Ten
Cent Econ
BACKGROUND
ANALYSIS OF THE 2008
FINANCIAL CRISIS
by Phil Martinez
This
page is intended to introduce economic topics relevant to the crisis or
raised by the
crisis. The goal is to specifically cover economic theory and history
that is often controversial, misunderstood, or misrepresented. These
are very brief summaries at a introductory level and are not intended
to provide a comprehensive understanding of all that contmeporary
economic theory has to contribute to these topics.
Free Market Economics.
Much of the discussion,
analysis, and debate regarding the Financial Crisis of 2008-09 has
revolved around the role and functioning of "the free market". Unfortunately,
most of the discussion of "the free
market" is more political ideology and social idealism
than objective economic analysis.
While is is clear that the Classical economists, most famously Adam
Smith, constructed a theory of the free market, it is equally clear
that such a market is an idealistic abstraction that has never existed
and can never exist. All modern economies are mixed economies. They
rely both upon markets and government regulation to efficiently
meet society's needs.
Furthermore, the very theory that is so often used to argue that the
free market will self-adjust more efficiently than any government
intervention also states the conditions required for the free market to
effectively exercise this ability commonly do not exist in actual
economies. In other words, we know from economic theory, analysis of
economic models, and actual history (the current crisis is an example)
that unregulated, free markets often fail to acheive efficient
self-adjustment and desirable results. Furthemore, we know the
conditions under which they are likely to fail. Guess what? Many of
these conditions existed in the housing and financial markets leading
to the crash, conditions like the following:
- Market
Power - firms being so large that they can control or
manipulate
market conditions, such as prices or relevant market information. In
the currrent crisis, firms are so large
that even an anti-intevetnionist administration (Bush, Paulsen,
Bernanke) finds it cannot allow
them to fail, so it intervenes to keep them afloat even though they
have clearly failed as competitve firms. Such firms are so large that
they move capitalism away
from free, competitive markets toward oligopolistic markets, which
justify
regulation.
- Collusion - firms
choose to cooperate to enhance profits by avoiding competitive prices.
In the current crisis, security rating firms (e.g. Moody's, and
Standard and Poor) did not properly rate risky
securities because they, and the rest of the financial industry,
profitted from inflated securities prices. They had no incentive to do
costly analysis which cut their customers' credit ratings, reducing
both their customers' sales as well as their own.
- Imperfect information -
firms did not fully disclose the range and nature of their investments
in risky securities. This included the poor risk evaluation of the
rating firms. In many cases, the banks and executives themselves did
not understand nor have the necessary information to make efficient
decisions. Under such
conditions firms, their executives, their investors, and shareholders
cannot make efficient decisions if they do not even understand their
own investments.
So why do so many commentators,
analysts, and even economists argue that government intervention to
alleviate the crisis is not justified and that we should let the free
market self-adjust? Well, either they do not understand contemporary
economics or they are actually committed to the free market ideal due
to political ideology. This is precisely the point made by Alan
Greenspan's confession that his theory of the economy was flawed due to
a flaw in his ideology. See Greenspan
Concedes Error in Regulation, NYTimes, October 24, 2008.
The Role of the Government and
Government Regulation.
No modern economy exists independent of a government. In order for
capitalism
to exist, for example, there must be a complex system of contract law,
property rights, and a civil justice system. Additionally, there must
be police and national security institutions. Civil libertarians,
because of their political beliefs (not economic analysis), would like
to limit government to these narrow areas of responsibility. However,
these are not the minimum governmental needs of an advanced capitalist
market economy.
Precisely because the market commonly fails to produce the most
efficient or optimal result the economy requires the government to
address a range of economic problems that "the free market" will not or
cannot address. These areas correspond precisely to the areas of
"market failure" that Neoclassical free market theory identifies:
market power, public goods, externalities, imperfect informaiton, and
concentration of wealth.
Additionally, as proven by John Maynard Keynes, free market capitalism
can fail to appropriately self adjust under specific conditions short
of social collapse. (More on this below under Keynesian Theory and
Stabilization Policy).
Finally, all major infrastructural networks and systems require
development by or under the authority of the government both because
they are required prior to the emergence of private firms capable of
financing national infrastructure and because infrastructure is
usually a public good. If a firm produces it then it has to
operate as a monopoly (anti-competitive market power) or it cannot
profit from the investment. The government has been integral in the
development of the national highway system, railroad system,
airports and air traffic control system, modern seaports,
electrical grid, hydro-power, nuclear power, flood control, water
delivery, sewage treatment, et
cetera.
John Maynard Keynes.
