Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Nepal to cap CEO’s pay

Nepal’s central bank has decided to cap CEO’s pay to eight to 10 percent of total expenses made on employees of their respective institutions.

[…] a ceiling on the salary and benefits of CEOs was needed to check existing practice of handing out huge amount of perks and benefits to the head honchos, even if the financial condition of the bank concerned is not very sound. Similarly, the huge pay has been used by some executives cum promoters to “quietly” recoup their investment, in the form of remuneration.

The NRB study also concluded that the practice of awarding huge pay to the CEOs and other subordinates was also putting pressure on the management, especially of new banks, to increase earnings by many folds to pay the increased liabilities. This often instigates the management to make massive risky investment in unproductive sectors like land and real estate that are rejected by established banks, said the official.

Sounds good to reduce malpractices in the (bubbling) banking sector and to decrease widening income inequality!

Are economists to blame for the crisis?

Yes, says Krugman. But the economists he is talking about are neoclassicals and their variants, who have been pretty much driving economics and economic policy for a long time. He argues that the neoclassical stuff is neat and clean but wrong and its alternative is messier and not straight forward but right.

one thing’s for sure: we don’t have that beautiful final theory now, so the current choice is between ideas that are beautiful but wrong and a much messier hodgepodge.

Here is how he feels about economics, economists, and the whole profession. This is a good rundown of the trouble with economics and economists for people how have not read Krugman’s book ‘The Depression Economics and the Crisis of 2008’, which I have reviewed here.

Few economists saw our current crisis coming, but this predictive failure was the least of the field’s problems. More important was the profession’s blindness to the very possibility of catastrophic failures in a market economy. During the golden years, financial economists came to believe that markets were inherently stable — indeed, that stocks and other assets were always priced just right. There was nothing in the prevailing models suggesting the possibility of the kind of collapse that happened last year. Meanwhile, macroeconomists were divided in their views. But the main division was between those who insisted that free-market economies never go astray and those who believed that economies may stray now and then but that any major deviations from the path of prosperity could and would be corrected by the all-powerful Fed. Neither side was prepared to cope with an economy that went off the rails despite the Fed’s best efforts.

And in the wake of the crisis, the fault lines in the economics profession have yawned wider than ever. Lucas says the Obama administration’s stimulus plans are “schlock economics,” and his Chicago colleague John Cochrane says they’re based on discredited “fairy tales.” In response, Brad DeLong of the University of California, Berkeley, writes of the “intellectual collapse” of the Chicago School, and I myself have written that comments from Chicago economists are the product of a Dark Age of macroeconomics in which hard-won knowledge has been forgotten.

As I see it, the economics profession went astray because economists, as a group, mistook beauty, clad in impressive-looking mathematics, for truth. Until the Great Depression, most economists clung to a vision of capitalism as a perfect or nearly perfect system. That vision wasn’t sustainable in the face of mass unemployment, but as memories of the Depression faded, economists fell back in love with the old, idealized vision of an economy in which rational individuals interact in perfect markets, this time gussied up with fancy equations. The renewed romance with the idealized market was, to be sure, partly a response to shifting political winds, partly a response to financial incentives. But while sabbaticals at the Hoover Institution and job opportunities on Wall Street are nothing to sneeze at, the central cause of the profession’s failure was the desire for an all-encompassing, intellectually elegant approach that also gave economists a chance to show off their mathematical prowess.

Unfortunately, this romanticized and sanitized vision of the economy led most economists to ignore all the things that can go wrong. They turned a blind eye to the limitations of human rationality that often lead to bubbles and busts; to the problems of institutions that run amok; to the imperfections of markets — especially financial markets — that can cause the economy’s operating system to undergo sudden, unpredictable crashes; and to the dangers created when regulators don’t believe in regulation.

It’s much harder to say where the economics profession goes from here. But what’s almost certain is that economists will have to learn to live with messiness. That is, they will have to acknowledge the importance of irrational and often unpredictable behavior, face up to the often idiosyncratic imperfections of markets and accept that an elegant economic “theory of everything” is a long way off. In practical terms, this will translate into more cautious policy advice — and a reduced willingness to dismantle economic safeguards in the faith that markets will solve all problems.

