By Alan Greenspan
Published: August 4 2008 18:54 | Last updated: August 4 2008 18:54
The surprise of recent months is not that global economic growth is slowing, but that there is any growth at all. The credit crunch of the past year has not followed the path of recent economically debilitating episodes characterised by a temporary freezing up of liquidity – 1982, 1989, 1997-8 come to mind. This crisis is different – a once or twice a century event deeply rooted in fears of insolvency of major financial institutions.
This crisis was not brought to closure by the world’s central banks’ injection of huge doses of short-term liquidity. Only when sovereign credits were substituted for private bank credit, first in the case of the UK (Northern Rock) and subsequently in the case of the US (Bear Stearns), was a semblance of stability restored to markets. But the London Interbank Offered Rate spreads on overnight index swaps and credit default swaps of financial institutions have not returned to the modest pre-crisis levels. Fears of insolvency have not, as yet, been fully set aside. There may be numbers of banks and other financial institutions that, at the edge of defaulting, will end up being bailed out by governments.
The insolvency crisis will come to an end only as home prices in the US begin to stabilise and clarify the level of equity in homes, the ultimate collateral support for much of the financial world’s mortgage-backed securities. However, US home prices will stabilise only when the absorption of the huge excess of single-family vacant homes that emerged as the US housing boom peaked in 2006 is much further advanced than it is now. New single-family home completions are currently barely under the rate of home demand generated by household formation and replacement needs. Only later this year will the current suppressed level of housing starts be reflected in completion levels consistent with a rapid rate of liquidation of the inventory glut, and this, of course, assumes that current levels of demand for housing hold up.
Pending that outcome, the price of equities worldwide will determine whether the international financial system can maintain a modicum of stability as it eases out of its credit crunch, or falls back into another period of angst and turmoil.
The optimistic case rests on the business world beyond finance. Given this past year’s vast impairment of financial intermediation, nonfinancial corporate business has held up surprisingly well, contributing to a flow of corporate earnings that has helped sustain a stressed global stock market. To be sure, global stock prices are off a fifth from their October 2007 peaks, but still hover at levels last seen in 2006, a demonstrably less fear-ridden period than currently prevails.
A sustained level of global equity prices will be critical if banks are to recapitalise themselves at the higher levels daunted investors now require. The pool of capital is being augmented by a reasonably high level of saving (nearly 24 per cent of world gross domestic product), up significantly from earlier this decade. The flow of new saving will provide some support.
Capital gains, however, are just as important. This can best be observed in the context of the consolidated balance sheet of the world economy. All debt and derivative claims offset in global accounting, leaving real physical and intellectual assets and their market value reflected as net worth. Capital gains cannot finance new physical investment, but do add to global net worth. If, for whatever reason, discounting of prospective future earnings engendered by the world’s physical capital stock declines, the market value of that capital stock rises with no offsetting liability. There is accordingly a larger value of equity shoring up the capital of financial or nonfinancial businesses. Should that discount rate reverse, the value of world equity will fall. Consequently, lower global stock prices could impede the recapitalisation of banks and other financial institutions. Debt issuance would also be suppressed as it leverages off the level of equity.
Globalisation is at the root of the past decade’s unprecedented surge in world economic activity. The growth in the volume of global trade has far exceeded the pace of world real GDP growth for decades. Between 2001 and 2007 global cross-border investments (at market values) rose almost two-thirds faster than world nominal GDP, according to data from the International Monetary Fund.
The economic edifice – market capitalism – that has fostered this expansion is now being pilloried for the pause and partial retrenchment. The cause of our economic despair, however, is human nature’s propensity to sway from fear to euphoria and back, a condition that no economic paradigm has proved capable of suppressing without severe hardship. Regulation, the alleged effective solution to today’s crisis, has never been able to eliminate history’s crises.
A financial crisis is heralded, in fact defined, by sharp discontinuities of asset prices. The crisis must thus be unanticipated. The fact that risk was heavily underpriced for much of this decade was broadly recognised in the financial community, but the timing of the sharp price correction was nonetheless a surprise.
