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Economic Crisis Yields Idiocy at Wall Street Journal

Thursday, November 05, 2009 - by  Staff Report


Frederic Mishkin

The pain of the financial crisis has economists striving to understand precisely why it happened and how to prevent a repeat. For that task, John Geanakoplos of Yale University takes inspiration from Shakespeare's "Merchant of Venice." The play's focus is collateral, with the money lender Shylock demanding a particularly onerous form of recompense if his loan wasn't repaid: a pound of flesh. Mr. Geanakoplos, too, finds danger lurking in the assets that back loans. For him, the risk is that investors who can borrow too freely against those assets drive their prices far too high, setting up a bust that reverberates through the economy. Yale economist John Geanakoplos has seen his previously obscure theory about collateral's role in the credit bubble gain currency after it burst. For years, his effort to understand this process didn't draw much interest. Now it does -- yet another aftereffect of the brutal deflating of the credit bubble. The crisis exposed the inadequacy of economists' traditional tool kit, forcing them to revisit questions many had long thought answered, such as how to tame disruptive boom-and- bust cycles. Mr. Geanakoplos is among a small band of academics offering new thinking about those cycles. A varied group ranging from finance specialists to abstract theorists, they are moving to economic center stage after years on the margins. The goal: Fix the models that encapsulate economists' understanding of the world and serve as policy-making tools at the world's biggest central banks. It is a task that could require a thorough overhaul of the way those models work. "We could be looking at a paradigm shift," says Frederic Mishkin (pictured left), a former Federal Reserve governor now at Columbia University. That shift could change the way central bankers do their job, possibly leading them to wade more deeply into markets. They could, for example, place greater emphasis on the amount of borrowing in the economy, rather than just the interest rates at which borrowing is done. In boom times, that could lead them to restrict how much money various players, ranging from hedge funds to home buyers, can borrow. - Wall Street Journal

Dominant Social Theme: The crash is complicated?

Free-Market Analysis: Here at the Bell, we believe in civil discourse. Polity is part of civil society and civil discourse is often preferable to invective, all things being equal. And all things being equal, this article in the Wall Street Journal has got to be one of the stupidest, most idiotic, irreparably ignorant and certainly hypocritical economic analyses we have ever read. More on this in a minute. First let us set the stage for why we think this article (actually one of a series of articles) is yet another sign that the monetary elite is absolutely losing it.

Human beings being communicative creatures that think metaphorically, there are certain informational elements that stand out like signposts within a larger, given conversation pointing the way. One signpost we noticed a number of months back was the incompetent testimony of the Federal Reserve's inspector general - promptly posted on YouTube - when she appeared at a Congressional hearing to explain how she was auditing what was apparently, potentially, some US$8 trillion or more that the Fed had decided to dish out to overseas institutions (at least we think that was the case, it's hard to tell with the Fed).

The testimony of this woman was so incoherent, rambling and evasive that we realized at that moment that the world's most powerful central bank had lost control of its message - had basically given up, in other words, and was not going to be able to justify its behavior either now or any time in the near future. This meant that the current version of central banking was basically OVER in the United States and maybe the world (for the near future anyway). (And sure enough, they are trying erect something-or-other with different bells and whistles over at the IMF.)

Why is that? Any dominant social theme of the elite (such as central banking which is indefensible) becomes basically useless if it cannot be justified, defended and carried forth with some level of credibility. By putting this astonishingly defensive and incompetent woman on the stand, so to speak, the Fed provided us with a metaphor for its current institutional state of mind. The inspector general, in other words, was a metaphorical white flag.

And now comes this mess (we will allow, we guess, that it is part of a larger group of weird profiles) in America's most prestigious daily journal. Again it is nearly impossible to overstate the significance of this next signpost as we chart the blithering degeneracy of the monetary elite's shredded messaging in the face of nearly insurmountable problems. Once upon a time, the monetary elite OWNED the media. If the monetary elite wanted to blame one of its fairly-manufactured monetary crises on banking or private industry or greedy accountants, it could do so and there was no one who would demure. There was in fact, no way to provide another opinion short of shooting off intemperate letters to the editor that never got published. But today it is different.

Today, the Internet provides thinking people everywhere in the Western world with a forum for discussion that has led to a rediscovery of age-old ideas about free-markets and freedom generally that had for generations been suppressed by the elite's ironclad control over Western media. And anyone who wishes to can go on line and read thousands, nay, millions of articles about these issues - and most certainly about the economic crisis.