About Keynes:

Keynes did not, despite what you may have heard, want the government to run the economy. He described his analysis in his 1936 masterwork, “The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money,” as “moderately conservative in its implications.” He wanted to fix capitalism, not replace it. But he did challenge the notion that free-market economies can function without a minder, expressing particular contempt for financial markets, which he viewed as being dominated by short-term speculation with little regard for fundamentals. And he called for active government intervention — printing more money and, if necessary, spending heavily on public works — to fight unemployment during slumps.

It’s important to understand that Keynes did much more than make bold assertions. “The General Theory” is a work of profound, deep analysis — analysis that persuaded the best young economists of the day. Yet the story of economics over the past half century is, to a large degree, the story of a retreat from Keynesianism and a return to neoclassicism. The neoclassical revival was initially led by Milton Friedman of the University of Chicago, who asserted as early as 1953 that neoclassical economics works well enough as a description of the way the economy actually functions to be “both extremely fruitful and deserving of much confidence.” But what about depressions?

[..] Eventually, however, the anti-Keynesian counterrevolution went far beyond Friedman’s position, which came to seem relatively moderate compared with what his successors were saying. Among financial economists, Keynes’s disparaging vision of financial markets as a “casino” was replaced by “efficient market” theory, which asserted that financial markets always get asset prices right given the available information. Meanwhile, many macroeconomists completely rejected Keynes’s framework for understanding economic slumps. Some returned to the view of Schumpeter and other apologists for the Great Depression, viewing recessions as a good thing, part of the economy’s adjustment to change. And even those not willing to go that far argued that any attempt to fight an economic slump would do more harm than good.

[…]“We have involved ourselves in a colossal muddle, having blundered in the control of a delicate machine, the working of which we do not understand. The result is that our possibilities of wealth may run to waste for a time — perhaps for a long time.” So wrote John Maynard Keynes in an essay titled “The Great Slump of 1930,” in which he tried to explain the catastrophe then overtaking the world. And the world’s possibilities of wealth did indeed run to waste for a long time; it took World War II to bring the Great Depression to a definitive end.

About faulty models:

[…] It’s hard to argue that this transformation in the profession was driven by events. True, the memory of 1929 was gradually receding, but there continued to be bull markets, with widespread tales of speculative excess, followed by bear markets. In 1973-4, for example, stocks lost 48 percent of their value. And the 1987 stock crash, in which the Dow plunged nearly 23 percent in a day for no clear reason, should have raised at least a few doubts about market rationality.

These events, however, which Keynes would have considered evidence of the unreliability of markets, did little to blunt the force of a beautiful idea. The theoretical model that finance economists developed by assuming that every investor rationally balances risk against reward — the so-called Capital Asset Pricing Model, or CAPM (pronounced cap-em) — is wonderfully elegant. And if you accept its premises it’s also extremely useful. CAPM not only tells you how to choose your portfolio — even more important from the financial industry’s point of view, it tells you how to put a price on financial derivatives, claims on claims. The elegance and apparent usefulness of the new theory led to a string of Nobel prizes for its creators, and many of the theory’s adepts also received more mundane rewards: Armed with their new models and formidable math skills — the more arcane uses of CAPM require physicist-level computations — mild-mannered business-school professors could and did become Wall Street rocket scientists, earning Wall Street paychecks.

To be fair, finance theorists didn’t accept the efficient-market hypothesis merely because it was elegant, convenient and lucrative. They also produced a great deal of statistical evidence, which at first seemed strongly supportive. But this evidence was of an oddly limited form. Finance economists rarely asked the seemingly obvious (though not easily answered) question of whether asset prices made sense given real-world fundamentals like earnings. Instead, they asked only whether asset prices made sense given other asset prices. Larry Summers, now the top economic adviser in the Obama administration, once mocked finance professors with a parable about “ketchup economists” who “have shown that two-quart bottles of ketchup invariably sell for exactly twice as much as one-quart bottles of ketchup,” and conclude from this that the ketchup market is perfectly efficient.

Saltwater economists vs. Freshwater economists:

Forty years ago most economists would have agreed with this interpretation. But since then macroeconomics has divided into two great factions: “saltwater” economists (mainly in coastal U.S. universities), who have a more or less Keynesian vision of what recessions are all about; and “freshwater” economists (mainly at inland schools), who consider that vision nonsense.

