The Cost of Capitalism Market Madness_6

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174 • THE COST OF CAPITALISM remain confident in their abilities to wire your house, and plumbers are cocksure that sewage flows downhill. Unfortunately, policy makers were clearly influenced by the latest generation of economists of the classical school. Indeed, I would submit that Fed policy makers, Treasury officials, and other key players over the past two dozen years made bad decisions in part because they let themselves believe that sewage really could, on occasion, flow uphill. New Keynesians Drink Half a Glass of Kool-Aid Keynesians of any stripe, by definition, accept the notion that market failures are possible. New Keynesians took the bait, however, when criticized by their new classical competition, and set out to establish microeconomic foundations for Keynesian conclusions. And to do that, the math required them to embrace the notion that people in general act rationally. Boom and bust cycles are not ideal, according to New Keynesians. But they agree with their new classical colleagues that there is no longrun inflation/unemployment trade-off. The key market imperfection that drives cycles is found in the labor market. Wages are sticky. An unlucky group loses their jobs because the majority keeps their wage rates intact. This leads New Keynesians halfway toward the new classical formulation in their design of monetary policy: • They agree that keeping inflation low is the main job for the central bank. • They agree that there is no long-run inflation/unemployment trade-off. Economic Orthodoxy on the Eve of the Crisis • 175 • They train their sights on the real economy and inflation, giving Wall Street sideshow status. The Taylor rule best captures their efforts. The equation directs the monetary authorities to adjust nominal interest rates in reaction to inflation and output. If output is below potential amidst low inflation, the central bank delivers low interest rates. When inflation rises above target, the central bank raises rates, confident that the temporary high unemployment period that ensues will lower inflation. What is the key difference between New Keynesian and new classical directives toward the central bank? New classical economists argue that the sole job for the central bank is to keep inflation low. A big jump for joblessness, in their world, should be ignored as long as stable prices are in view. New Keynesian economists direct the central bank to lower rates and stimulate if the economy has clearly hit a bad patch. The New Keynesian formulation sees demand and supply shocks as the destabilizing forces, but like new classical theorists, they judge wage and price inflation as the key symptom of imbalance. They embrace the notion that markets are rational. Therefore, if inflation is stable, excesses are absent, and Fed policy makers can relax. In general, that is what central bankers have done over the past 25 years. Focusing on wages and prices, they saw no excesses. When confronted with breathtaking market advances, they quoted efficient markets rhetoric. And the financial system bust of 2008 and the global 2008-2009 recession are the price the world is now paying. Post-Keynesians, especially acolytes of Hyman Minsky, watched the developments leading up to the 2008 crisis with morbid fascination. An impressive number of papers were published from 2004 through 176 • THE COST OF CAPITALISM 2006 that warned of the extraordinary risks building in the world’s financial system. If Minsky and his followers had a central Keynesian foundation, it was their focus on the speculative nature of long-term expectations. As Keynes put it: . . . the orthodox theory assumes that we have a knowledge of the future of a kind quite different from that which we actually possess.11 In the next chapter I will argue that for modern day economists, Keynes without Minsky is something like Caesar without the Bard. Chapter 14 MINSKY AND MONETARY POLICY Pollyanna was much happier than Cassandra. But the Cassandric components of our nature are necessary for survival. . . . The benefit of foreseeing catastrophe is the ability to take steps to avoid it, sacrificing short-term for long-term benefits. —Carl Sagan, The Dragons of Eden, 1986 n the mid-1970s, as the worst recession since the Great Depression I was ending, Hyman Minsky published a book championing the insights of J. M. Keynes. It was a bizarre moment to offer up this analysis. Keynesian economic theories were under siege. Milton Friedman, the poster child for free market capitalism, would soon collect his Nobel prize. In addition, over the next 20 years economists in the classical tradition would reclaim center stage in both academia and Washington. Minsky, unruffled, offered the world the monograph John Maynard Keynes in the fall of 1975. For Minsky, the deep economic troubles that confronted the United States and the world could not be laid at the doorstep of Keynes. Minsky was convinced that the key attribute he shared with Keynes • 177 • 178 • THE COST OF CAPITALISM was that neither of them were Keynesians. As far as Minsky was concerned, the mainstream theorists had squeezed the life out of what Keynes had to offer. Read Minsky’s monograph and you are destined to see Keynes in a new light. Minsky highlighted the fact that Keynes, a very successful speculator in commodities, completely rejected Never Never Lander notions of well-informed and always rational investors: Enterprise only pretends to itself to be mainly actuated by the statements in its own prospectus. Only a little more than an expedition to the South Pole, it is based on an exact calculation of benefits to come.1 Minsky recognized that Keynes offered the world a theory to explain a capitalist system with sophisticated financial institutions. Early in this book we imagined a world without financial markets. We talked about how a boom and bust cycle could arise, a consequence of the mismatch between the way consumers save and the patterns of business investment. Paul Samuelson, the most accomplished and prolific postwar Keynesian, developed just such a model to explain business cycles, and it was the standard explanation for business cycles in the 1950s and the 1960s.2 Minsky’s Keynesian system embraced the notion that business cycles are driven by the instability of investment. But the underlying cause, he makes quite clear, is the tenuous nature of financial relationships and the “instability of portfolios and of financial relations.” Quite simply, for Minsky financial markets are center stage. Minsky believed that boom and bust cycles are guaranteed by the interactions of the myriad players who meet and deal in the world of Minsky and Monetary Policy • 179 finance. Therefore, models for the economy that leave out banks and financial system upheavals are destined to fail. Pervasive uncertainty rules the world. To cope with the unknown, the majority allows yesterdays to inform opinions about tomorrow. A string of