Austrian, free-markets economics has had a resurgence in the past decade that can hardly be described, so explosive has it been. On the Internet, in the so-called alternative electronic press, it is THE dominant economic paradigm. Millions and millions have been educated about REAL economics online - information that they would never have ferreted out at even the finest schools (given that the finest schools receive a good deal of funding from the monetary elite and therefore know which side their metaphorical bread is buttered on).

What does Austrian economic analysis tell us? It informs firmly that central banking monetary stimulation causes first booms and then busts. This is the so-called business cycle and it is incredibly exacerbated by fiat money and the central banking overprinting of currency, which happens on an ongoing basis. It is no secret now! Seventy-five years ago one of the pre-eminent explainers of the business cycle, the Austrian economist FA Hayek even won a Nobel prize for these sorts of insights! This stuff is not hidden. In fact, even a five-year-old could find these articles on Google.

So how come the Wall Street Journal publishes a long analysis of an obscure Yale economist who thinks he has the found the key to understanding the current economic crisis and it is ... wait for it ... TOO MUCH LEVERAGE. This is some kind of special illumination? This is something new? This is something that the Internet has not yet presented to the world in spades? Here's some more relevant information from this incredible, indescribably strange article:

Now that the financial crisis has exposed flaws in the models central banks use, economists have launched into a flurry of activity that is likely to reshape the field. As they did in the two revolutions in economic thought of the past century, economists are rediscovering relevant work. Mr. Woodford asked Mr. Geanakoplos to present his ideas at an April conference held by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Mr. Geanakoplos has yet to develop his theory into a comprehensive model. "His work assumes that the leverage cycle is bad, but gives little guidance [about] to what extent regulators should control it," says Markus Brunnermeier, an economist at Princeton who specializes in financial bubbles.

The goal for economists now is a model that takes account of what happens in the financial sector, yet is simple enough to apply in policy making. The quest is bringing financial economists -- long viewed by some as a curiosity mostly relevant to Wall Street -- together with macroeconomists. Some believe a viable solution will emerge within a couple of years; others say it could take decades.

"Mr. Geanakoplos has yet to develop his theory into a comprehensive model." But Good Lord, he doesn't have to! It's called Austrian free-market economics and THERE ARE THOUSANDS, MAYBE MILLIONS, OF ARTICLES ABOUT IT ON THE NET.

We could go on and on about this sort of weirdness. But our point here is not theoretical. We understand that it is part of a series profiling lesser known academic "economists" - but free-market economics doesn't seem to have made an impact, not on the collective anyway. (And certainly not judging from this article.) Throwing a bunch of nonsense together doesn't make it any less nonsensical than a nonsensical singularity.

The monetary elite simply doesn't know what to do. And neither do the Journal's editors, charged with defending the indefensible. So they have decided to profile a bunch of young mathematicians in the hopes that they will obscure the real issue and confuse people about the facts. Yet any high school student can go online and find plenty of information about what's going on in the economy.

In fact, It would be very easy to write a fairly well-thought out paper on how central banks fool the market into generating the leverage that has so perplexed Geanakoplos. Does he ever read the ‘Net? Does he disagree with Hayek? Does he read at all (outside an eminent bard, anyway)? Or only study numbers? Why is he so puzzled when with the flick of a finger he can find all the answers he needs. Even if he disagrees with them, HOW CAN HE NOT BE AWARE OF THEM?

It is really an incredible piece of journalism, and part of a very weird effort at providing a substrata on which the crackpot theory of central banking can resist the undermining of the ‘Net. The Murdoch owned Wall Street Journal is something of a mouthpiece for the monetary elite and articles like this (and the editorial decisions that spawn them) likely don't happen by accident. The monetary elite is searching for something, anything, that will provide an intellectual justification for a handful of glorified clerics (specially selected for their malleability and mathematical acuity) fixing the price and quantity of money.

Before we rest, we cannot help but commenting on the seeming puzzlement of the collective economic wisdom of the young geniuses at Yale, Harvard, etc. who apparently are so disturbed by the seeming irrationality of the market that they cannot sleep at night. The market folks is RATIONAL. How can it be otherwise? It is the sum of one or more buying decisions that are the product of the best or most information available at the time (that the individual wants to use, anyway).

The seeming IRRATIONALITY of the market stems from the incredible monetary stimulation of central banking. The market simply prices in the crazy monetary inflation of a hundred central banks around the world. It appears irrational because central banking IS irrational.) Now, Lord help us, we will be subject to thousands of articles bemoaning the failure of capitalism and the irrational nature of markets in the face of perfectly good information. We won't read them. We suggest you don't read all of them either, or you will become just as confused as America's young econometric elite (not to mention writers and editors at the Journal).