Recent history is replete with such underpricing persisting for years. Those market players who withdraw from “long” commitments at the first sign of an excess of exuberance, risk losing market share. They thus continue “to dance” as Chuck Prince, the former Citigroup chairman put it, but always assume they will have time to exit the markets. The vast majority invariably fail. When the current crisis emerged, it was assumed that the weak links would be unregulated hedge and private funds. The losses, however, have been predominately in the most heavily regulated institutions – banks.
We may not easily confront or accept the price dynamics of home and equity prices, but we can fend off cries of political despair which counsel the containment of competitive markets. It is essential that we do so. The remarkably strong performance of the world economy since the near universal adoption of market capitalism is testament to the benefits of increasing economic flexibility.
It has become hard for democratic societies accustomed to prosperity to see it as anything other than the result of their deft political management. In reality, the past decade has seen mounting global forces (the international version of Adam Smith’s invisible hand) quietly displacing government control of economic affairs. Since early this decade, central banks have had to cede control of long-term interest rates to global market forces. Previously heavily controlled economies – such as China, Russia and India – have embraced competitive markets in lieu of bureaucratic edict. The danger is that some governments, bedevilled by emerging inflationary forces, will endeavour to reassert their grip on economic affairs. If that becomes widespread, globalisation could reverse – at awesome cost.
The writer is the former chairman of the US Federal Reserve
Let bankers be as greedy as they want and then crash. Loss of half of a community’s assets is so GOOD for the country. The free market will learn!
(…even though they didn’t for over a hundred years, and what actually fixed the nearly-every-decade bank panics was Evil Government Regulation.)
nevermind the regulations that forced those same panics…
Suuuuuuure there were. Of course, you don’t have any clue of what those possibly could have been, but somewhere in there your blind idealism tells you that there had to be SOMETHING.
And, also, the markets never suffer losses until government gets involved, amirite?
look it up, banking was highly regulated, branch banking was outright prohibited, banks were effectively prevented from diversifying their holdings, so any small local shock could easily cause them to fail
|
Let bankers be as greedy as they want and then crash. Loss of half of a community’s assets is so GOOD for the country. The free market will learn!
(…even though they didn’t for over a hundred years, and what actually fixedthe nearly-every-decade bank panics was Evil Government Regulation.) |
You could argue that, if there was a free market.
No.
No, ya can’t. The solid evidence is already there. The free market has shown itself to be clearly inferior on this regard.
.
Gas prices didn’t start going down until Democrats threatened action against oil speculators.
Yes, because Democrats, those bastions of decency and benevolence, will save us all, starting January 2009.
Just goes to show, most people will do what you tell them to if you stick the muzzle of a gun in their face.
Strange that these are the same people who seem to want to repeal the Second Amendment.
|
Just goes to show, most people will do what you tell them to if you stick the muzzle of a gun in their face.
Strange that these are the same people who seem to want to repeal the Second Amendment. |
No, it’s not strange at all if you consider proper historical perspective.
Yeah, repealing the 18th was a terrible thing.
|
Just goes to show, most people will do what you tell them to if you stick the muzzle of a gun in their face.
Strange that these are the same people who seem to want to repeal the Second Amendment. |
Not that strange considering they don’t want to take the guns away from the people who are sticking it in other’s faces. They just want to take away guns from people who may need to defend against that gun in the face.
We wouldn’t want any dissent
Completely ignore the fact that prices increased past the point of market tolerance or the fact that this time every year the prices start to drop. Every year, except for last year.
i dunno– why should anyone listen to easy credit al in the first place?
Related posts:
- Joseph Stiglitz argues that the "left" are best for economic growth Both the left and the right say they stand for economic growth. So should voters trying to decide between...
- Asian stock markets still continue to collapse And those guys aren't even 10 trillion in debt with a negative trade balance and a central bank looking...
- i want America’s economy to collapse then i want our government to collapse. yea i gotta start getting high againi can see you've thought this through...
- so we’re under $120/bbl for crude Shit, I'm only paying 12 cents less than I was when it was at 140 Does the price of bread...
- U.S. Congressman tells what really happened in September (you can skip to about the 2:10 mark to hear the most important part) $550 billion was taken out...