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The Global Financial Crisis Satyendra Nayak The Global Financial Crisis Genesis, Policy Response and Road Ahead Satyendra Nayak Center for Advanced Banking and Finance Studies ICFAI Business School Mumbai, Maharashtra, India ISBN 978-81-322-0797-9 ISBN 978-81-322-0798-6 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-81-322-0798-6 Springer New Delhi Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London Library of Congress Control Number: 2012956054 © Springer India 2013 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, speci fi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on micro fi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. Exempted from this legal reservation are brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis or material supplied speci fi cally for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Copyright Law of the Publisher’s location, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer. Permissions for use may be obtained through RightsLink at the Copyright Clearance Center. Violations are liable to prosecution under the respective Copyright Law. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a speci fi c statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. While the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication, neither the authors nor the editors nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibility for any errors or omissions that may be made. The publisher makes no warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein. Printed on acid-free paper Springer is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com) Preface My earlier book on globalization was published in December 2007. It focused on the genesis and impact of major global economic policy change in the postwar period which has brought a dramatic shift in global trade, investments, and fi nancing, thereby causing the most pronounced reduction in the global economic divide. It was time to move on to my next assignment which I was ruminating on and was my natural interest and obsession for years. The US Dollar at Crossroads was the theme I have been working on since the demise of the Bretton Woods. Although the fl oating exchange rates and globalization gave fresh lease for the US dollar, the institution of American capitalism was under stress. The New Deal formed the cornerstone of American capitalism since the Great Depression days of the 1930s. Despite some minor hiccups, the system continued to serve as the engine of economic prosperity. Communism collapsed as it took the shape of hierarchical, bureaucratic, and totali- tarian machine devoid of market signals and individualism that engender innovation and enterprise. American capitalism succeeded as the invincible political economic doctrine but still remained under pressure to achieve its goal of sustained growth, full employment, and price stability. Yet nobody expected the major crisis as it did in 2008. In September 2008, I had meetings in the IMF and with Paul Volcker giving presentation of my book. Coincidentally, in the same month later, the economy witnessed an unexpected bolt from the blue—the USA experienced its worst fi nancial and economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s. My op-ed on the subject titled “Keynes: Savior of Capitalism” was published in Washington Times on October 1, 2008. My attention for research and analysis naturally shifted from the future of dollar to much larger and more fundamental issues of the struc- ture and dynamics of the US economy, American capitalism, backlash of globaliza- tion, and the need for the further reform of the global economy and monetary system. The global fi nancial crisis, the function and dysfunction of dollar, and its future role became the focal point of the book. The crisis demonstrated the weaknesses in the functioning of the economy, institutions that govern, and policies that direct and regulate the economy. It also v vi Preface underscored the need for introspection into the current state of knowledge and theoretical basis of economics that have molded the contemporary policies. The draft of the book took shape in New York, Boston, and Mumbai, the nerve centers of the global and Asian fi nancial markets. I bene fi tted immensely from the excellent collection of books of the New York Public Library (NYPL) and Boston Public Library (BPL). The book is divided into three parts. The fi rst part deals with the genesis of the crisis and policy measures that prevented the culmination of the crisis into another great global depression. It examines the microeconomic origins of the subprime debt crisis but also goes on to look into its macroeconomic roots. In dealing with both the approaches, it highlights the systemic lacunae and policy changes that trig- gered the crisis. Part two gives the backdrop of evolutionary view of the global economic and monetary system from the Bretton Woods of 1944 until the phase globalization that began in the 1980s. The phenomena of the Great Crash of 1929 and Great Depression of the 1930s are revisited in the light of the current crisis. The third part covers the structural aspects of the American capitalism and the global economy. It examines why and how the American capitalism survived the onslaught of several crises in the past and why it is at the crossroads now. The demise of com- munism in USSR and East Europe, and its reform in China are analyzed. In addition to the study of fundamental changes in the dynamics of the US economy, it high- lights the implications of changing structure of global trade and investments. The issues of the global savings gap and liquidity re fl ux are compared. The fourth part deals with road map of reform for the future. Since the fi nancial markets have been the focus of the crisis, it draws and articulates the peculiar features of the fi nancial markets which make them more volatile and which need regulation. It shows why and how fi nancial markets crash by introducing the concept of Niagara effect. It also deals with the limitations of the use of sophisticated models for pricing fi nancial products for trading. There is an exercise on relearning from Keynes’ writings in dealing with economic management. Finally, the last chapter, Agenda for Global Economic Reform, the New Bretton Woods, outlines the measures which the USA, China, IMF, and Eurozone need to take to evolve a sustainable crisis-free global economy. Coincidentally this draft was fi nished in the beautiful surroundings of the Bretton Woods, New Hampshire. January 1, 2013 Satyendra S. Nayak Contents Part I The Crisis: Micro-Macro Perspective 1 Pathology of the Crisis ........................................................................... 3 The Crisis: Then and Now ........................................................................ 