Freshwater economists are, essentially, neoclassical purists. They believe that all worthwhile economic analysis starts from the premise that people are rational and markets work, a premise violated by the story of the baby-sitting co-op. As they see it, a general lack of sufficient demand isn’t possible, because prices always move to match supply with demand. If people want more baby-sitting coupons, the value of those coupons will rise, so that they’re worth, say, 40 minutes of baby-sitting rather than half an hour — or, equivalently, the cost of an hours’ baby-sitting would fall from 2 coupons to 1.5. And that would solve the problem: the purchasing power of the coupons in circulation would have risen, so that people would feel no need to hoard more, and there would be no recession.

[…]Meanwhile, saltwater economists balked. Where the freshwater economists were purists, saltwater economists were pragmatists. While economists like N. Gregory Mankiw at Harvard, Olivier Blanchard at M.I.T. and David Romer at the University of California, Berkeley, acknowledged that it was hard to reconcile a Keynesian demand-side view of recessions with neoclassical theory, they found the evidence that recessions are, in fact, demand-driven too compelling to reject. So they were willing to deviate from the assumption of perfect markets or perfect rationality, or both, adding enough imperfections to accommodate a more or less Keynesian view of recessions. And in the saltwater view, active policy to fight recessions remained desirable.

But the self-described New Keynesian economists weren’t immune to the charms of rational individuals and perfect markets. They tried to keep their deviations from neoclassical orthodoxy as limited as possible. This meant that there was no room in the prevailing models for such things as bubbles and banking-system collapse. The fact that such things continued to happen in the real world — there was a terrible financial and macroeconomic crisis in much of Asia in 1997-8 and a depression-level slump in Argentina in 2002 — wasn’t reflected in the mainstream of New Keynesian thinking.

Even so, you might have thought that the differing worldviews of freshwater and saltwater economists would have put them constantly at loggerheads over economic policy. Somewhat surprisingly, however, between around 1985 and 2007 the disputes between freshwater and saltwater economists were mainly about theory, not action. The reason, I believe, is that New Keynesians, unlike the original Keynesians, didn’t think fiscal policy — changes in government spending or taxes — was needed to fight recessions. They believed that monetary policy, administered by the technocrats at the Fed, could provide whatever remedies the economy needed. At a 90th birthday celebration for Milton Friedman, Ben Bernanke, formerly a more or less New Keynesian professor at Princeton, and by then a member of the Fed’s governing board, declared of the Great Depression: “You’re right. We did it. We’re very sorry. But thanks to you, it won’t happen again.” The clear message was that all you need to avoid depressions is a smarter Fed.

And as long as macroeconomic policy was left in the hands of the maestro Greenspan, without Keynesian-type stimulus programs, freshwater economists found little to complain about. (They didn’t believe that monetary policy did any good, but they didn’t believe it did any harm, either.)

It would take a crisis to reveal both how little common ground there was and how Panglossian even New Keynesian economics had become.

[…] saltwater economists, who had comforted themselves with the belief that the great divide in macroeconomics was narrowing, were shocked to realize that freshwater economists hadn’t been listening at all. Freshwater economists who inveighed against the stimulus didn’t sound like scholars who had weighed Keynesian arguments and found them wanting. Rather, they sounded like people who had no idea what Keynesian economics was about, who were resurrecting pre-1930 fallacies in the belief that they were saying something new and profound.

[…] Why should it take mass unemployment across the whole nation to get carpenters to move out of Nevada? Can anyone seriously claim that we’ve lost 6.7 million jobs because fewer Americans want to work? But it was inevitable that freshwater economists would find themselves trapped in this cul-de-sac: if you start from the assumption that people are perfectly rational and markets are perfectly efficient, you have to conclude that unemployment is voluntary and recessions are desirable.

Keynesian fiscal stimulus:

During a normal recession, the Fed responds by buying Treasury bills — short-term government debt — from banks. This drives interest rates on government debt down; investors seeking a higher rate of return move into other assets, driving other interest rates down as well; and normally these lower interest rates eventually lead to an economic bounceback. The Fed dealt with the recession that began in 1990 by driving short-term interest rates from 9 percent down to 3 percent. It dealt with the recession that began in 2001 by driving rates from 6.5 percent to 1 percent. And it tried to deal with the current recession by driving rates down from 5.25 percent to zero.

