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Economic Theory and the Current Economic CrisisJoseph E. Stiglitz
Manchester
October 2008
Current economic crisis has many lessons for economists
Probably most serious economic disturbance in U.S. since Great Depression Most downturns since have been inventory cycles—
Economy recovers as soon as excess inventories are decumulated Or a result of Central Bank stepping on brakes too hard
Economy recovers as soon as Central Bank discovers its mistake, removes its foot from brake
This economic downturn is a result of major financial mistakes Akin in many ways to frequent financial crises in developing countries Worse version of S & L crisis
Which led to 1991 recession Effects spreading to Europe
Partly because of major financial losses in Europe Partly because of exchange rate adjustments, impact on exports Both part of globalization
Pathology teaches lessons
Useful in discriminating among alternative hypotheses
Great Depression led to new insights—into how periods of unemployment could persist
Led to conclusion that markets are not self-adjusting At least in the relevant time frame Role for government in maintaining economy at full
employment
New Lessons Insights into macro-economics
Debate about source of macro-economic failures Nominal wage/price rigidities (in tradition of early Hicks) Real wage rigidities (efficiency wage models) Imperfect contracting (Greenwald-Stiglitz/Fischer debt
deflation/Minsky, later Hicks)
These events are already drawing attention to Greenwald/Stiglitz/Fisher/Minsky models
Insights into micro-economics Are markets really as efficient and innovative
as market advocates claim? How do we explain these market failures?
Imperfections of information? Irrationality?
What does traditional finance theory have to say?
What advice does economic theory give about what should be done now?
Neoclassical synthesis
Belief that, once markets were restored to full employment, neo-classical principles would apply—economy would be efficient
Not a theorem, but a belief Idea was always suspect—why should market
failures only occur in big doses Recessions tip of iceberg Many “smaller” market failures
Imperfect information Incomplete markets Irrational behavior But huge inefficiencies—e.g. tax paradoxes
This is a micro-economic failure leading to a macro-
economic problem
Financial markets are supposed to allocate capital and manage risk
Misallocated capital Mismanaged risk
Innovation
Financial markets did not create risk products that would have enabled individuals to manage the risks which they faced
Innovations—tax, regulatory, and accounting arbitrage Actually resisted innovations that would have made
markets work better Inflation indexed bonds GDP indexed bonds Danish mortgage Better mortgages that would have managed risk better Better auctions of Treasury Bills
Incentives
Incentives matter But incentives in financial markets were distorted
Focus only on short term profits Asymmetric rewards—20% of gains, none of losses Designed to encourage gambling Succeeded Reliance on non-transparent stock options encouraged
distorted accounting Easier to increase reported returns than to provide better products Opposed reforms for improved accounting
■ Mismatch between private rewards and social returns (which may be negative)Social returns may have been negativeYet as a sector and as individuals they were
generously compensatedSome 40% of corporate profits
With predictable consequences—behavior designed to enhance private returns, not social benefits
Understanding market failure
General Theorem: whenever information is imperfect or markets incomplete (that is, always) markets are not constrained Pareto efficient Taking into account costs of collecting and processing
information or creating markets, there are government interventions that can make everyone better off
Pecuniary externalities matter
B. Greenwald and J.E. Stiglitz, “Externalities in Economies with Imperfect Information and Incomplete Markets,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 101, No. 2, May 1986, pp. 229-264.
R. Arnott, B. Greenwald, and J. E. Stiglitz, “Information and Economic Efficiency,” Information Economics and Policy, 6(1), March 1994, pp. 77-88.
Application: Securitization
While it enhances opportunities for diversification, creates new agency problemsResulting market equilibrium will not in general
be (constrained) Pareto EfficientOriginator of mortgages did not have sufficient
incentives to screen and monitor
J. E. Stiglitz “Banks versus Markets as Mechanisms for Allocating and Coordinating Investment,” in The Economics of Cooperation: East Asian Development and the Case for Pro-Market Intervention, J.A. Roumasset and S. Barr (eds.), Westview Press, Boulder, 1992, pp. 15-38.
