innonimatu
the resident Cassandra
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 15,350
That's what I'll name it: a betrayal of the trust that the public, the common people who trust governments and academics to manage the affairs of government, placed on them. Not by all economists, certainly, but by what has been variously know as neoclassical economics, neoliberal economics, mainstream economics, etc.
A lot of simplistic descriptions of the crisis have already been put forward, and its architects are now busy hiding their own responsibility. Even a cursory overview of the problems with global finance is too lengthy for a post here, so I'll just link to two papers on the issue:
Structural Causes of the Global Financial Crisis: A Critical Assessment of the New Financial Architecture
Financialization - What It Is and Why It Matters
Both papers, and their notes, show very well that the move towards a deregulated and inherently unstable financial system started as far back as the 1960s, and that the case of the greedy bastards running after profit regardless of the damage caused was always championed by academic economists, from Arrow and Debreu (with their infamous attempt at salvaging the classical models of economics, but I've discussed that one on other threads) to Friedman and to the "randite" Greenspan. By the 1980s the alliance between these academics and some financial groups finally managed to set the agenda for politics, and they've controlled it since. Starting in the USA and the UK, they eventually imposed their methods on most of the world.
I do not believe that the academics who pushed these economic ideas did it out of misguided ignorance. They knew the devastating effect they'd have. They knew they were increasing inequalities and concentrating wealth. It has been undeniable, for years now, that the neoliberal models prevalent for the past two decades produced much less economic growth (if any, we shall see when the dust settle on this crisis) that the state-regulated models of the 1950s and 1960s. Even the existing statistics do not hide this. Yet economic problems are always attributed to "too much regulation" always used as an excuse to sink further into the neoliberal dystopia. Where will public credulity run out?
And it it takes muck longer, will it be too late? People's instinctive reaction has been to support the bailout packages put forward by government, but these governments remain committed to the same economic ideas and policies that created the crisis. Instead of full nationalizations they seek to "save" the system, much as some countries have already done. Sweden is presented as example, yet Swedish banks were swiftly reprivatized and have been busy financing speculative bubbles in the baltic countries... the end result has that public money was used to keep the Ponzi scheme running. We are also seeing "solutions" suck as bank mergers. But the papers above basically make the case that the whole financial system, with its supra-national financial institution, and its theoretical underpinning cannot be saved, and that it is indeed contrary to public interest to keep it. Measures as simple as reducing the scale of financial institutions (tested and tried) and closing down the too-big-to-fail private-profit-socialized-losses giants are entirely absent from public discussion.
We have a few economists around, I'm curious about what they think of this. They've been unusually curt on the causes of these problems, and entirely silent on prediction, of late.
A lot of simplistic descriptions of the crisis have already been put forward, and its architects are now busy hiding their own responsibility. Even a cursory overview of the problems with global finance is too lengthy for a post here, so I'll just link to two papers on the issue:
Structural Causes of the Global Financial Crisis: A Critical Assessment of the New Financial Architecture
Financialization - What It Is and Why It Matters
Both papers, and their notes, show very well that the move towards a deregulated and inherently unstable financial system started as far back as the 1960s, and that the case of the greedy bastards running after profit regardless of the damage caused was always championed by academic economists, from Arrow and Debreu (with their infamous attempt at salvaging the classical models of economics, but I've discussed that one on other threads) to Friedman and to the "randite" Greenspan. By the 1980s the alliance between these academics and some financial groups finally managed to set the agenda for politics, and they've controlled it since. Starting in the USA and the UK, they eventually imposed their methods on most of the world.
I do not believe that the academics who pushed these economic ideas did it out of misguided ignorance. They knew the devastating effect they'd have. They knew they were increasing inequalities and concentrating wealth. It has been undeniable, for years now, that the neoliberal models prevalent for the past two decades produced much less economic growth (if any, we shall see when the dust settle on this crisis) that the state-regulated models of the 1950s and 1960s. Even the existing statistics do not hide this. Yet economic problems are always attributed to "too much regulation" always used as an excuse to sink further into the neoliberal dystopia. Where will public credulity run out?
And it it takes muck longer, will it be too late? People's instinctive reaction has been to support the bailout packages put forward by government, but these governments remain committed to the same economic ideas and policies that created the crisis. Instead of full nationalizations they seek to "save" the system, much as some countries have already done. Sweden is presented as example, yet Swedish banks were swiftly reprivatized and have been busy financing speculative bubbles in the baltic countries... the end result has that public money was used to keep the Ponzi scheme running. We are also seeing "solutions" suck as bank mergers. But the papers above basically make the case that the whole financial system, with its supra-national financial institution, and its theoretical underpinning cannot be saved, and that it is indeed contrary to public interest to keep it. Measures as simple as reducing the scale of financial institutions (tested and tried) and closing down the too-big-to-fail private-profit-socialized-losses giants are entirely absent from public discussion.
We have a few economists around, I'm curious about what they think of this. They've been unusually curt on the causes of these problems, and entirely silent on prediction, of late.