from SLATE:

>>The Great Panic of 2015

Has Washington, or the rest of the world, learned anything from the
Great Recession?
By Annie Lowrey

Posted Thursday, Feb. 3, 2011, at 4:38 PM ET

The Great Recession officially started in December 2007, according to
the bean-counters at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Most
people on Wall Street or in Washington, however, would probably name
Sept. 15, 2008, as the real start date: That was when unprecedented
losses in housing-backed securities led to the bankruptcy of Lehman
Bros., setting off the banking panic, the credit crunch, and the rest
of the horrible aftermath. But the better question is not when the
last financial crisis began, but when the next one will.

According to some creative analysts at the management consulting firm
Oliver Wyman, that date is April 26, 2015. In a paper presented last
week at the World Economic Forum in Davos to much chattering from the
fur-and-cashmere class, Wyman analysts imagine an all-too-familiar
scenario coming back all too soon. The next time, the authors say, the
fat-cat financiers will be in Singapore or Hong Kong, chased away from
New York and London by stricter reserve requirements and emboldened
regulators. The bubble will appear in developing markets, with easy
developed-world money and the promise of ever-spiraling commodity
prices funding unnecessary building and silly investments. So there
you have it—again: a big pool of money chasing market-beating returns
and ultimately inflating asset-price bubbles that burst with awful
consequences, from bank failures to sovereign-debt crises.

Do the authors of this report—complete with an imaginary protagonist,
"John Banks," awakened in his air-conditioned Singapore bedroom at 3
a.m. one April day with grim news—really believe another crisis is
just around the corner? Well, maybe. "Financial services executives
and regulators have worked hard to design a safer and more stable
financial system, but we will not know whether they have succeeded
until it is tested by the next crisis," the authors note. "The first
aim of our 2015 crisis scenario is to stress test the design of the
new financial system, to consider how well it would stand up to this
type of adverse scenario. The broader aim of the report is to
encourage readers to think about the broader financial system" using
many such plausible scenarios, in different markets, in different
countries, in different financial institutions.

Now that the recovery has fully taken hold [of financial markets?] and
the global financial regulations overhaul is in the implementation
phase, the Wyman analysts are not alone in starting to imagine how the
combination of easy money plus risk mispricing and irrational
exuberance might again lead to catastrophe. Economist Jayati Ghosh,
for instance, also sees hot money flowing into emerging economies,
laying the groundwork for troubles. Many economists cite commodities
as problematic, given the growing conventional wisdom that increasing
demand from countries like China and India means prices will not
decline.

Others see troubles starting to brew in the United States' own
finances, with the next crisis perhaps originating in Washington
rather than on Wall Street. The documentary Overdose, for instance,
argues that the recessionary strategy of shoring up over-indebted
private institutions by adding trillions in debt to public ones will
result in even greater catastrophe, later if not sooner. Sheila Bair,
the chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., worries about the
United States' [the US government's??] crushing debt burden causing
financing and dollar problems down the road, as do Allan Meltzer and
dozens more economists across the political spectrum.

Other theories focus on continued vulnerabilities in the financial
system. Simon Johnson, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and former chief economist for the International Monetary
Fund, for instance, believes that the policy of "too big to fail," in
which the U.S. government deemed some banks too systemically important
to collapse, will make the problems worse down the road. Even though
Washington has promised no more bailouts, he believes concentration in
the financial sector has made some firms more important, not less—and
that the government would step in for the sake of the broader system,
again.

All of these narratives of the next big crisis share one very scary
assumption: that whatever the United States and its European peers do
to try to prevent the next crisis might not be enough. At the heart of
the concern is the way Washington approached regulation—an incremental
approach based in strengthening existing rules rather than brute
force. Some wise men suggested strong leverage caps, or size or
activity restrictions to stop financial companies from getting too
risky. Others suggested just taxing the whole sector. But politicians
in Washington mostly stuck with the rules they had, attempting to
bolster them instead. Worries abound, then, as they have for a year,
that reform failed to address the core cause of the crisis. Everyone
from Forbes to The Nation, from the Hoover Institution to the
Roosevelt Institute, has admitted concerns with the Dodd-Frank law.

That leads us back to April 26, 2015. If anything will prevent the
next financial crisis, it will be financial firms recognizing bubbles
and popping them early, with regulators stepping in to ensure that
risk-takers are the ones eating the losses. Vigilance is the word. Of
course, bubbles are virtually impossible to see while they're
inflating—who is to say what is a reasonable bull market, and what
isn't, especially when everyone's making money? For that reason, we
all might be left hoping for nothing more than better luck next time.

-- 
Jim Devine /  "Living a life of quiet desperation -- but always with style!"
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