The
current financial crisis is generating a revival of Keynesian economic
theory, and for good reason. Keynesian economic theory provides the
primary analytical structure for virtually all of contemporary
macroeconomics. Additionally, it was constructed specifically to
address the issue of proper governmental policy during a depression.
Thus, his theory is particularly appropriate, and is the beginning
point of any macroeconomic analysis of the crisis.
This is what
"The History of
Economic Thought" website writes about Keynes:
John Maynard Keynes
is doubtlessly one the most important figures in the entire history of
economics. He
revolutionized
economics
with his classic book,
The
General Theory of
Employment, Interest and Money (1936). This is generally
regarded as
probably the most influential social science treatise of the 20th
Century, in that it
quickly and permanently changed the way the world looked at the economy
and the role of
government in society. No other single book, before or since, has
had
quite such an impact...Indeed, with this book, he almost
single-handedly constructed the fundamental relationships and ideas
behind what
became known as "macroeconomics".
So, if
Keynes is such a towering figure of macroeconomics, why is there so
much controversy and debate about his theory?
The short answer: he challenged and overthrew the enitre basis of a purely laissez-faire (no government
intervention) response to economic crisis. This undermined all
Classical economic theory regarding the role of the government and the
functioning of the market that preceded him.
The long
answer: he is not as controversial as his critics claim. The truth is
that he was so successful in proving the errors of a purely non-governmental
approach and in outlining sound reasoning and evidence in support of a
range of potentially effective government stabilization policies, that
the vast majority of economists today, whether they are employed in the
private sector, the government sector, or are researchers and
theorists,
rely on his theories to do their analysis and even to criticize his
theory. The best evidence of this is the fact that strong free market
proponents (Bush, Paulson, Bernanke, Greenspan) returned to his
analysis and recommendations after their view of the economic world
collapsed with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, in September 2008. The
$750 billion banking rescue package (TARP), the $17.4 billion loans to
the auto industry (both proposed and implemeneted by the Bush
administration), and the proposed $825 billion Stimulus Package
proposed by President Obama are all based upon Keynesian economic
theory.
Keynes and
Macroeconomics.
Keynes introduced the analysis that a modern capitalist economy is
driven by the level of demand in the economy, the amount of money that
consumers are willing and able to spend. In the Keynesian
view there are four major sources of demand spending: consumers,
private investors, foreign consumers, and the government. Keynes argued
that during some economic crisis there is not enough spending to keep
the economy operating at its capacity. Due to increasing unemployment,
declining wages, insecurity about future income, and poor job
opportunities
consumers may not have enough income or confidence to maintain their
spending. At the same time investors may be unwilling to invest, lend,
or borrow because of poor profit expectations or massive losses in the
market. If the crisis has spread internationally then foreign consumers
will also be unable or unwilling to buy imports. The government remains
the only sector of the economy that has the ability to restore spending
to a level that employs the population and maintains production near
its capacity. If the government does not increase spending, then Keynes
concludes, that the economy is likely to enter long term depression
that can keep employment, wages, production, investment, and profit
suppressed for years at a time.
Because this policy prescription potentially expands the both the size
of the government and the role of the government beyond the
traditional Classical laissez
faire ideal Keynes' theory alarmed both Classical theorists and
small government advocates. Consequently, he and his theory have been
inaccurately criticized as being Socialist. This is major
misunderstanding, both of the theory and of Keynes. Keynes was an
ardent supporter of Capitalism and was anti-socialist. However, he was
a reformer. He viewed Capitalism as imperfect and prone to periodic
major crises. His theory and policy recommendations were designed to
protect Capitalism from its own excesses, not to undermine it. In his
view a modern Capitalist economy is far more complex than the economy
that Adam Smith observed in 18th century Britain. In his view an
advanced Capitailst economy requires a large and active government
engaged in ensuring the stability of the market.
Government
Stabilization Policy
From Keynes' perspective the goal
of government economic policy is to keep the market stable, avoiding
major depressions and major inflations. In his view the market is
inherently unstable, prone to unpredictable volatility and
ocassional crises. General goals of Keynesian stabilization
policy are to keep
production and employment near the economy's full capacity, keep
inflation low, and keep the economy growing at a stable level
consistent with full employment and low inflation. The U.S. Congress
formally endorsed Keynesian policy with the passage of the Full
Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1978 (the Humphrey-Hawkins Act)
which set national targets of a 4% unemployment rate and a 3% inflation
rate.
There are only two policy areas that the government might be able to
manage in order to stabilize the economy. I say "might" only because
there is some controversy as to how effective these measures are.
Keynes had little doubt about there effectiveness. The policy areas are
Monetary Policy and Fiscal Policy.