Application: Lending based on collateral
Increased price of houses gives rise to increased lending Leading to increased demand Leading to increased prices Socially excessive lending Bubbles Similar problems arise in amount of foreign borrowing
(endogenous exchange rates—Anton Korinek)
J.E Stiglitz and M. Miller, “Bankruptcy protection against macroeconomic shocks: the case for a ‘super chapter 11’,” World Bank Conference on Capital Flows, Financial Crises, and Policies, April 15, 1999.
But this does not fully explain what went wrong
Hard to reconcile behavior with rationality Or even rational herding behavior Many borrowed beyond their ability to repay Should have been obvious to both borrower and lender
But those in financial market were supposed to be financially sophisticated
Borrowing based on pyramid scheme—belief that prices would always go up
But how could low income individuals continue to pay more and more as their real incomes declined?
Models used by banks and rating agencies flawed and obviously so
Underestimated correlations Underestimated systemic risks Once in a lifetime events happened every
ten yearsShould have used fat tailed distributions rather
than lognormal distributionsBut there already were several instances of
failures from using these models—financial markets didn’t learn
Zero (or negative) non-recourse mortgages are an option Issuing such options is equivalent to giving away
money Giving away money is hard to reconcile with profit
maximizing behavior Unless there is an underlying belief in the irrationality of
borrower (won’t exercise options) Or of those to whom one will sell the mortgage Or part of a scheme of fraud
Design was an invitation to fraud Conflicts of interest made these more likely But market participants seemed to ignore this
Standard models and policy prescriptions used by Central Bank
did not anticipate problem Indeed, they made it worse Denied existence of bubble (a little froth) Encouraged people to take out variable rate
mortgages when interest rates were at record lows With individuals borrowing to capacity And likelihood that interest rates would go up Especially with negative amortization and balloon
mortgages, high likelihood of system blowing up Change in interest rates would lead to defaults, difficulty
refinancing
Denied any ability to ascertain that there was a bubbleEconometric Models to predict economic
vulnerability J.E. Stiglitz and J. Furman, “Economic Crises:
Evidence and Insights from East Asia,” Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1998(2), pp. 1-114.
Shiller Basic economics—how could prices keep going up
when real incomes of most Americans were declining
Believed in self-regulation—oxymoron And can’t take into account interactions arising from
banks’ simultaneously following similar policies Believed that if there was a problem, it would be
easy to fix Argued that interest rate was too blunt of an
instrument If tried to control asset price bubble, would interfere
with focus on current markets But refused to use instruments at its disposal
Regulatory instruments rejected Even though one Fed governor tried to get them to act
Central banks were focused on models centered on second order problems—micro-misallocations that occur when relative prices get misaligned as a result of inflationEconomics professor shares blame
First order problem was integrity of the financial system
Why is this a problem?
Standard model (representative agent models) without institutions says this is no problem Misallocations couldn’t have happened Were acting on best information available Simply a negative shock Some redistributions But redistributions don’t matter Economy simply goes on with new capital stock as if
nothing had happene
Redistributions and institutions do matter
Loss in bank equity will not be readily replaced Heavy dilution demanded Consistent with theories of asymmetric information
Asquith and Mullins; Greenwald, Stiglitz, and Weiss “Informational Imperfections in the Capital Markets and Macroeconomic Fluctuations,” American Economic Review, 74(2), May 1984, pp. 194-199.