But zero, it turned out, isn’t low enough to end this recession. And the Fed can’t push rates below zero, since at near-zero rates investors simply hoard cash rather than lending it out. So by late 2008, with interest rates basically at what macroeconomists call the “zero lower bound” even as the recession continued to deepen, conventional monetary policy had lost all traction.

Now what? This is the second time America has been up against the zero lower bound, the previous occasion being the Great Depression. And it was precisely the observation that there’s a lower bound to interest rates that led Keynes to advocate higher government spending: when monetary policy is ineffective and the private sector can’t be persuaded to spend more, the public sector must take its place in supporting the economy. Fiscal stimulus is the Keynesian answer to the kind of depression-type economic situation we’re currently in.

What needs to change?

So here’s what I think economists have to do. First, they have to face up to the inconvenient reality that financial markets fall far short of perfection, that they are subject to extraordinary delusions and the madness of crowds. Second, they have to admit — and this will be very hard for the people who giggled and whispered over Keynes — that Keynesian economics remains the best framework we have for making sense of recessions and depressions. Third, they’ll have to do their best to incorporate the realities of finance into macroeconomics.

Many economists will find these changes deeply disturbing. It will be a long time, if ever, before the new, more realistic approaches to finance and macroeconomics offer the same kind of clarity, completeness and sheer beauty that characterizes the full neoclassical approach. To some economists that will be a reason to cling to neoclassicism, despite its utter failure to make sense of the greatest economic crisis in three generations. This seems, however, like a good time to recall the words of H. L. Mencken: “There is always an easy solution to every human problem — neat, plausible and wrong.”

When it comes to the all-too-human problem of recessions and depressions, economists need to abandon the neat but wrong solution of assuming that everyone is rational and markets work perfectly. The vision that emerges as the profession rethinks its foundations may not be all that clear; it certainly won’t be neat; but we can hope that it will have the virtue of being at least partly right.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Thoughts on Paul Mason’s book ‘The End of the Age of Greed’

I just finished reading Paul Mason’s book Meltdown: The End of The Age of Greed. I found the book very informative and enriching. While reading the book, sometimes you feel that the blame for the whole financial crisis should be heaped upon the corporate elites and the policymakers, who aided elite’s greedy nature in order to fulfill their own greed. The nexus between the corporate elites, who only cared about increasing profits and dividends by often going roundabout laws and lobbying for easier rules, and politicians who shared similar ideology (economic) in principal was something much deeper than what I had imagined.

He walks readers through events like the repealing in 1999 of Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 in the US and the wave of deregulation (propounded by conservative policymakers by flowing with the partisan findings of conservative think tanks, which are funded by the business community that have vested interested in profit- making only), separating investment banking from regulation, allowing the sub-prime market to deliberately bloat, giving derivatives markets to free ride without supervision, and a deep-rooted belief on a flawed ideology (to borrow Krugman’s words “crank philosophy”) among others, all of which contributed to the global financial crisis.

Mason offers a fairly detailed timeline and description of the events that occurred during the makeup to and after the crisis. I will briefly note and quote the stuff I find interesting in the book.This blog post is not a review of his book.

In human terms, the commodities craze was the shortest, steepest and most disastrous of the bubbles. If subprime ruined the credit scores of millions of Americans, the commodity inflation took food out of the mouths of mouths of children from Haiti to Bangladesh, and made many middle-income people in the developed world feel instantly poor. [...] G7 politicians generally tried to address the combined credit freeze and commodity inflation with the old tools and the old obsession. The inflation hawks fought inflation; the monetarists flooded the system with money; fiscal conservatives attacked government profligacy. And economists, consulting their graphs, saw the end of a cycle instead of the end of an era.

He argues that the credit freeze and commodity prices boom originated in the parts of the financial system that were impenetrable to public scrutiny. The derivatives market had no surveillance despite it being about six folds the size of global real GDP. Similar was the case with credit default swaps, whose market was valued at $58 trillion. He believes that a blind belief in neoliberal ideology, which is focused too much on self-interest and self-regulation, is partly the cause of this crisis.