3 US Economy Revives and Skips Depression: Thanks to Keynesian Wisdom ............................................................................... 6 American Economic Boom of 1990s: An Overview ................................ 8 Lower Inflation and Higher Unemployment Thresholds: 2-3-4% Economy ...................................................................................... 10 Genesis of Real Estate Boom .................................................................... 11 Housing and Real Estate: Driver of Economic Growth ............................ 13 Government Initiatives in Housing ........................................................... 15 Housing and Real Estate Boom: 2002–2007 ............................................ 16 Role of Debt Securitization in Housing Sales ........................................... 18 Favorable Trend in Fed Funds Rate .......................................................... 20 Keynes Effect (Wealth Effect) and Real Balance Effect ........................... 22 Wealth Effect, Consumption, and Investment, 1990–2008 ....................... 23 Lessons from Theories of Growth and Business Cycles ........................... 24 References ................................................................................................. 26 2 Subprime Debt Imbroglio: Risks–Rewards of Financial Sophistication ..................................................................... 27 The Backdrop and Genesis of Securitization ............................................ 28 Financial Innovation: Mortgage Debt Securitization ................................ 29 Subprime Adjustable Rate Mortgage: Promoting Home Ownership ....... 31 Pillars of Subprime Debt Securitization ................................................... 32 Housing Collapse: The Crisis Trigger ...................................................... 34 Credit Derivatives and Credit Default Swaps ........................................... 36 Indexed Credit Default Swaps (CDS) ....................................................... 38 Flaws in Risk Management and Collapse of Risk Trading ....................... 38 vii viii Contents Accounting Fallacy That Triggered the Crisis: Mark-to-Market Versus Fair Valuation Accounting ............................................................ 39 Interest Rate Shock: Tipping Point for the Crisis ..................................... 40 The Niagara Effect .................................................................................... 42 Economic Crisis Causation ....................................................................... 43 Dot-Com Bust Versus Subprime Crisis..................................................... 46 What Went Wrong? ................................................................................... 49 Could the Crisis Be Averted? .................................................................... 50 References ................................................................................................. 51 3 Policy Response ....................................................................................... 53 Economic Wisdom and Political Vision ................................................... 53 Quick Policy Response ............................................................................. 56 Economic Policy Measures ....................................................................... 56 Macroeconomic Policy Action ................................................................. 57 How Did the Fed Do It? ............................................................................ 58 Operation Bailout ...................................................................................... 61 Fiscal Stimulus Packages .......................................................................... 61 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act .............................................. 62 Troubled Assets Recovery Plan (TARP) ................................................... 62 Micromanagement: Tackling Corporate and Banking Failures ................ 63 Specter of Protectionism ........................................................................... 64 Falling Oil Prices: Great Stimulus ............................................................ 65 G-20 Agenda: Quick Stimulus and More Effective Regulation ............... 65 Financial Reform (Dodd–Frank) Act and the Volcker Rule ..................... 68 Quantitative Easing 2 (QE 2) .................................................................... 70 Central Banks and Financial Regulators: Countervailing Force Against Market Abnormality .......................................................... 71 Keynes on Slump and Management of Economic Cycles ........................ 73 Metaphysics of Money and Markets ......................................................... 75 Keynesianism, Friedman’s Monetarism, and Turns in Monetary Policy .................................................................................... 76 Some Fallacies on Interest Rate Policy: Zero Interest Rates, Money Traps, and Interest Rate Illusion ................................................... 79 Interest Rate Illusion ............................................................................ 79 Zero Interest Rate Policy ...................................................................... 79 Reference .................................................................................................. 81 4 Why Is the Economy Not Taking-Off? .................................................. 83 Monetary Mechanics ................................................................................. 83 Sluggish Investment .................................................................................. 86 Infrastructure: The Growth Driver ............................................................ 87 5 Eurosclerosis: Causation and Control: Euro and Eurozone Management: Lessons from Greek Tragedy ..... 91 Strong Euro and Worsening BoP .............................................................. 92 Contents ix Currency Stability as a Deterrent for Fiscal Profligacy ............................ 96 Dilemma of Common Currency in Pluralistic Community ...................... 97 Part II Evolutionary Economics: A Systemic View 6 Benign Neglect of Dollar: The Bretton Woods and Its Demise ........... 101 Evolution of Global Economy: The Bretton Woods Architecture ............ 103 Era of Stable Financial and Trade Milieu ................................................. 104 Benign Neglect of Dollar: Bretton Woods Drill ....................................... 105 Gold–Money Rift, Collapse of Bretton Woods: Obsolescence of “Benign Neglect” .................................................................................. 106 1971 Dollar Crisis: A Global Systemic Problem ...................................... 108 Divergent Trade Propensities .................................................................... 