With loss of bank capital, there will be reduced lending Greenwald and Stiglitz, New Paradigm of Monetary Economics
What matters is not just interest rates but credit availability Credit availability affected also regulations (capital adequacy
requirements) and risk perceptions As important as open market operations and interest rates Spread between T-bill rate and lending rate an endogenous
variable With reduced lending, reduced level of economic activity
Problems exacerbated by reduction in interbank lending Tightening credit constraints and leading to higher
lending interest rates Banks know that they don’t know own balance sheet And so can’t know balance sheet of others But there are still high levels of information asymmetries Market breakdown
Stiglitz and Weiss, “Credit Rationing in Markets with Imperfect Information,” American Economic Review, 71(3), June 1981, pp. 393-410
Akerlof, Lemons
Credit interlinkages
As important as interlinkages emphasized in standard general equilibrium model
Not fully mediated through price system Bankruptcy in one firm can lead to bankruptcy in others
(bankruptcy cascades) Collapse of economic system Worry underlies bail-outs (1998 LTCM, 2008 Bear Stearns)
Agent based models more likely to bring insights No hope from representative agent models
S. Battiston, D. Delli Gatti, B. Greenwald and J.E. Stiglitz ,“Credit Chains and Bankruptcy Propagation in Production Networks,” Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Volume 31, Issue 6, June 2007, pp. 2061-2084.
It will take time to restore bank capital, and therefore for full restoration of economy
B. Greenwald and J. E. Stiglitz, “Financial Market Imperfections and Business Cycles,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 108(1), February 1993, pp. 77-114.
Pace will be affected by magnitude of fiscal stimulationMoney to those who are credit constrained
(unemployed)Would not work if Ricardian equivalence held or if
redistributions didn’t matter
Pace will also be affected by government sponsored capital injections Hidden in bail-outs, huge wealth transfers
Many banks focusing on selling “bad assets” By itself, doesn’t solve capitalization problem, only reduces
uncertainty They seem to be paying a high price
American bail-outs particularly non-transparent With credit and interest rate options embedded Access to Fed window by investment banks Discriminatory patterns?
Paulson plan badly flawed
Based on trickle down economics—throwing enough money at Wall Street will trickle down to rest of economy
Like mass transfusion—while patient is dying from internal bleeding
Does nothing to stop hemorrhaging Buying hundreds of thousands of toxic mortgages and
derivatives based on them is complex—and because of lemons problem taxpayer will overpay
If we don’t overpay, won’t repair hole in balance sheet
What should have been done
Equity injection Preferred shares with warrants Downside protection, upside potential
Helping people stay in their homes Already 3 million foreclosures, 2 million more expected in
next year Converting tax deduction to tax credit Bankruptcy reform—homeowners’ chapter 11 Direct lending to homeowners at government’s lower cost of
capital and better enforcement mechanisms Combined with conversion to recourse loans And major haircut for banks—reducing loan amount to 90% of house
value
Stimulus
Even with program, economy is headed for recession Credit contraction Worsening of balance sheets Cutbacks in state and local spending
What is needed Expanded unemployment benefits Aid to states and localities More investment
Given high national debt, important to have large bang for buck
America does not need to stimulate consumption Problem has been too much consumption Simply postpones day of reckoning
What was going on? Macro
At macro-level—insufficient aggregate demand induced Fed to flood economy with liquidity and have lax regulations to keep economy going Created new bubble to replace dot.com bubble Lower interest rates major effect on mortgage equity
withdrawals, much of which was consumed Decline in net worth, unlike case where investment is
stimulated
High level of demand for U.S. dollars to put in reserves Massive reserve accumulation Partly in response to IMF/US treasury response to 1997/1998
crisis But exporting T-bills rather than automobiles does not create
jobs High oil prices
Massive redistribution to oil exporters If redistributions don’t matter, wouldn’t have any consequences But redistributions do matter Part of global imbalances But real side of imbalances—inadequate global aggregate
demand
Myopic, short sighted response Akin to how Latin America avoided negative impact of oil
price shock—borrowing for consumption Paid a high price—lost decade
Housing bubble fueled consumption boom that offset higher expenditures on oil, large trade deficit—for a while
Not sustainable There were alternatives—none of this was inevitable
See J. E. Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes, The Three Trillion Dollar War, 2008
What was going on? Micro
Regulatory arbitrage—financial alchemy converting F-rated toxic mortgages into financial products that could be held by fiduciaries had a private (but not necessarily social) pay-off
Accounting arbitrage—bonuses based on reported profits, incentive to book profits (e.g. from repackaging), leaving unsold (risky) pieces “off balance sheet”
Distorted incentive systems
Hard to explain How markets used models that were so bad
Underestimated systemic risk Underestimated obvious correlations Underestimated fat tail distributions Overestimated value of insurance (undercapitalized
insurance companies) Underestimated potential consequences of conflicts of
interest, moral hazard problems, perverse incentives and scope for fraud
Appraisers owned by originating companies Rating agencies paid by those producing products
Intellectual incoherenceArgued that they had created new products that
transformed financial markets Justified high compensation
Yet based risk assessments on data from before the creation of the new products
Argued that financial markets were efficientBased pricing on spanning theorems Yet also argued that they were creating new
products that transformed financial markets
Hard to Explain
It was individually rational for those in finance to take advantage of flawed incentive structure—but not good for the system
Even if those originating mortgages had flawed incentives, why didn’t investors buying mortgages exercise better oversight?