Neoliberalism, like all ideologies, needs to be understood exactly as it wishes to avoid being understood: as the product of history. [...] Neoliberalism fought its way to dominance against the power of the Keynesian establishment: against Nixon, Carter, Callaghan; against the Marxist and Keynesian influence in the academia. Above all it was a doctrine of conflict and vision. [...] The problem with neoliberalism's critics, for now, is that they have no coherent world view to take its place. There are elements of such a world view, scattered within the writings of neo-Keynesians, the anti-globalisation left and the Stiglitz critique of neoliberalism.

He maintains that information technology has shaped our lives and lifestyles beyond what we could imagine. This, along with political changes and heavily funded conservative think tanks, has also accelerated the adoption of neoliberal ideas across the society.

It is too crude to say the silicon chip 'causes' the rise of the free market, globalisation and finance capitalism. But the silicon chip and the internet protocol were surely key to their rapid rise to dominance.

He gives details of works of two economists who more or less predicted periodic booms and busts in the market. First, he talks about Kondratiev wave, a path first described by Russian economist Nikolai Kondrative. It predicts that capitalism moves through, on average, fifty-year cycles in which periods of economic growth are followed by periods of crisis and then depression. This theory explains the booms and busts except for the period after 80s and 90s, when the gold standard was abandoned, central banks developed new measures to expand credit and tame inflation, and  the Berlin Wall fell down.

He then talks about Hyman Minsky, who laid out the reasoning and tools to predict the crisis and recommended how to resolve it. Minsky argues that capitalist society is inherently flawed and when it is uncontrolled, the government has to step in to remedy the uncontrolled aspects. He warned, "The normal functioning of our economy leads to financial trauma and crises, inflation, currency depreciation, unemployment and poverty in the midst of what could be virtually universal affluence- in short ... financially complex capitalism is inherently flawed." We need to live with the fact that capitalism is flawed; it is not perfect and efficient; and policymakers can use policy tools to mitigate the effects of downsides of capitalism.

Minsky's proposed solution to financial crisis (which is more or less is close to what Krugman and other Keynesian economists have been rightly saying):

... state intervention in two fronts: the government should run a big budget and the central bank should pump money into the economy. It will be noted, despite Minsky's pariah status in economics, that his remedy is exactly what has been adopted- in the US, the UK, the eurozone and much of the developed world. The problem is, it has not so far worked. Trillions of dollars of ready money, tax cuts and state spending were shoveled into the world economy to stop the credit crunch producing another Great Depression. yet all those trillions are up against a powerful backwash of collapse within the real economy.

I think Mason is misguided here and is taking a very short-sighted view about the impact of stimulus. First, the global fiscal stimulus is just above a trillion dollars and is not expected to kick in until early 2010. Second, the fiscal stimulus was small if we look at the historic nature of this slump. In the US economy, Krugman has been calling for a stimulus equivalent to 4 percent of GDP, which is not politically feasible though it would have been the best policy move if enacted. The global economy needs to be heated (because the economy still is slightly close to deflationary point) and slight inflation with budget deficit must be tolerated. In fact, the global economy, especially the emerging Asia and some EU nations, have rebounded from the first quarter of 2009. So, the fiscal stimulus (clearly worked in China, France, Germany, Australia) along with liquidity injection from the central banks have worked for now. It needs to be seen if the current nascent recovery is sustainable.

Mason outlines three rational alternatives for the developed world: (i) revive the high-debt/low-wage model under the more controlled conditions (pretty much the one agreed by G20); (ii) abandon high growth as an objective altogether; (iii) a return to higher wages, redistribution and a highly regulated finance system. The third one is close to what Minsky argued for-- a high-growth economy that transcends the limitations of both Keynesian and neoliberal models (nationalization/semi-nationalization of banking and insurance industries; strict limits on speculative finance; address inequality by changing tax structure so that the bottom half of the income scale benefit from growth; and consumer demand sustained by growth itself; create permanently benign conditions for entrepreneurs by limiting the power of large-scale enterprises).

