Exactly
one year ago, the Wall Street investment bank Lehmann Brothers was
allowed to go bust, in a move that is generally seen to have brought
on the global financial crisis. Shock waves hit the financial markets;
stock markets collapsed in waves of contagion across the world; credit
seized up in most developed and many developing economies; and for
a while it really did seem that global capitalism was facing direct
threats to its very survival.
The collapse was not entirely unexpected. The implosion of the US
housing market over the past year had already exposed the massive
fragilities in the global financial system, with institutions interlocked
in such opaque ways that the full extent of liability was not known
even to the most experienced players. In consequence, the summer of
2008 had already witnessed the US Federal Reserve bailing out several
major financial institutions, beginning with providing a dowry for
the failing bank Bear Stearns in its shotgun marriage with JP Morgan,
and then going on to protect and then effectively nationalise the
mortgage holding agencies Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. It was well
known that many major investment banks and other financial institutions
(such as the insurance giant AIG) were all extremely vulnerable, and
short-selling by those betting against such institutions only hastened
the likely denouement.
After the Lehmann Brothers debacle, the US government, and indeed
other governments in Europe and elsewhere, swung into action on an
unprecedented scale to prevent what seemed like a possible financial
and economic catastrophe of global dimensions. Monetary policy was
loosened to the absolute limit and fiscal stimuli were introduced
to maintain spending. Most of all, there were more bailouts: huge
injections of liquidity that directly and indirectly benefited certain
big financial players who were seen as integral to the functioning
of the system.
On year on, it can be said that that particular crisis was averted.
The world economy went into recession, but did not collapse altogether.
Today there is talk of recovery everywhere, even in currently recessionary
Europe and certainly in the US. So was the emergency response successful?
And have policy makers learned the important lessons from the crisis?
Unfortunately, this does not seem to be the case. Most significantly,
hardly anything seems to have been learned in terms of required regulation
of finance. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, there has
been no moving away from the ''efficient markets'' hypothesis that
determined the hands-off approach of governments to the financial
sector. Financial institutions have been bailed out at enormous public
expense, but without changes in regulation that would discourage irresponsible
behaviour. Banks that were ''too big to fail'' have been allowed to
get bigger. Flawed incentive structures continue to promote short-term
profit-seeking rather than social good. So we have protected private
profiteering and socialised its risks.
One of the worst consequences of this flawed manner of dealing with
the crisis is that moral hazard is now more pronounced than ever.
The Palgrave Dictionary of Economics defines moral hazard as ''actions
of economic agents in maximising their own utility to the detriment
of others, in situations where they do not bear the full consequences''.
In financial markets, these problems are especially rife because such
markets are anyway characterised by imperfect and asymmetric information
among those participating in the markets.
The moral hazard associated with any financial bailout results from
the fact that a bailout implicitly condones the earlier behaviour
that led to the crisis of a particular institution. Typically, markets
are supposed to reward ''good'' behaviour and punish those participants
who get it wrong. And presumably those who believe in ''free market
principles'' and in the unfettered operations of the markets should
also believe in its disciplining powers.
But when the crisis hits, the shouts for bailout and immediate rescue
by the state usually come loudest from precisely those who had earlier
championed deregulation and freedom from all restriction for the markets.
The arguments for bailout are related either to the domino effect
- the possibility of the failure of a particular institution leading
to a general crisis of confidence attacking the entire financial system
and rendering it unviable - or to the perception that some institutions
are too large and too deeply entrenched in the financial structure,
such that too many innocent people, such as small depositors, pensioners
and the like, would be adversely affected.
The problem is that this leads to both signals and actual incentives
actually encouraging further irresponsible behaviour. Both financial
markets and government policies have operated in such a way that those
running the institutions that might or do collapse typically walk
off from the debris of the crisis not only without paying any price,
but after substantially enriching themselves further. Because those
responsible for the crisis do not have to pay for it, they have no
compunctions in once again creating the same conditions.
This is why these enormous bailouts should have been accompanied by
much more systematic and aggressive attempts at financial regulation,
to ensure that the same patterns that led to this crisis are not repeated.
Similarly, there must be regulation to prevent speculative behaviour
in global commodity markets, which can otherwise still cause a repeat
of the recent crazy volatility in world fuel and food prices that
created so much havoc in the developing world.
This opportunity wasted by governments – reflecting the lack of basic
change in the power equations governing capitalism – will prove to
be expensive. We should brace ourselves for an even worse replay of
the financial crisis in the foreseeable future. And the lopsided government
response – benefiting those responsible for the crisis without adequate
concern for the collateral damage on innocent citizens – may give
public intervention a bad name, at a time when we desperately need
such intervention for more democratic and sustainable economies.