We are all Slaves to Defunct Austrians Economists Now!
We were Keynesians. Then we were Monetarists. Now, everybody is an Austrian. The reference is to the Austrian school of economists not necessarily one of geography. Austria – the country – is rather caught up in the credit crisis as it banking system seems to be heavily exposed to economically weak and financially struggling central and eastern european economies.
This is a re-issue of Minsky’s book originally published around 1986. There was steady demand for the book despite it being out of print. Prices on e-Bay were upwards of $1,000 especially after interest in Minsky’s work exploded in 2007 as the current financial crisis unfolded.
"Stabilizing An Stable Economy" seeks to explain why modern economies are liable to fluctuate and how the obvious instability can be masked for a time. Minsky’s central thesis is that stability in financial markets engenders instability as a result of a number of inherent tendencies in the financial system. Minsky’s insights into financial markets specifically speculative finance, increasing debt levels, decreasing debt quality and economic volatility are well worth reading. Minsky’s caution about what he called “balance sheet adventuring” could almost be a by-line for the modern age of finance.
Minsky’s view was that modern financial markets are “conditionally coherent” and characterised by “periods of tranquility”. Excessive risk taking driven in part assumptions about levels of risk, inherent investment biases as asset prices increase and increased leverage leads to market breakdowns.
Minsky’s analysis seems eireely prescient anticipating many elements of the current financial crisis. It seems the world is having a “Minsky moment”. If Minsky had lived to witness the present crisis, he could be excused for an entirely self-satisfied “I told you so!”
Niall Ferguson (2008) "The Ascent of Money"
The title is a self conscious reference to the Jacob Bronowski’s path breaking "Ascent of Man" – a television history of scientific progress. Ferguson, a respected historian and author of acclaimed two volume biography of the Rothschild Family (The House of Rothschild), attempts a financial history of the world.
"The Ascent of Money" is divided into six parts – money; bond markets; stock markets; insurance and risk; real estate (housing); global money (essentially Bretton Woods 2). There is an afterword that is an afterthought probably prompted by the current financial crisis.
"The Ascent of Money" is an uneven work. At its best, it is engaging, lucid and insightful in the analysis of the role of money in economies. The book is at its best when it is deals with the past. The writing is vivid and brings the characters and episodes to life.
The difficulty with the book is its ambition. It is challenging to reduce the complex history of a tangled specialist subject into a simple series of narratives and themes. This leads to simplifications that are questionable. The author’s concept of “Chimerica” – a financial amalgam of America and China – is not entirely convincing. As events may demonstrate, Chimerica may well prove an evanscent Chimera.
"The Ascent of Money" also seems less assured when dealing with the present. The intricacies of modern finance are glossed over. The text may also be over reliant on the views and opinions of a few people - George Soros and Ken Griffin (founder of the, now embattled, mega hedge fund Citadel).
The form of the book and especially the writing style is a concession to its context – the ubiquitous “Major Television Series”. "The Ascent of Money" often reads like a script of a TV series rather than a cohesive work of history. A musical could be next!
Despite shortcomings, "The Ascent of Money" is an entertaining history for the ordinary reader interested in an introduction on the role that money has played in civilisation. The book, rushed out to capitalise on the current interest in finance, explores ideas that are now in a process of fundamental revision. Perhaps history can only be written about distant events of long dead souls and fallen empires and houses.
Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin (2006) "Empire of Debt"
"Empire of Debt" is a sardonic, penetrating analysis of debt and credit in the modern economy, with a particular focus on the world’s largest borrower – the USA.
Bonner and Wiggin are contrarian investors who are the President and Editorial Director respectively of a financial newletter – The Daily Reckoning. Their thesis is that empire (in the political sense) fuels an insatiable appetite for financial excess required to support the costs of the supporting infrastructure of Pax Americana. Central to their theme is the concept of consuetudo fraudium – habitual cheating.
The book’s structure is linear. It weaves it way through American history identifying the key inflection points and identifying the growing tide of financial debauchery.
Much of the analysis is not original and many of identified failings have been identified by other analysts. What makes "Empire of Debt" interesting is that Bonner and Wiggin write with sardonic wit about the trapping of modern economy and finance – Bill Gates is “where God goes for a loan”. Nothing and no one is spared.
At times, the book’s analysis is repetitive and the unremitting bleakness difficult. However, "Empire of Debt’s" great achievement is its cohesive and consistent analysis of the trajectory of finance and economics. Published in 2006, the book anticipates the current financial crisis with considerable accuracy. Bonner and Wiggin are intellectually successors to both Minsky and an earlier economist and social observer – Thorstein Veblen.
Michael Pettis (2001) "The Volatility Machine" Anastasia Nesvetailova (2007) "Fragile Finance"
Emerging market investing has never been for the faint hearted. 2008/ 2009 may well prove to be yet another Minsky moment – there have been many – in the history of emerging market lending. Cross border loans to central/ eastern Europe and Latin America (a serial defaulter) may provide a new phase in the current financial crisis.
"The Volatility Machine", written by Michael Pettis (now an acedemic but previously an practitioner), is an interesting exploration of financial crisis in emerging markets. It’s central thesis is that such crisis are caused more by problems in management of country balance sheets than (the more commonly accepted hypothesis) economic mismangement. Pettis argues, sometimes persuasively, that emerging market investors and borrowers underestimate the magnitude and effect of volatility on these economies and the structure of financing. The book highlights the disconnect between the work of economists (such as those employed by the IMF and World Bank) and market practitioners.
"Fragile Finance" focuses on recent financial crisis (specifically the Asian, Russian and Argentine crisis). The book explores how the liberalisation of financial markets, the proliferation of derivatives, and new financial techniques translate into financial crisis for emerging countries. The fragile nature of finance that frequently undermines the stability of the economy is the central focus of the analysis. The analysis is unashamed based on Minsky. But then we are all Austrians now.
As Keynes observed: “The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who believe themselves to be exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back.”