happy yesterdays raises confidence in blue skies tomorrow. Risky finance gets riskier as confidence builds. In the last scene, with little margin for safety in place, a small disappointment has shockingly profound consequences. In 1975, Minsky put it this way: The missing step in the standard Keynesian theory [is] the explicit consideration of capitalist finance within a cyclical and speculative context . . . finance sets the pace for the economy. As recovery approaches full employment . . . soothsayers will proclaim that the business cycle has been banished [and] debts can be taken on. . . . But in truth neither the boom, nor the debt deflation . . . and certainly not a recovery, can go on forever. Each state nurtures forces that lead to its own destruction.3 For the cult of Wall Street fans who now dub financial crises “Minsky moments,” Keynes without Minsky is something like Caesar without Shakespeare (Figure 14.1). Why Banks and Wall Street Are Special Schumpeter celebrated the creative destruction that he believed was the signature characteristic of a capitalist system. As he saw it, entrepreneurial risk taking was the source of long-term growth. The fact that innovation destroyed the value of established franchises was an 180 • THE COST OF CAPITALISM Figure 14.1 inescapable part of the process. The creative destruction that Schumpeter envisioned certainly makes sense when we think of Main Street. Progress requires us to accept a never-ending string of new champions setting up shop as old peddlers give up and close their doors. For Schumpeter, creative destruction is the price of progress. Naive free market apologists mistakenly see financial market crises in the same light. Arthur Laffer, a man ready to blame government intervention for meteor showers, in late 2008, put it this way: Financial panics, if left alone, rarely cause much damage to the real economy, output, employment, and production. . . . People who buy homes and the banks who give them mortgages are no Minsky and Monetary Policy • 181 different than investors in the stock market. . . . Good decisions should be rewarded and bad decisions should be punished.4 In other words, we can treat a string of bank failures the same way we do a succession of fast food restaurant bankruptcies—with enthusiasm for creative destruction and a heavy dose of benign neglect. More specifically, Fed and Treasury officials should have welcomed AIG’s default, days after the Lehman bankruptcy, and whoever failed in subsequent days. Simple free market rhetoric. Simple, neat, and wrong. Minsky’s central insight is that financial companies are different. Widespread bankruptcy in the world of finance, the horrendous experience of the 1930s taught us, produces deflationary destruction. Ever since the 1930s, policy makers have been forced to accept that self-evident truth. And that is why, whatever their political stripes, they always end up writing any and all checks necessary to prevent a domino chain of bank and other finance company failures. The Great Depression vs. Japan’s Lost Decade What is deflationary destruction? Contrast the dynamics of Japan in the 1990s with the fate that befell the United States in the 1930s. In both countries a wild speculative bubble took hold. Herd mentality drove the prices of stocks to levels that were completely at odds with the earnings these companies could deliver. When the bubble burst and asset prices began to plunge, banks found that the stocks and real estate and corporate loans they had made were tumbling in value. As we explained in Chapter 3, a bank’s equity at any moment is the difference between the value of its assets and the value of its liabilities. In Japan in the 1990s many bank assets fell in value by 80 percent. In 182 • THE COST OF CAPITALISM the United States in the 1930s many bank assets plunged in value. On a mark-to-market basis, therefore, both banking systems were bankrupt midway through the process. Despite these brutal similarities, the economic consequences of the bubble were wildly different. In the United States in the 1930s unemployment hit 25 percent, and industrial production fell by 40 percent. In Japan the jobless rate never climbed above 6 percent, and production fell by 10 percent and then went sideways for the next five years. Why was Japan spared full-blown depression? Banking system survival is the key difference between Japan in the 1990s and the United States in the 1930s depression. In the United States, 9,600 banks failed. In Japan, banks limped their way through the decade, with a few forced mergers and ultimately government money to recapitalize the system. But there were no bank runs. The center held. The visible hand of government, pure and simple, is the reason that Japan’s banks survived and U.S. depression–era banks collapsed. FDIC insurance was created in the aftermath of the Great Depression. A bank run was avoided in Japan because depositors had confidence in a government guarantee. The collapse of banks throughout America wiped out the savings of millions of Americans. The consequent plunge in their buying power drove sales, output, employment, and production into a free fall. The lesson is unambiguous. Banks are not like other businesses. The “too big to fail” doctrine has been in practice since the 1930s. Both Bush presidencies signed major bailouts into law, ideological leanings notwithstanding. For Schumpeter, creative destruction is the price of progress. For Minsky, government activism, to thwart the deflationary effects of Minsky and Monetary Policy • 183 banking crises, is the cost of capitalism. The last 50 years of global growth and rising living standards give license to those who celebrate Schumpeter. But it is Minsky’s framework that explains policy responses to financial system mayhem. We need to create a model that allows both Schumpeter’s and Minsky’s visions to coexist throughout the business cycle. Systemic Risk and Modern Finance Amidst the 2008 global market meltdown, Alan Greenspan was almost speechless. He openly confessed to being shocked by the collapse and acknowledged that at some basic level market participants had miscalculated. As he put it: “It was the failure to properly price risky assets that precipitated the crisis.”5 But Greenspan could not bring himself to admit the obvious: the financial architecture he depended on was fundamentally flawed. Even amidst the carnage of the 2008 crisis, in his October mea culpa he guilelessly sung its praise: In recent decades, a vast risk management and pricing system has evolved, combining the best insights of mathematicians and finance experts supported by major advances in computer and communications technology. A Nobel prize was awarded for the discovery of the pricing model that underpins much of the advance in derivatives markets.6 What could have thwarted a system designed by Ayn Rand–reading rocket scientists? The “intellectual edifice . . . collapsed,” Greenspan explained:
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