Background Information
Online radio, video, article, and
blog links:
October 29, 2010 October, 2009 The Warning,
Frontline,
PBS, October 20, 2009. Excellent video documentary on the deregulation
of the derivatives market, the collapse and bailout of Long-Term
Capital Management, the precursor of the 2008 fiancial collapse. Online
video approx. 60 minutes; podcast 23 minutes. Multiple valuable links
including a timeline of de-regulation and financial crisis from 1987 to
2009.
Andrew Sorkin's 'Inside Story' On Financial Collapse, Fresh Air, NPR, October 20, 2009. Financial journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin talks with Fresh Air host Terry Gross about his investigation into what really happened one year ago, during the financial collapse and bailout. Podcast 40 minutes. September 28, 2009 Video: Stiglitz on the Financial Crisis,
Role of Markets, and Government Intervention, Interview by
James Surowiecki, The New Yorker.
April 13 - April 26 March 30 - April 12, 2009 Recession
Economics 101, Interview
of Mark Thoma & Tim Duy, UO professors, KLCC, radio podcast approx.
1 hour. Excellent intro. level summary. When you go on to the UO take
these professors.
March 15 - 29, 2009 Anatomy
of a Bank Takeover,
All Things Considered, NPR, March 26, 2009 Radio podcast 13
minutes.
Brilliant explanation, if you have any confusion this will clear up the
issue of nationalization. You may want to read the entry in the
Economics Primer section or follow-up with other links to
nationalization below.
Frank
Partnoy: Derivative Dangers, Fresh
Air, NPR, March 25, 2009 Radio
podcast, 40 minutes. Frank Partnoy is a professor at the University of
San Diego Law School. In his 1997 book FIASCO: Blood in the Water
on Wall Street,
Partnoy detailed how derivatives — financial instruments whose value is
determined by another security — were being used and abused by big
financial firms. Partnoy used his experiences as a derivatives trader
at Morgan Stanley to give the book an insider's perspective.In addition
to FIASCO, he's the author of Infectious Greed: How
Deceit and Risk Corrupted the Financial Markets.
Crisis
Predicted by Repeal of Glass-Seagall in 1999. A must read of
another prediction of the crisis as reported in the NYT, November 5,
1999:
The opponents of the measure gloomily predicted that by unshackling banks and enabling them to move more freely into new kinds of financial activities, the new law could lead to an economic crisis down the road when the marketplace is no longer growing briskly. ''I think we will look back in 10 years' time and say we should not have done this but we did because we forgot the lessons of the past, and that that which is true in the 1930's is true in 2010,'' said Senator Byron L. Dorgan, Democrat of North Dakota.Scrutinizing AIG Spending, Fresh Air, NPR, March 16, 2009 Radio podcast, 43 minutes. March 1- 14, 2009 Elizabeth
Warren: Foreclosures Threaten Economy, Fresh Air, NPR,
March 9, 2009 Radio
podcast 38 minutes
Simon Johnson on Bank Bailouts and
Nationalization, Fresh
Air, NPR, March 3, 2009 Radio podcast, 37 minutes
February 22 -
28, 2009
Bad Bank,
Adam Davidson, Alex Blumberg, Ira Glass, This American Life, February
27, 2009 Radio podcast, 59 minutes. The collapse of the banking
system explained.
Taxpayer Beware: Any Bank Bailout Will
Hurt and Twin Peaks, Adam Davidson & Alex
Blumberg, Morning Edition, NPR, February 27, 2009 Radio podcast, 7 minutes.
February
15-21, 2009
Volcker:
Crisis May Be Even Worse than Depression, CNBC, Rueters, February 20, 2009
Paul
Volcker, former
FED Chairman (1979-87) appointed by Pres. Carter and Pres. Reagan and
current advisor to Pres. Obama, states concern about the rapid rate of
decline in the US economy as well as its spread internationally. He
also states that there is no inherent benefit of "financial
innovation", the ability of investment banks and financial institutions
to develop new and complex products such as credit default swaps and
derivatives. States one of the sources of the crisis is the slow
response of policymakers to regulate the global financial
markets.
Inside the Meldown,
Frontline, PBS February, 16, 2009 Frightening summary of the
collapse of U.S. banks starting with losses in sub-prime mortgages in
the Summer of 2007 leading to the collapse of Bear Sterans in March
2007, followed by Fannie and Freddie Mac, Lehman Bros, the world's
largest insurance company AIG and culminating in the passage of TARP in
October 2008. Captures the frenzy and unpreparedness of the FED
(Bernanke and Geithner) and especially the US Treasury (Paulson).
Excellent supporting pages provide a Timeline and transcripts of
interviews.
February
8 - 14, 2009
February 1 -
7, 2009
Act Fast Or Else - What we should
nationalize troubled banks sooner rather than later, Newsweek, February 6, 2008
Probably the best,
quickest way to clean up the banking industry. The government provides
capital to salvageable banks by buying shares, dismisses failed
executives, appoints new executives committed to reviving the bank and
the market. Unsalvageable banks are dissolved shareholders and
investors lose. Creditors are partially or wholly protected. Valuable
assets of the banks are sold off. Taxpayers are paid off first. Once
banks recover the government sells its shares in the private market for
a modest profit. Taxpayers are protected. The problem: is it
politically viable given the hysterical reaction to "nationalization" or "socialization"?
Playing Politics When the Economy
Burns, Robert Reich, February 5, 2009 Excellent explanation
as to why government spending stimulates the economy and tax cuts do
not. It sounds partisan but it is straight from Intro. to Macro. texts.
January, 2009
Drastic
Times, The
Economist, Jan. 8, 2009.
Summary of a study of the average declines in 19 major financial crises. The study was presented at the American Economic Association's annual meeting January 3, 2009. The article also summarizes the perspectives of the "major hitters" in American economics, all of whom concur that major long term decline will occur. Almost all support a major stimulus package. Stimulus Plan: The need and the size, Robert Reich, January 6, 2009 Excellent summary of the Keynesian argument for a large, quick stimulus ($900billion by his estimate). Reich is the former economic advisor and Secretary of Labor under Pres. Clinton. December, 2008
Paul
Krugman on Major Stimulus Spending,
On Point, NPR, December 1, 2008 Radio podcast, 57 minutes.
November, 2008
What
went wrong inside the major investment banks (Solomon Brothers, Goldman
Sachs, Lehman Brothers, et cetera) and the credit rating agencies
(Moody's, Standard and Poore) that contributed to the collapse of the
derivatives market, from the perspective of inside traderswho were both
critical of the industry's operations and predicted the collapse. This
can be a tedious read, but is fascinating, funny, infuriating and very
enlightening.
October,
2008
Paul Krugman on the
Crisis, Fresh Air, NPR, Terry Gross,
October 21, 2008 Radio
podcast, 39 minutes.
Radio podcast, 57 minutes.
September, 2008
The
Giant Pool
of Money, This
American Life, Ira Glass, September 12, 2008 Radio podcast, 55 minutes
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