Conclusion: We await the day that the Journal discovers Austrian economics and realizes that it won't take decades to figure out what just happened. In fact, a private gold- and silver-based money standard would fix the system just fine. (The market would even begin acting "rationally" again.) Go on line and Google "Mises." You'll find at least 100 million cites, or maybe more. How could the Journal and its hotshot editors miss it? Or didn't they bother to look? Or maybe they just didn't want to.

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Posted by Joseph May on 11/5/2009 2:41:12 AM

Why don't you send this to Geanokoplos?


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Would he read it?

Posted by Bowman W. Davis on 11/5/2009 8:56:04 AM

They (the anti free marketeers) are not acting out of ignorance of the facts, that central banks, fiat money and evermore government controls are the reasons for the economic ruinization of millions of people. They are acting with great deliberation to create more constructed calamities to which they will offer more controls,regulation, more government and less freedom. This is not to say there are not a bunch of totally incompetent people espousing pure dribble out of total ignorance of historical facts.


Reply from the Daily Bell:

"This is not to say there are not a bunch of totally incompetent people espousing pure dribble out of total ignorance of historical facts."

You think?

Posted by Richard Daughty on 11/5/2009 9:39:23 AM

Your recent article, "Economic Crisis Yields Idiocy at Wall Street Journal", with the inane Wall Street Journal quote followed with a delicious Free Market Analysis extolling the Austrian School of economics in a context of ridiculing the neo-Keynesian econometric stupidity running rampant in the world, is the best thing that I have read in a long, long time. A LONG time!

So, not only do I say "Thank you!", but I also stand to applaud! Bravo! Bravo!


Reply from the Daily Bell:

High praise indeed, coming from the pre-eminent Mogambo, stalker of truth, slayer of falsehoods, one of the most incisive hard-money commentators ever spawned (and the funniest), the biggest gorilla in the economic (and econometric) jungle.

Anyway ... we assume this is he, whom we admire a great deal, and thus are mightily complimented. (If it's not, we'll pretend it is and take the pat-on-the-back anyway!)

Posted by Adrian W on 11/5/2009 2:28:05 PM

An analogy. Its like the 3 Stooges trying to re-arrange the deck furniture on the Titanic. Oblivious to the real problems at hand.


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Oblivious -- or ignoring them?

Posted by Ralph Tamm on 11/5/2009 3:23:52 PM

NOT CAPITALISM
We really don't have a Capitalist system in this country. At best it can be classed as a secondary entity, or pseudo capitalism. State meddling is entwined in every facet of our private sector, mainly in finance, from political legislation and other actions causing many problems from unintended consequences.

In addition it should be recognized that in the state's quest for power they favor the groups with the greatest number of votes, as examples, labor unions and the vocal masses of many groups who consider themselves the disenfranchised, causing many class wars. Also, Lobbies are employed to gain favor with the voting bureaucrats for specific groups. We have come close to being a Fascist Dictatorship where businesses are steadfastly influenced by the state's agenda.

Proving that the state is responsible for our many problems is almost impossible to establish because of the above, so violation of sound and moral principles must be examined to show that it is logical that the state and only the state can be blamed, not capitalism.

False Premises in Logic: If the premises are wrong, the derived conclusions are also wrong even though the thought processes were impeccable. Almost everyone today is a pragmatist relying on observable facts and building premises to explain them. Interpreting facts are generally faulty based on Sir Arthur Edington's epistemological discovery that there is no such thing as pure objective knowledge.

In the volitional realm a person's life experiences and history influence the way he will see things thus deriving the wrong premises he uses in his analyses. Other thoughts derived from many bizarre hand-me-down beliefs acquired from those who preceded us are another source of false premises. As an example, we have been told over and over again that those residing in the USA are a free people.

The definition of a "free" people is left vague so it is impossible to verify the freedom premise. Therefore, we need filters and semantic precision to develop true and valid premises. It is not surprising that with absolute definition (where no equivocation can be both true and valid) for key societal words, an understanding of our real world is easily acquired.

Moral Principles: Moral is defined as: Absence of coercion. Before Andrew J. Galambos we lacked an absolute definition for morality independent of time. Heretofore the ideas involving moral behavior were time and place dependant (in a constant state of flux). I am sure the state leadership would not like the Galambos definition because everything they do involves one or another form of coercion. This definition is an excellent way to identify and filter immoral, therefore, wrong actions on all political proposals.

