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Walden
Bello*
Walden
Bello was invited to participate in the Economist's Debate Series
on "Freedom and its Digital Discontents." The proposition of the
debate was "By intervening to regulate business and financial
risks, governments have made things worse." The debate can be
accessed at http://www. Economist.com/debate/
here
are two doctrinaire positions that have proved singularly destructive
over the last half century. One is that the government riding herd on
the economy is the way to go. The other is that the market is always
right.
The
first brought us the gem that was central planning; and the second,
the wondrous neoliberal economics that has reigned over the last 25
years. Despite opposite locations on the ideological spectrum, both
approaches were united at a metaphysical level by the Platonic
paradigm that there is one ideal straitjacket into which you can cram
all actually existing economies.
We
all know where central planning and the elimination of the market
brought the Soviet Union and eastern Europe. Over the last few
decades, we have witnessed how the holy trinity of radical
liberalization, deregulation and privatization has increased the
numbers of people living in absolute poverty, redistributed income
towards the rich and reduced global economic growth per year in the
1980-2000 period by more than half of what it was during the 1960-80
period. Despite claims to the contrary, what we have had under the
reign of unfettered market processes is not Schumpeterian creative
destruction, but long-term stagnation combined with periodic
destabilization.
The
current financial crisis that may lead to what the former Federal
Reserve chairman, Alan Greenspan, describes as possibly the "world's
worst economic crisis since the second world war" provides a
cautionary tale of what happens if you eliminate all effective
controls on the market. The housing bubble is but the latest of some
100 financial crises that have swiftly followed one another ever
since Depression-era capital controls began to be lifted during the
Thatcher-Reagan years.
Owing
to the devastating impact of uncontrolled gyrations and permutations
of speculative capital, there were calls for capital controls and a
return to strong financial regulation following the Asian financial
crisis in 1997 and the dot.com craze of the late 1990s. The first
event led to the economic collapse of all the so-called Asian tiger
economies that did not impose capital controls, the second to the
wiping out of $7 trillion in investor wealth and the US recession of
2001.
Instead
of heeding these calls, Washington caved in to Wall Street's
insistence on private sector "self-surveillance" and "self
policing". Instead of stronger monitoring and regulation of
sophisticated financial instruments such as derivatives,, governments
meekly agreed to leave this to market players who were supposed to
have access to complex quantitative computer models that would
undertake sophisticated risk assessment.
Instead
of busting the housing bubble by decisively raising interest rates,
Mr Greenspan simply stood by, as he did during the dot.com mania, and
allowed another bubble to grow and grow. Instead of pushing Mr
Greenspan to prick the bubble, the then US Council of Economic
Advisers chairman, Ben Bernanke, provided his guru with technocratic
cover and attributed the rise in US housing prices to "strong
economic fundamentals" instead of speculative mania. Both Mr
Greenspan and Mr Bernanke disregarded the overwhelming evidence that,
as the economist Dean Baker put it a few years ago, when the bubble
was taking off, "Like the stock bubble, the housing bubble will
burst. Eventually, it must. When it does, the economy will be thrown
into severe recession, and tens of millions of homeowners, who never
imagined that house prices could fall, likely will face serious
hardship."
What
happened to self-policing? When it came to risk assessment of
derivatives such as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and
structured investment vehicles (SIVs), the process collapsed almost
completely, with the most sophisticated quantitative risk models left
in the dust as risk was priced according to one simple rule by the
sellers of securities: underestimate the real risk and pass it on to
the suckers down the line.
What
happens when you leave the market unregulated is best described by
the Wall Street Journal's summary of the report of the meeting of
the Group of Seven's Financial Stability Forum in Tokyo in early
February: "[T]here is plenty of blame to go around for the
financial chaos: The US subprime mortgage market was marked by poor
underwriting standards and ‘some fraudulent practices.' Investors
didn't carry out sufficient due diligence when they bought
mortgage-backed securities. Banks and other firms managed their
financial risks poorly and failed to disclose to the public the
dangers on and off their balance sheets. Credit-rating companies did
an inadequate job of evaluating the risk of complex securities. And
the financial institutions compensated employees in ways that
encouraged excessive risk-taking and insufficient regard to long-term
risks."
In
other words, a bloody mess.
With
the global economy on the brink of a deep recession, citizens in the
developed and developing worlds have had their fill of doctrinaire
policymakers from the far left and the far right imposing their
fundamentalist views on them. Just as they were disillusioned with
central planning, they have had enough of government inaction as
speculative capital triggered permanent instability and redistributed
the national income towards a small minority of market players. They
want the market to be subjected to the discipline of the public
interest. We are now entering what the great Hungarian economist Karl
Polanyi described as the second phase of the "double movement"
under capitalism: an era following a period of uncontrolled market
gyrations when, forced by a civil society that is up in arms,
governments again intervene, this time to stabilise the economy,
bring about a just income distribution, eliminate poverty and - a
critical goal in this era of global warming - promote environmental
sustainability.
* Walden Bello is
Senior Analyst with Focus on the Global South
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