- Monetary policy focuses on
trying to manage major interest rates in
order to influence the level of investment, borrowing, and inflation.
The primary interest rates in the U.S. economy are managed by the
Federal Reserve Bank ("the Fed"), which is a private bank that is given
governemntal authority to manage the U.S. money supply. The Fed sets
the interest rates that banks pay to borrow money from the Fed nad from
each other. The U.S. Treasury manages the interest rates that it pays
to borrow money. The Treasury borrows money by selling U.S. Treasury
Bonds.
By lowering interest rates the Fed
attempts to encourage borrowing,
investing, and spending, thereby stimulating the economy to avoid or
pullout of a recession. This ype of monetary policy (expansionary) will
always expand creidt in the economy and, thereby, encourage debt.
Conversely, to avoid or lower inflation, the Fed can raise interest
rates to discourage borrowing, investing, and spending and to encourage
saving. This type of monetary policy (contractionary) will always
constrain the availability of credit and, thereby, encourage savings
and debt reduction.
- Fiscal policy focuses on
managing the level of taxation and government
spending in order to influence the total level of income in the
economy. Fiscal policy intended to stimulate the economy out of a
recession includes any combination of increasing government spending
and cutting taxes. This type of fiscal policy (expansionary) will
always generate government deficit spending and reduce a surplus or
expand the national debt. Fiscal policy intended to avoid or reduce
inflation uses the opposite combination of mechanisms: cutting
government spending and increasing taxes. This type of fiscal policy
(contractionary) will always run a government surplus and pay down the
national debt.
The goal of managing fiscal policy
long term is to balance the
government's budget over the business cycle (through repeated periods
of growth and recession) NOT annually. In order for fiscal policy to be
effective overtime and not be overally disruptive the government must
borrow money and spend it, that is it must run deficits, during
recessions, and run surpluses to pay down the debt during
expansions.
Consider
the similarity of Keynes'
analysis of the Great Depression and the current Financial Crisis.
M A Y 1
9 3 2, The Atlantic Monthly
The
World's Economic Outlook
by John
Maynard Keynes
…This is the point
at which, on the precedent of previous slumps, we might hope for the
beginning of recovery. I am not confident, however, that on this
occasion the cheap-money phase will be sufficient by itself to bring
about an adequate recovery of new investment. It may still be the case
that the lender, with his confidence shattered by his experiences, will
continue to ask for new enterprise rates of interest, which the
borrower cannot expect to earn. Indeed, this was already the case in
the moderately-cheap-money phase which preceded the financial crisis of
last autumn.
If this proves to
be so, there will be no means of escape from prolonged perhaps
interminable depression except by direct state intervention to promote
and subsidize new investment.
Formerly there was
no expenditure out of proceeds of borrowing that it was thought proper
for the State to incur except for war. In the past, therefore, we have
not infrequently had to wait for a war to terminate a major depression.
I hope that in the future we shall not adhere to this purist financial
attitude, and that we shall be ready to spend on the enterprises of
peace what the financial maxims of the past would only allow us to spend on the
devastations of war.
At any rate, I
predict with an assured confidence that the only way out is for us to
discover some object which is admitted even by the deadheads to be a
legitimate excuse for largely increasing the expenditure of someone on
something! …
|
Nationalization: Socialist or
Capitalist?
The debate
about whether the federal government should nationalize the failed and
struggling banks (e.g. Citibank, Bank of America, et al) is obscured by
the debate about the name. Some conservative critics claim
nationalization is the equivalent of creating socialism. Other
commentators, including conservatives, claim it is the appropriate
government response to a collapsing banking system. To get down to the
fundamental economic issues of nationalization we have to first clarify
the meaning of words and concepts.
- Capitalism is an economic
system in which the productive assets ("means of production") are
privately owned. Individuals and groups of private individuals own the
raw materials, machinery, technology, factories, productive facilities,
and companies in the economy.
- Socialism is an economic
system
based upon state ownership of the productive assets, which are seen as
rightly belonging to the entire nation, in the same manner that we see
water, air, national forests, and the military as belonging to the
nation as a whole. Since all production, wealth, income, employment and
survival depend upon the productive assets, a socialist government
owns them to manage the entire economy for the nation as a whole.
- Nationalization is any
process
in which the government takes over privately owned productive assets.
Historically, there are two basic motivations for nationalization: to
implement socialism or to protect capitalism from economic crises by
providing government funds and management to revive failed private
enterprises. What is essential to understand is that these are two
opposite motivations - to create socialism or to revive capitalism.