On a side note, I think Mason does not fully explore Sachs’ prescribed "shock therapy" that created mess during Russia’s transformation from socialist to capitalist economy. He is favorable of Sachs and wrongly attributes some of the events to Sachs’s academic and policy activism. That said, he does mention the role played by Sachs, and Stiglitz, in making policymakers aware that the IMF-prescribed policies to East Asia after the 1997 crisis was flawed.

He thinks that the Minsky model would be the likely outcome because of heavy government involvement in the market (as was necessitated by the mess created by the markets):

As the crises worsens, it is becoming commonplace for pundits to observe, while capitalism is collapsing, that nobody has thought of an alternative. This is not true. The Minsky alternative- a socialised banking system plus redistribution- is, I believe, the ground on which the most radical of the capitalist re-regulators will coalesce with social justice activists. And it may even go mainstream if the only alternative is seen to be low growth, decades of debt-imposed stagnation, or another re-run of this crisis a few years down the line. It is also possible that a socialised banking system, by allowing the central allocation of financial resources, could be harnessed to the rapid development and large-scale production of post-carbon technologies.

Overall, a very good and informative book about the meltdown. John Kay reviews Mason's book here.

Is the global economy rebounding?

Carnegie Endowment hosted a session about global recovery in the aftermath of the global financial crisis yesterday. Four analysts shared their forecasts and views about where the global economy is heading now.

Hans Timmer, lead economist of Development Prospects Group at the World Bank, argued that though gradual recovery is happening , the pace would depend not only on performance of the US economy but also on the magnitude of rebound in the emerging economies. During the crisis, the emerging economies plunged the most, so in order to rebound strongly, they have to grow strongly. He argued that Fareed Zakaria's misread the numbers in his recent column in the sense that he holds the view that if the US spends enough, things will be okay. Rebound in the developing countries, especially the emerging economies, will determine how fast the global economy will be pulled out of this mess. In the emerging economies, the decline in imports was higher than the decline in exports; the opposite is true for high-income countries. The developing countries reconsidered their investment projects and used up their inventories while reducing imports, deepening the crisis.

He opined that the present rebound (industrial production), which has been visible since the first quarter of 2009, does not reflect a real recovery and might just be a "technical rebound". In the last five months, Asian exports and imports have increased. Japan’s growth is driven by imports by other Asian nations. Commodity prices have also begun to move up. The strength and sustainability of rebound would depend on investment levels and inventories build up and the looseness of international credit supply.

Jorg Decressin, division chief of European Department at IMF, argued that the global recovery is definitely real but is heavily policy dependent. It is a subdued recovery. Consumer confidence is gradually rebounding and so is trade. Interest rate is near zero and a lot of liquidity has been injected into the global economy. However, for sustainable recovery, private demand has to take the place of public demand. Moreover, global imbalances in trade have to be corrected and fiscal deficits have to be brought down. External deficit countries will have to invest less and save more while external surplus countries have to invest more and save less. China alone cannot do it because Chinese total consumption is almost 25 percent of the total US consumption. The Middle East countries also have to step in but they too are constrained by their own challenges. So, rebalancing will take time and recovery will be slow. It is not a self-sustaining recovery.

Philip Suttle, director of Global Macroeconomic Analysis at IIF, argued that the rebound is real and does not look “technical” to him. He made six points:

  • Inventories will be rebuilt steadily rather than suddenly in the coming quarters
  • Global financial condition is getting better. The transmission mechanism of money is working pretty good
  • There is an upward revision to capital spending plans
  • Housing collapse appear to be ceasing, especially in the US and UK
  • Fiscal stimulus is starting to kick in.
  • Labor market conditions will begin to improve.

All these positive signs signal that rebound is real and the trend is upwards. However, there are chances of “double-dip”, as happened during the first half of 1980s, but is not very likely. Events that could cause “doubled-dip” are (but unlikely):

  • Emerging markets don’t deliver
  • More financial turmoil (like Lehman Brothers debacle)
  • High inflation forcing policymakers to tighten up monetary and fiscal policies (he argues that this is possible because our errors in predicting inflation have typically been on the high side)

Uri Dadush, director of International Economics program at Carnegie, argued that stimulus and credit restoration has led to nascent recovery. Rebounding might be slow but it cannot be too slow because it is already a very low level. He argued that in six to twelve months from now, the stimulus will have to be withdrawn. The recovery will then depend on how much the private sector will be able to pick up from the public sector-driven growth path. In the next six months, recovery will persist. Asia, the Europe, and the US have to rely on their own restructuring and domestic demand for sustained growth, he said.

