Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism...

20
Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July 2009 Hansjörg Herr Berlin School of Economics and Law

Transcript of Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism...

Page 1: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset

Markets Driven Capitalism

WorkshopFinance-Led Capitalism and Crisis

Berlin 16 July 2009

Hansjörg HerrBerlin School of Economics and Law

Page 2: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

„ …… the element of time, the source of many of the greatest

difficulties in economics“. (Marshall 1890, p. 92)

Page 3: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Time and Money in the Neoclassical Model

Léon Walras (1874):“Capital formation in a market ruled by free competition is an operation

by which excess income over consumption can be transformed into such types and quantities of new capital goods proper as are best suited to yield the greatest possible satisfaction of wants both to the individual creators of savings and the whole body of consumers of the services of new capital goods … Furthermore, an important truth, which economist have proclaimed over and over again, but have left unproven, is finally established in the face of the denials of socialists, namely, that under certain conditions and within limits the mechanism of free competition is a self-driven and self-regulating mechanism not only for transforming services into products but also for turning savings into capital goods proper.”

- The General Equilibrium Model: Universal future markets

Page 4: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Rational Expectations

“I would like to suggest that expectations, since they are informed predictions of future evens, are essentially the same as the predictions of the relevant economic theory.” (John Muth 1961)

Page 5: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Time and Money in the Neoclassical Model

Rational Expectations and Efficient Market Hypothesis in the 1970s

- Economic agents use only one model to understand the world- Expectations are identical with the equilibrium of the model- Expectations disappear as an independent variable form the

model- Some agents can be wrong, however, the mistakes have a

normal distribution- Arbitrage guarantee grantees the equilibrium

- The probability apparatus was added- Future events depend on objective probabilities- Logical time is assumed, future reflects the past vice versa

(Newton)- There is risk no uncertainty

Page 6: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Consequences of the Neoclasscial Approach

• Domination of quantitative risk models– „Production“ of financial products– Rating Agencies used quantitative risk models– Basel II (bank based risk models)

• Fair Value Accounting

Page 7: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Keynes: Historical Time, Uncertainty, and “Animal Spirits”

“We are merely reminding ourselves that human decisions affecting the future, whether personal or politic or economic, cannot depend on strict mathematical expectations, since the basis for making such calculations does not exist.“ Keynes 1936) About many economic matters “there is no scientific basis on which to form any calculable probability whatever. We simply do not know.” (Keynes 1937)

“Most, probably, of our decisions … can only be taken as a result of animal spirits – of a spontaneous urge to action rather than inaction, and not as the outcome of a weighted average of quantitative benefits multiplied by quantitative probabilities.” Keynes (1936)

“entrepreneurship” (Schumpeter)

Page 8: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

What is the result of the Keynesian approach?

• Expectations are given exogenously– For example the marginal efficiency of capital– The liquidity premium– Credit rationing

• Sequence economy – No long-term trend• We cannot accept that expectations are stable• Expectations without anchor lead to

– Asset markets without price anchor– Credit markets without quantity anchor

Page 9: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

- There are no fundamentals which can be detected: - „In The Alchemy Finance …valuations affect the

fundamentals that they are supposed to reflect.“ Soros (2008)

- Historical time: The world is permanently created- Path-dependency of economic development- Self-fulfilling prophecy

- Not all economic agents search for fundamentals- Short-term orientation- Speculation: beauty contest- Chart techniques- Herding

Page 10: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Without strict regulations and stabilizing institutions asset markets and credit

markets are be unstable

Page 11: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

The neoliberal revolution in the 1970s/1980s

- Conservative governments were elected- Margret Thatcher 1979- Ronald Reagan 1980

- The intellectual climate: Rational expectations and efficient financial market hypothesis

- Conservative think tanks

- Failure of the left in the 1970s

Page 12: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

The Twins of the Neoliberal Globalisation Project: Deregulation of financial markets

and labour markets

• Financial markets lost its anchor– Asset price bubbles– Exchange rate volatility – Uncontrolled national and international credit

expansion– Price volatilty of natural resoruces

• Deregulation of labour markets– Nominal wages lost its function as price level anchor– Deflation is back

Page 13: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Real estate prices in Japan

Prof. Hansjörg Herr 13Source: Japan Real Estate Institute

Page 14: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Real estate prices in the USA

Prof. Hansjörg Herr 14Source: S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices

Page 15: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Share prices in the United States, Germany and Japan

Prof. Hansjörg Herr 15Source: finance.yahoo.com

Page 16: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Nominal exchange rates

Prof. Hansjörg Herr 16Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Page 17: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Current account imbalances Germany, United States and Japan

Prof. Hansjörg Herr 17Source: World Economic Outlook 2008

Page 18: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Total net capital flows and net FDI into all developing countries in m $-US

Prof. Hansjörg Herr 18Source: Global Development Finance 2009

Page 19: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Crude oil price development in US-dollar

Prof. Hansjörg Herr 19Source: Inflationdata.com

Page 20: Financial Liberalisation, Deregulated Labour Markets and the New Asset Markets Driven Capitalism Workshop Finance-Led Capitalism and Crisis Berlin 16 July.

Chaos is back! No surprise!

Thanks