Many countries have nationalized companies or industries in order to
try to create Socialist economies, for example the Soviet Union, China,
Cuba, and even Mexico to name a few. These countries did so with the
intent of
permanently
keeping the companies or industries under the ownership of the
government.
Other countries have have nationalized industries
temporarily in order to
infuse the companies or industries with government funds, change their
management, and implement new organizational structures. They have then
returned the nationalized companies or industries back to private
ownership by selling them to private investors or companies. These
nationalizations are implemented with the intent of reviving the market
and saving Capitalism from prolonged crisis.
Countries
that have temporarily nationalized financial institutions include
the U.S., Mexico, France, and Israel in the 1980s, and Sweden in the
1990s. In the current crisis the following countries have already
nationalized banks: Ireland nationalized the Anglo-Irish Bank in
January 2009, England nationalized the Northern Rock, Bradford &
Bingley, and the Royal Bank of Scotland in 2008, and the U.S.
nationalized Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in 2008.
Thus, commentators that warn that
nationalization of U.S. financial institutions during the current
crisis is the implementation of Socialism either do not understand
nationalization, or worse, are intentionally misinforming the public
for
political or personal benefit (Jim Cramer on CNBC and Rush Limbaugh are
the two
most outrageous commentators on this topic). All proposals for
nationalization of financial institutions in the U.S. during the
current crisis are explicitly oriented toward reviving the private
market and returning the institutions to private ownership as soon as
the crisis has ended. There are no proposals being made by any
administration representative for the permanent nationalization of any
financial institution. Nationalization under these circumstances is
entirely intended to benefit the capitalist system.
A Rose By Any Other Name ...
The calls for
nationalization in the current crisis are really nothing more than
calls to develop and implement a bankruptcy process for institutions
that do not have such a process in place. Nationalization would include
four fundamental actions:
- A federal government agency (most likely the U.S. Treasury) would
take controlling ownership of the company. This could be done a number
of ways from purchasing shares of stock to declaring the company
financially worthless and commiting the U.S. government to manage its
debts.
- The current management would be replaced by the government
appointment of an adminstrator, conservator, receiver, or new board of
directors. These managers are typically paid at a standard government
adminstrator rate. Some are paid nothing.
- The company would be re-structured to pay off debt. This would
probably require selling assets at a loss incurred by current investors
and shareholders, with partial to full compensation to creditors.
- When the company
returned to stable profitability and when the staock value of the
company rose enough to compensate taxpayers to some minimum degree the
government agency would sell its stock back to private investors, fully
restoring the company to private ownership.
Several
government agencies already have the authority take all of these
actions over particular inustries whenever they deem it necessary. The
FDIC (Federal Depositors Insurance Corporation) has such authority over
member retail banks. The Comptroller of the Currency has similar
authority over commercial banks. The Office of Thrift Supervision
has similar authority over Savings and Loan institutions. In 2009 the
FDIC has already taken over more than a twenty
retail banks, selling off their assets to healthy banks, and
restructuring their debt, while protecting depositors and taxpayers.
Listen to:
The main difference between the process implemented by these agencies
and nationalization is that these agencies are empowered to take over
control of the private financial institutions without having to buy
ownership of them and without any commitment to inject money into them.
The process is called conservatorship or receivership, depending upon
the legal authority granted.
The reason that nationalization is an issue in this crisis is that the
financial institutions currently in trouble are both unregulated and so
large that other alternatives for taking control of them do not exist.
Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Citibank, and Bank of America were
operating as investment banks (not retail or commercial banks). AIG
(American International Group) the world's largest insurance company,
was operating as derivatives trader. As such, none of these
institutions were operating under a regulatory agency that had the
authority to take conservatorship or receivership of them.
Additionally, they were so large that simply liquidating them (selling
off al their assets to pay off as much creditor debt as possible) would
have forced tens, perhaps hundreds of other financial institutions,
thousands of companies, millions of investors to go bankrupt, and tens
of millions of people to lose their jobs worldwide . Thus,
the government has an incentive to take control by buying shares to
both legally establish its authority to take control and to infuse
money into the financial system via these failing institutions.
Who supports
nationalization?
Nationalization is
controversial because it is perhaps the most powerful intervention the
governmant can make into the private market. (Impementing wage and
price controls as the U.S. did during WWII and under Nixon in 1971 are
another strong intervention.) However, it is not nearly as
controversial as critics and commentators claim. There is a surprising
range of political and economic perspectives that support
nationalization of some of the failed financial institutions.