Repeated failures
Hard to Explain
Markets still have not made available mortgages that would have helped individuals manage the risks which they face
There are alternatives that do a better jobDanish mortgagesVariable rate, fixed payment, variable maturity
Regulatory Failure
Using wrong models Focusing on wrong thing Ideological—appointed partly because of
commitment to non-regulation Political—when appointment was made, implications
for campaign contributions played key role in appointment
Political (special interest) role in design of Basel II regulations—not “just” technocratic
Beyond regulatory capture
Regulatory capture model provides too simplistic model of what happened
There was a party going on, and no one wanted to be a party pooperBut Fed not only failed to dampen party but
also kept it going It had alternatives
Going forward Actions by market participants generated externalities
Costs borne by taxpayers Those who are losing their jobs Social problems—millions of Americans losing homes
Whenever there is an externality, grounds for government intervention
Those in the financial sector would like us just to build better hospitals, but do nothing about prevention and contagion
Can we design interventions that encourage “good” innovation (questionable value of much of recent financial innovation)?
Can we avoid “political economy” problems that have marked past regulation?
Regulatory systems have to recognize asymmetries of information and asymmetries of salaries
Regulation
Incentives Conflicts of interest Longer term Asymmetries give rise to excessive risk taking Stock options
Behaviors Speed bumps Retaining some responsibility for financial products
created Accounting
Reducing scope for off balance sheet activity
Structures
Financial product safety commission With representation of those who are likely to be hurt by
“unsafe” products Skills required to certify “safety” and “effectiveness”
different from those entailed in financial market dealings Financial market stability commission
Need separate market regulators because complexity of each market requires specialized regulators
But need oversight, to understand interactions among pieces (systemic leveraging, regulatory arbitrage)
Financial market regulation is too important to leave to those in the financial sector alone
Some aspects need to be approached on a global level IMF and Basel failed to provide adequate
regulatory frameworkNotion underlying Basel II that banks could be
relied upon to assess their own risk seems, at this juncture, absurd
Rich research agenda ahead
Exploring financial interlinkages Bankruptcy cascades Optimal network design (preventing contagion)
Designing financial instruments that better reflect information imperfections and systematic irrationalities
Designing appropriate mix of financial institutions Taking into account local information Need for renegotiation Asymmetries of information created by securitization
Rich research agenda ahead
Macro-economic models that take into account complexity of financial system Including financial linkagesRecognizing role of banksAnd the consequences of redistributions Information imperfections, bubbles (rational
herding and irrational)
Research and Policy Agenda Unfettered financial markets do not work
But regulation and regulatory institutions failed Markets are not self-adjusting
At least in the relevant time frame Darwinian natural selection may not work
Like Gresham’s law—bad money drives out good Reckless firms forced more conservative firms to follow
investment strategies More prudent firms might have done better in long run—
but couldn’t survive to take advantage of that long run
Design of better regulations Not only designed to discourage destructive behaviors But to encourage financial system to fulfill its core
mission May require more extensive intervention in markets
Design of better regulatory institutions Based on a theory of regulation that is better than
simplistic “capture” theory Which itself should be an important subject of study
Our financial system failed in its core missions—allocating capital and managing risk
With disastrous economic and social consequences Huge disparity between potential and actual GDP
We must do better And a successful research agenda will help us to
do that