brian.holmes@aliceadsl.fr on Tue, 12 Jun 2012 15:03:44 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Nightmare or Opening? the Soros perspective |
Frederic Janssens wrote me to say that a recent article by George Soros was the best thing he had read about the Euro crisis. He's right, it's quite a good read. I am going to pick out the key paragraphs and offer some comments. At the end there is a technical bit I do not understand, and if anyone else has an explanation it would be great! The whole text is here: http://tinyurl.com/soros-on-euro Soros starts out with his main idea as a financier: that market participants are both fallible and self-reflexive. They make mistakes and they readjust their moves according to their perceptions of the boomerang effects that they and other participants have had on market dynamics. Intervene, observe, imagine what will happen next and intervene again. Soros has been proposing this for years. His obvious and intuitive approach flies in the face of all of the neoclassical market theory promoted by Hayek, Friedman and their ilk: [snip] "Social events... have thinking participants who have a will of their own. They are not detached observers but engaged decision makers whose decisions greatly influence the course of events. Therefore the events do not constitute an independent criterion by which participants can decide whether their views are valid... Economics, which became the most influential of the social sciences, sought to remove this handicap by taking an axiomatic approach similar to Euclid's geometry. But Euclid's axioms closely resembled reality while the theory of rational expectations and the efficient market hypothesis became far removed from it... "I am not well qualified to criticize the theory of rational expectations and the efficient market hypothesis because as a market participant I considered them so unrealistic that I never bothered to study them. That is an indictment in itself but I shall leave a detailed critique of these theories to others." [snip] Austrian neoclassical economics is - or was? - an amazing phenomenon. We have - or had? - an academic theory of self-regulating markets (naturally tending toward efficient allocation of goods and price equilibrium) which serves - or served? - only to convince politicians and regulators that everything was fine. Economic actors had no reason to even learn these theories. Soros was far from alone in undrstanding this. Everyone directly involved with the markets necessarily understood this. Alan Greeenspan, who only recently claimed there was a "flaw in his theory," was continuously involved with gigantic reflexive actions to stave off each successive financial collapse, from the Mexican loan crisis of 1982, to the 1987 Black Monday which was the prototypical computerized trading crisis, to the Tequila Crisis of 1994 and the far bigger 1997 Asian-Russian-Latin American crisis, to the dot-com bust in 2000. Each time he played his role by pumping huge amounts of federal and private dollars into the maelstrom. This gave rise to the belief in a Washington-based "Plunge Protection Team" continuously operating to make the financial system viable. More pertinently, it gave rise to the doctrine of "too big to fail." So in other words, the very people whose authority rested on the efficient-markets and equilibrium theories were constantly intervening self-reflexively to create the appearance of the validity of those theories. And that's still going on today even though the theories have been discredited by the facts. I think the higher level academic economists should be divested of their positions and some should be thrown in jail for profiting off their obvious lies. For a good example, see Charles Ferguson's movie "Inside Job" and in particular, its treatment of an academic and former governor of the Fed named Frederic Mishkin (for more on this controversy check http://tinyurl.com/Mishkins-reply and http://tinyurl.com/Fergusons-counter). Soros continues: [snip] "Among other things, I developed a model of a boom-bust process or bubble which is endogenous to financial markets, not the result of external shocks. According to my theory, financial bubbles are not a purely psychological phenomenon. They have two components: a trend that prevails in reality and a misinterpretation of that trend. A bubble can develop when the feedback is initially positive in the sense that both the trend and its biased interpretation are mutually reinforced. Eventually the gap between the trend and its biased interpretation grows so wide that it becomes unsustainable. After a twilight period both the bias and the trend are reversed and reinforce each other in the opposite direction. Bubbles are usually asymmetric in shape: booms develop slowly but the bust tends to be sudden and devastating. That is due to the use of leverage: price declines precipitate the forced liquidation of leveraged positions. "Well-formed financial bubbles always follow this pattern but the magnitude and duration of each phase is unpredictable. Moreover the process can be aborted at any stage so that well-formed financial bubbles occur rather infrequently." [snip] The neoclassical theories postulate a closed system, where production increases along a predictable growth-curve and all monetary inputs to the world market cancel each other out around a point of equilibrium that defines the proper price of everything. That's a negative or self-correcting feedback model which can absorb lots