seem to find that concerns with
bubbles are overblown or unsubstantiated? I have wondered about this
for years, and still do not quite have an answer. It must have
something to do with the tool kit given to economists (as opposed to
psychologists) and perhaps even with the self-selection of those
attracted to the technical, mathematical field of economics.
Economists aren't generally trained in psychology, and so want to
divert the subject of discussion to things they understand well. They
pride themselves on being rational. The notion that people are making
huge errors in judgment is not appealing.

In addition, it seems that concerns about professional stature may
blind us to the possibility that we are witnessing a market bubble. We
all want to associate ourselves with dignified people and dignified
ideas. Speculative bubbles, and those who study them, have been deemed
undignified.

In short, Mr. Janis's insights seem right on the mark. People compete
for stature, and the ideas often just tag along. Presidential
campaigns are no different. Candidates cannot try interesting and
controversial new ideas during a campaign whose main purpose is to
establish that the candidate has the stature to be president. Unless
Mr. Greenspan was exceptionally insightful about social psychology, he
may not have perceived that experts around him could have been subject
to the same traps.

Robert J. Shiller is professor of economics and finance at Yale and
co-founder and chief economist of MacroMarkets LLC.

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company

[It's more than group think. Economists in general _believe_ in the
market, seeing "market failure" as the exception. And no-one wanted to
rain on the bubblicious parade. So many influential people were making
big profits off of it, it was taboo to criticize it.

[I should mention that above, Shiller ignores such economists as Dean
Baker who were shouting "the emperor has no clothes!"]
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Nobody told me there'd be days like these / Strange
days indeed -- most peculiar, mama." -- JL.
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