109 Moving to Fiat Money .............................................................................. 111 Decade of Economic Uncertainty and Stagflation .................................... 112 References ................................................................................................. 113 7 Enter the Globalization: A Paradigm Shift .......................................... 115 Foreign Aid and Trade for Development .................................................. 117 Sovereign Debt Crisis and Brady Bonds ................................................... 117 The Setting for Globalization: 3W (Washington-World Bank-Wall Street) Policy Model .............................. 119 Globalization: Smith-Ricardo-Keynes (SRK) Model ............................... 121 The MOT Revolution ................................................................................ 122 Gresham’s Law in Reverse Gear ............................................................... 124 Economic Compulsions of Globalization: Genesis .................................. 125 Financing Globalization ............................................................................ 127 References ................................................................................................. 128 8 Great Crash and Depression: Last Economic Apocalypse: A Relook ............................................................................. 129 Birth of Capitalism sans Economic Insecurity: Fail-Safe Capitalism ...... 129 The 1920s Economic Boom: Golden Age of Prosperity .......................... 131 Stock Market Boom: 1920s ...................................................................... 133 The Great Crash of 1929 ........................................................................... 134 Political Reaction to the Great Crash: Measures in Desperation .............. 136 Great Crash and Monetary Implosion ....................................................... 137 Onset of Great Depression ........................................................................ 138 Gold Standard and Depression .................................................................. 139 Income Inequalities and Deficiency of Demand ....................................... 140 The New Deal: Roosevelt’s 100 Days of Silent Revolution: American Capitalism Under Reform ........................................................ 141 Budget Deficit, Depression, and Economic Revival ................................. 145 Stock Market Crash and Banking Crisis: Then and Now ......................... 146 References ................................................................................................. 148 x Contents Part III Structural Gaps 9 Metamorphosis of American Capitalism .............................................. 151 American Economic Psyche: Adaptive and Resilient ............................... 151 The Laissez-Faire Capitalism ................................................................... 153 The Fall of Laissez-Faire Model: Noncompetitive Market Reality .......... 156 Birth of American Welfare Capitalism: New Deal—Antidepression and Communism Pill ................................... 157 The Countervailing Power Under Capitalism ........................................... 159 Paradox of Affluent Society: Social Imbalance ........................................ 161 The Cold War and Military–Industrial Complex ...................................... 162 Culture of Contentment ............................................................................. 164 Powerhouse of American Capitalism: The Wall Street............................. 166 Democratization of Stock Market and Equity Ownership ........................ 168 Institutional Investors: Dominant Monitors of Corporates ....................... 170 New Liberal Democrat: Non-Keynesian Economic Boom ....................... 170 Age of Universal Banking—Repeal of Glass–Steagall Act: A Calculated Risk ..................................................................................... 171 The Challenge of Crisis of Capitalism ...................................................... 172 References ................................................................................................. 174 10 Downfall of Communism: God That Failed ......................................... 175 Marx: Vision of Manifesto and Premise of Communism ......................... 175 Demise of Communism ............................................................................ 178 Collapse of USSR: Transition Under Perestroika and Glasnost ............... 179 Free Market Capitalism Versus Central Planning ..................................... 181 Schumpeter’s Creative Destruction: The Seed of Growth of Capitalism and Fall of Communism ..................................................... 183 References ................................................................................................. 185 11 Structural Shifts ...................................................................................... 187 Backdrop: The Setting .............................................................................. 187 Systemic Context ...................................................................................... 188 Internal Stressors on the Dynamics of US Economy ................................ 188 American Capitalism: Mature and Migrating ...................................... 188 Slopping Savings and Eroding Capital ..................................................... 189 Consumption Dominant Economy ............................................................ 191 Predominance of Permanent Income and Wealth Effect ........................... 191 Income Inequality ..................................................................................... 192 Return on Capital Under Squeeze ............................................................. 192 Structural Trade Deficit ............................................................................. 193 Slowing Exports Growth ........................................................................... 194 Most Favored Nation (MFN) for Global Capital ...................................... 195 Political Economy of Ideology of Capitalism: Size of Government ........ 198 Welfare Capitalism and the Fiscal Cliff .................................................... 199 Sixty-Year Cycle of American Capitalism ................................................ 200 Market Failure: Microanalysis and Macro Picture ................................... 203

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​The Financial Crisis, though originating in the US, is global and comparable with the Great Depression of the 1930s. The book takes both micro and macro view of the crisis. It examines the evolution of the global monetary system and looks at the crisis from a systemic angle. It examines the insti
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.