Conservatives who support nationalization include:
- Alan Greenspan,
former Chair of the Federal Reserve,
- John Makin, economist
at the
American Enterprise Institute,
- Douglas Holtz-Eakin economist and economic
advisor to Sen. John McCain during 2008 Presidential campaign,
- James Baker, Secretary
of Treasury under Pres. Reagan and former Secretary of State under
Pres. Geo. H.W. Bush,
- Sen. Lindsey Graham of
South Carolina.
Liberals who support
nationalization include:
- Nobel economist Paul
Krugman, Prof. of Economics and International Affairs,
Princeton University; Centenary Professor, London School of Economics
- Nobel economist Joseph
Stiglitz, Prof. of Economics , Dept. of Economics and Columbia School of Business,
Columbia University
- Simon Johnson,
Professor of Entrepreneurship, Sloan School of Management, MIT; Fellow
at Peterson Institute of International Economics; and former Economic
Counselor and Director of Research of the IMF
- Nouriel Roubini, Prof.
of Economics and International Business, Stern School of Business, NYU;
Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research; former
staff economist/advisor positions in U.S. Treasury and Council of
Economic Advisors
- Matthew Richardson, Charles Simon
Professor of Applied Economic Financial Economics, Stern School School
of Business, NYU; Director of Salomon Center of financial research,
NYU; Research Associate National Bureau of Economic Research
Conservatives that support
nationalization often do so for two basic reasons: pragmatism and
principle. Many conservatives accept nationalization as the only
practical option in financial crisis as large and threatening as this
one. In normal, run-of-the-mill recessions or financial declines these
conservatives would never consider nationalization as a solution.
However, they understand that when we face a crisis potentially on the
scale of the Great Depression then nationalization is the only option
available. Alan Greenspan was clear on this when he stated to the
Financial Times on February 18, 2009:
Some
conservatives also support nationalization out of a sense of principle
- although the government is intervening and taking over private
companies it is doing so to both implement some degree of market
discipline (forcing executives and shareholders to bear some of the
losses from their decisions) while limiting losses to creditors and
taxpayers, and while reviving the market economy.
Liberals tend to support nationalization primarily from a Keynesian
perspective: the market is not perfect, requires consistent government
regulation, and ocassional government intervention to keep it from its
worst crises.
To Nationalize or Not to Nationalize,
That is the Question
The truth about nationalization is that the U.S. government has in fact
already nationalized several of the major financial institutions at
least partially (as of March 24, 2009):
- On Sept. 7, 2008 under the authority of the U.S. Treasury Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac the largest holders of housing mortgages in the
U.S. were placed in conservatorship by the Federal Housing Finance
Agency. The executive management was replaced and the U.S. Treasury
committed $200 billion to purchase shares in both institutions.
- Currently the U.S.
Treasury owns 80% of AIG stock and has infused at least $170 billion
dollars. The government has also appointed new leadership, CEO Edward
Liddy, who is reported to be working for free.
- Currently the U.S.
Treasury owns approximately 40% of Citibank stock and has infused at
least $45 billion.
- Currently the U.S.
Treasury is the largest single shareholder of Bank of America having
purchased $25 billion of its shares.
The only things keeping these
interventions from being classified as full nationalization is that the
U.S. government has either not replaced management or is not actively
invovled in managing the companies, and there has been no effort to
begin to restructure the debt or liquidate assets.
Excellent
explanations of nationalization:
Where
Does the Obama Administration Stand?
This is the major issue of
speculation for the last several months. At the time of publication,
March 24, 2009, the Administration just announced yesterday that
it would seek to remove toxic assets from the banking system by
encouraging a joint Public-Private Investment Plan by subsidizing the purchase of the toxic assets with up to $100 billion of the
previously approved TARP funds. Thus, for now it appears that
nationalization is not in the cards.
News reports continue to
report differences of opinion within the administration between the
economists with Wall Street experience (Larry Summers and Treasury Sec.
Tim Geithner) who disapprove of nationalization for fear that it will
frighten investors out of the market for too long of a period, and the
academic economists (Ben Bernanke, the Fed chair and Christina Romer,
Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors) and other policy advisors
(David Axelrod, Senior Advisor to Obama) supporting nationalization as
both unavoidable and the best policy to quickly end the banking crisis.
As for Obama himself, he
appears, as always, to keeping his ship pointed toward the center with
all options open. It appears that the administration is opting for a
stratgy of devising all possible options to avoid nationalization,
while keeping it in reserve as the absolute last resort. Thus, we get
this Public-Private Investment Plan, which will take a couple of months
to implement and evaluate, while we await the "stress testing" of the
trouble banks to evaluate their long term viability. Nationalization
has not been rejected, it is just not being addressed at this point by
the administration.