The discussion was focused exclusively on the emerging economies and the OECD countries, though the panelists kept on saying ‘developing countries’, trying to mean as if they were talking about the whole world. Nobody even mentioned Sub-Saharan Africa (except for Hans, who briefly said the focus of the next G20 would be on the developing countries, poverty reduction, and the financial crisis’s impact on the poor). No trading blocs like SAARC, SADC, AU, MENA, and BIMSTEC, among others were mentioned. It might partly be because only a handful of countries drive the global trade and economy and if they don’t grow, others might not as well.

Also, it appeared that the recovery they were talking about was based on the existing system. What would a recovery look like in a reformed system, where some banks are nationalized and investment banks and hedge funds are under tight supervision? The looseness in credit from these institutions is already restrained. Moreover, a huge chunk of liquidity and investment source-- derivatives markets-- is pretty much in doldrums now. So, the recovery now look like just stocking up of inventories. After it is near-full, the real recovery would actually depend on how we fill up the liquidity void created by busted investment banks, hedge funds, subprime markets and derivates markets. Due to these markets’ absorptive capacity, inflation was pretty low despite high liquidity in the past seven years (?!?). It won’t be the same now. So, where will the trend in recovery stop or satiate?

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Climate and life in Nepal, as seen by a BBC reporter

This article is based on a recent Oxfam report:

But an Oxfam report released earlier this week has warned that poor harvests, water shortages and extreme temperatures - the consequences of climate change - will plunge millions of rural poor in Nepal into hunger.

In Bhattegaun, an hour's walk away from the road through forested hills, the effects are already apparent. A stream that provides water has dried up to a thin trickle.

Each day 35-year-old Naina Shahi gathers what she can for her three children and carries it back to her two-room hut.

Prabin Man Singh, who works for the international aid agency, Oxfam, says that with the changes in weather patterns the daily struggle for survival has been accentuated.

"Food production has fallen because of variable rainfall, so they don't have enough to feed the whole family. "There is a water scarcity in the hills and women have to walk a longer distance to get water," he says.

Two issues warrant immediate and close monitoring:

(i) late monsoon will decrease agriculture production, which is the backbone of the economy and more than 70 percent of the population depend on it for living. This will also have a huge impact on economic growth rate and per capita income.

(ii) late but heavy monsoon might wreak havoc, especially destroying property, landslides, farmed land (further decreasing production), increase the number of internally displaced people, and cause starvation, among others. This might fuel social conflict.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Skidelsky on economics and Keynes

The FT interviews Robert Skidelsky, the biographer of Keynes. Some interesting perspectives:

Skidelsky on if economists failed to foresee the dangers posed by uncontrolled capitalism hinged on mathematical models and detached from reality:

Skidelsky believes economists missed the danger signs ahead of the financial crisis. They were preoccupied with sophisticated mathematical models – a serious weakness, he says, in academic teaching of the discipline – and they were over-confident in self-regulation of the market.

He blames this mindset on the revival of anti-Keynesianism in the 1970s when government intervention in the economy made way for supply-side theory of tax cuts and labour market deregulation. But Keynesians, too, were guilty of overreaching: they assumed the state was capable of fine-tuning demand to mitigate the effects of the economic cycle. Today, Keynesianism has reasserted itself through multi-billion pound government interventions to stimulate the economy and recapitalise the banking system. Skidelsky is no statist but he says the crisis has exposed serious weaknesses in economic policy, from the Bank of England’s inflation targeting (“They did not have the tools”) to the Labour government’s belief in light-touch regulation.

A famous quote from Keynes:

The long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead. Economists set themselves too easy a task ... if they can only tell us that when the storm is past the ocean is flat again.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Hans Rosling’s new presentation

Hans Rosling gave a fantastic presentation (combining academic substance plus technology) at a talk show. Watch the interesting presentation about growth, healthcare, and infant mortality.

 

Equally interesting are his 2006 talk and 2007 talk.