Tamm's Law of Coercion: Coercion is the mechanism that progressively diminishes quality in the marketplace. It is a known fact that all states use universal coercion (coercion on a massive scale) as the modus operandi (non-contractual power over people through political laws, rules, controls and other enactments). No private citizen has the power to suspend and refuse to pay for one of the states services or entitlements clearly coercive.

Severe restrictions are enacted by the state making it illegal to compete for the "services" rendered. And, when a competing service is not illegal, our tax dollar supports the state service restricting profit potential, from an unfair advantage, for the private service.

First Postulate of Volitional Science: All volitional beings live to pursue happiness. This postulate tells us that if ones property is in jeopardy he will take steps to minimize losses. Therefore all kinds of unintended consequences occur for each political law enacted. Unintended consequences cause additional political laws to be enacted to "solve" these additional problems, which cause more unintended consequences - an unending spiral of stupidity.

The Law of Least Actions is another law of nature that can be used in the Volitional domain. The law tells us everything takes the path of least resistance - water moves down hill. To avoid thinking most humans prefer to allow the politicos to implement plans to insure his well being never thinking that he will lose control if the state is in charge. The end result is a form of slavery. Those in control make the rules. The irony is that our own money -- taxes -- is the state's only source of income is used to enslave us and for all politicians to advance their own agenda (maintenance of power).

Corollary to First Postulate: A man's concept of rational thinking dictates his actions. This Corollary tells us that the owner of a business may find it rational and expedient to use the coercive power of the state to gain an advantage over competition.

It is surprising that many people that should know better are jumping on the band wagon saying capitalism is broke and needs to be fixed by state entities. We forget so soon! It is not surprising that state workers, the media, educators and even corporate leaders have been convinced capitalism has somehow gone astray and needs to be fixed. The adage that one can't see the forest for the trees fits this dilemma.

There are so many variables involved that it's almost impossible to ferret out the big picture to refute the non-believers in capitalism using the current methods of analysis.

Capitalism, a mechanism for the production of products goods and services for profit, is alive and well if the meddling state would get off the backs of all business and let them function without interference if, of course, each individual business is not acting immorally.

Community service, providing jobs, et cetera is used only as a way to increase profit and not as an end to itself. Health care, paid vacations along with other fringe benefits were added to attract better employees, not as a public service.

It is a paradox that capitalist operations, who working for profit, will do far more good are beneficial for everyone than where the nation state which claims to work for the common man is a destroyer of men.

In other words, Democracy is a poor unworkable societal system as are all others.


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Interesting post. Thanks for the feedback and many insights.

"It is a paradox that capitalist operations, who working for profit, will do far more good are beneficial for everyone than where the nation state which claims to work for the common man is a destroyer of men."

Posted by James Kluttz on 11/5/2009 3:29:27 PM

Thank you for your article Economic Crisis Yields Idiocy at Wall Street Journal. I read the article in question and agree wholeheartedly with your reaction. Their is one part with which I disagree, however, where you talk about firing off a letter to the editor that won't be published. On November 5, one of mine was published (I would send it to you, but don't have access to the Online Journal).

The Letter was in response to an article about climate change models and pointed out that models of complex phenomena such as climate, the economy and the stock market are worthless and always will be worthless because simplifying assumptions make them so. Maybe there is someone on the editorial staff at the Journal who would like to set things right?


Reply from the Daily Bell:

We were talking about the pre-Internet days. Congratulations on getting your letter published. Maybe it is a little easier now, on-line certainly, with feedback postings ...

Posted by Dave Kress on 11/5/2009 4:23:35 PM

OK. You have trashed WSJ, the journalist, and well they both deserve it. NOW it is time for you to "expose" the monetary elite pulling the media's strings. If we dont have specific names, we dont have targets to attack, and it is well past the time to attack individuals and not opaque institutions or media. If Ron Paul
is Christ who is antichrist?


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Is Ron Paul Christ?

Posted by William on 11/6/2009 12:24:17 AM

And how many years was it that the catholic church denied Galileo? When are you going to wake up to the fact that policy is a function of power, not reason?


Reply from the Daily Bell:

We think we are awake. There have been numerous episodes of freedom throughout history. Not all is power and problems.

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We look forward to hearing your feedback and will respond to you as promptly as possible. Unless you specifically request otherwise, we reserve the right to publish your comments on the Daily Bell website. Please note, harassment, vulgarity and personal attacks are not welcomed.








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