of data but does not allow for any modeling of systemic change. The Soros approach is a second-order cybernetic model based on both positive and negative feedback. This is great for the short-term understanding of bubbles: everyone involved in the financial markets uses such models. They constantly "make" the market (establishing an advantageous price through major placements of capital) and then they "pull out" of the market just when they calculate that its trend is about to reverse. However, when political regulation gets involved, then something else comes in. This is the possibility of systemic change. By using their bubble models financiers profit from every successive crisis; and then the Treasury departments come in and clean up the mess. Soros is highly aware that the structure of market interactions is set by more-or-less arbitrary and fallible political decisions, which provide both the underlying parameters for market activities, and the more-or-less predictable forms of intervention to stave off market failure. So he goes on: [snip] "According to my theory financial markets may just as soon produce bubbles as tend toward equilibrium. Since bubbles disrupt financial markets, history has been punctuated by financial crises. Each crisis provoked a regulatory response. That is how central banking and financial regulations have evolved, in step with the markets themselves. Bubbles occur only intermittently but the interplay between markets and regulators is ongoing. Since both market participants and regulators act on the basis of imperfect knowledge the interplay between them is reflexive. Moreover reflexivity and fallibility are not confined to the financial markets; they also characterize other spheres of social life, particularly politics. Indeed, in light of the ongoing interaction between markets and regulators it is quite misleading to study financial markets in isolation. Behind the invisible hand of the market lies the visible hand of politics. Instead of pursuing timeless laws and models we ought to study events in their time bound context." [snip] Great, I agree. Except when he says "politics," it's a bit too vague. Maybe he should say "statecraft" and "electioneering," so as to get at the interplay between the kinds of closed-room decisions made by career politicians and top functionaries, on the one hand, and the need to justify those decisions in the public popularity contest of the news and the elections, on the other. Obviously the process of justification and vote-courting has some reflexive influence on the regulatory actions. That's an important part of the "time bound context" in my view. Anyway, he's totally right that mathematical laws do not have much to do with it. Models of timeless natural laws are useless in human affairs. On the other hands, the attempt to build dynamic models, to adjust them en route and then abandon them when they don't work any more, has everything to do with reflexive intervention. Not only for financiers but also for politicians and even for citizens. Let's have a look at the Soros view of the political model known as the EU single currency: [snip] "The Maastricht Treaty was fundamentally flawed, demonstrating the fallibility of the authorities. Its main weakness was well known to its architects: it established a monetary union without a political union. The architects believed however, that when the need arose the political will could be generated to take the necessary steps towards a political union. "But the euro also had some other defects of which the architects were unaware and which are not fully understood even today. In retrospect it is now clear that the main source of trouble is that the member states of the euro have surrendered to the European Central Bank their rights to create fiat money. They did not realize what that entails -- and neither did the European authorities. When the euro was introduced the regulators allowed banks to buy unlimited amounts of government bonds without setting aside any equity capital; and the central bank accepted all government bonds at its discount window on equal terms. Commercial banks found it advantageous to accumulate the bonds of the weaker euro members in order to earn a few extra basis points. That is what caused interest rates to converge which in turn caused competitiveness to diverge. Germany, struggling with the burdens of reunification, undertook structural reforms and became more competitive. Other countries enjoyed housing and consumption booms on the back of cheap credit, making them less competitive. Then came the crash of 2008 which created conditions that were far removed from those prescribed by the Maastricht Treaty. Many governments had to shift bank liabilities on to their own balance sheets and engage in massive deficit spending. These countries found themselves in the position of a third world country that had become heavily indebted in a currency that it did not control. Due to the divergence in economic performance Europe became divided between creditor and debtor countries... "It took some time for the financial markets to discover that government bonds which had been considered riskless are subject to speculative attack and may actually default; but when they did, risk premiums rose dramatically. This rendered commercial banks whose balance sheets were loaded with those bonds potentially insolvent. And that constituted the two main components of the problem confronting us today: a sovereign debt crisis