Hyman Minsky
I have learnt about him by going through his books , when he was alive he was never considered a
serious economist but now economists know his contribution and thinking. Minsky
spent his life on the margins of economics but his ideas suddenly gained
currency with the 2007-08 financial crisis. To many, it seemed to offer one of
the most plausible accounts of why it had happened. American economist Hyman
Minsky, who died in 1996, grew up during the Great Depression, an event which
shaped his views and set him on a crusade to explain how it happened and how a
repeat could be prevented. His long out-of-print books were suddenly in high
demand with copies changing hands for hundreds of dollars - not bad for densely
written tomes with titles like Stabilizing an Unstable Economy. Well , Krugman End this Depression has
mentioned about the night he re-read the book and Yellen also knows the importance
.
The Big Ideas
Stability is destabilising
Minsky's main idea is so simple that it could fit on a T-shirt,
with just three words: "Stability is destabilising."Most
macroeconomists work with what they call "equilibrium models" - the
idea is that a modern market economy is fundamentally stable. That is not to
say nothing ever changes but it grows in a steady way.
To generate an economic crisis or a sudden boom some sort of
external shock has to occur - whether that be a rise in oil prices, a war or
the invention of the internet.
Minsky disagreed. He thought that the system itself could
generate shocks through its own internal dynamics. He believed that during
periods of economic stability, banks, firms and other economic agents become
complacent.
They assume that the good times will keep on going and begin
to take ever greater risks in pursuit of profit. So the seeds of the next
crisis are sown in the good time.
3 Stages of Debt
Minsky had a theory, the "financial instability
hypothesis", arguing that lending goes through three distinct stages. He
dubbed these the Hedge, the Speculative and the Ponzi stages, after financial
fraudster Charles Ponzi.
(Ponzi schemes -- Charles Ponzi : Similar to a pyramid
scheme, an enterprise where - instead of genuine profits - funds from new
investors are used to pay high returns to current investors.Named after
fraudster Charles Ponzi (1882-1949), such schemes are destined to collapse as
soon as new investment tails off or significant numbers of investors simultaneously
wish to withdraw funds)
In the first stage, soon after a crisis, banks and borrowers
are cautious. Loans are made in modest amounts and the borrower can afford to
repay both the initial principal and the interest.
As confidence rises banks begin to make loans in which the
borrower can only afford to pay the interest. Usually this loan is against an
asset which is rising in value. Finally, when the previous crisis is a distant
memory, we reach the final stage - Ponzi finance. At this point banks make
loans to firms and households that can afford to pay neither the interest nor
the principal. Again this is underpinned by a belief that asset prices will
rise.
The easiest way to understand is to think of a typical
mortgage. Hedge finance means a normal capital repayment loan, speculative
finance is more akin to an interest-only loan and then Ponzi finance is
something beyond even this. It is like getting a mortgage, making no payments at
all for a few years and then hoping the value of the house has gone up enough
that its sale can cover the initial loan and all the missed payments. You can
see that the model is a pretty good description of the kind of lending that led
to the financial crisis.
Minsky Moment
The "Minsky moment", a term coined by later
economists, is the moment when the whole house of cards falls down. Ponzi
finance is underpinned by rising asset prices and when asset prices eventually
start to fall then borrowers and banks realise there is debt in the system that
can never be paid off. People rush to sell assets causing an even larger fall
in prices
Finance Matters
Until fairly recently, most macroeconomists were not very
interested in the finer details of the banking and financial system. They saw
it as just an intermediary which moved money from savers to borrowers.
This is rather like the way most people are not very
interested in the finer details of plumbing when they're having a shower. As
long as the pipes are working and the water is flowing there is no need to
understand the detailed workings. To Minsky, banks were not just pipes but more
like a pump - not just simple intermediaries moving money through the system
but profit-making institutions, with an incentive to increase lending. This is
part of the mechanism that makes economies unstable.
Words better than models and maths
Since World War Two, mainstream economics has become
increasingly mathematical, based on formal models of how the economy works.
To model things you need to make assumptions, and critics of
mainstream economics argue that as the models and maths became more and more
complex, the assumptions underpinning them became more and more divorced from
reality. The models became an end in themselves.
Although he trained in mathematics, Minsky preferred what
economists call a narrative approach - he was about ideas expressed in words.
Many of the greats from Adam Smith to John Maynard Keynes to Friedrich Hayek
worked like this.While maths is more precise, words might allow you to express
and engage with complex ideas that are tricky to model - things like
uncertainty, irrationality, and exuberance. Minsky's fans say this contributed
to a view of the economy that was far more "realistic" than that of
mainstream economics.
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