and a banking crisis which are closely interlinked." [snip] The euro acts (as Keith Hart observed) somewhat like a gold standard, imposing economic discipline on those who use it. You can't just print money when you need it (as with fiat currencies) and eventually, accounts have to balance. This discipline is relaxed by the simple fact of emitting bonds, or in other words, asking for loans: which was done by practically everyone, both private and public, especially on the edges of Europe. And of course, the people used their credit cards to keep up with the Joneses. People everywhere refinanced their houses and the result of all that borrowing was the overleveraged banking system that we have before our eyes. Soros is obviously right to point out that Germany's structural reforms (such as the Hartz IV welfare cuts, undertaken by the SPD under the increasingly strict and more-or-less neoclassical guidance of the ordo-liberal economists who are directly behind Merkel) was a sharp exception to this pattern of easy credit. (To understand what German neoliberalism looks like, check this: http://tinyurl.com/ordoliberalism). But the only reason the reforms worked was because Germany could sell its disciplined industrial production to debtor countries, whose governments and major businesses bought infrastructure products by megacorporations like Siemens while their citizens bought cars from Volkswagen and BMW and luxury household fixtures from hundreds of smaller companies, all with borrowed money. The inability of small borrowers to pay their loans provoked the crisis of confidence in sovereign bonds: because when citizens go broke there are no tax revenues for their governments, and then countries cannot pay the interest on the bonds they took out in order to pay welfare entitlements and float showy new projects in order to gain popularity for reelection. It is at this point that the financial markets exert discipline by refusing to pay for more bond issues. And then ordo-liberal Germany exerts further discipline by refusing any massive bailout using central-bank fiat money. So this is the political part of the crisis. Why does the German government under Merkel do this? Because it wants to maintain a situation which is currently working very well for the German economy, whose China business is also booming. Germany has cornered high-end productive technology in Europe and it is producing prosperity for lots of people. Exerting financial discipline in hopes of prolonging this prosperity is now a ticket for reelection. The knot is knotted. It is still quite possible that what will emerge from all this, under the pressure of a crisis situation, is a fiscal union of Europe with a central bank much more like the American Fed and very tight economic rules that force the so-called "peripheral" countries to bring spending in line with production. The crisis would then be a Hegelian "ruse of history" prompting further progress toward the rationalization of government and the integration of a European super-state, able to cooperate with the other continental-sized states in a world federation. Obviously the US and, to a lesser degree, China, are pushing very hard for this solution, along with the IMF and the OECD and other proto-institutions of world government. Then you would have institutionalized American capitalism everywhere, no pretence of democracy or equality, basically a rule of the bourgeoisie with a strong police force protecting a shrunken but still important middle class against lots of unemployed and marginalized people, according to the demands a very impressive corporate-financial oligarchy on a sure path to ecological suicide. Does that sound nice? It would be awful. And it's entirely possible. But let's check another scenario. The second most likely possibility, in my view and perhaps that of Soros too, is that financial "discipline" will be exerted in the typical, irrational, deflating-bubble mode that is currently the rule, where large market-making actors actually precipitate crises where they can profit from the downside, then pull out with various forms of short-selling and derivative-based profits, which they think they can reinvest in China, America, Russia, Brazil, Canada, India, South Africa, etc. In this case we would get a full-fledged Great Depression due to a major collapse in world demand, and the productive South would have to make attempts to break away from its dependence on the North as a market for its products. This would be great for the South by the way, and most of the southern countries have done fairly well in the last four years. In Europe, numerous countries would split from the Euro and probably a Core Europe would remain. Here the question would be whether self-protective authoritarian fascism or some more redistributive, commons-oriented social-democratic alternative gets the upper hand. In the US you would have the same question, indeed we already see its outlines. So let's look further. In the Great Depression scenario, the police-state/postmodern fascist alternative is not sure to win. Borders would clearly be sealed to the flow of people (check out the trends in the US once again) but inside the borders it is not clear what would happen. It takes a lot of nationalism to support a police state and that nationalism is in limited supply. In the US much of it has already been spent on the failed Global Wars on Terror. The Great Depression that I heard about when I was a kid lead to an (admittedly stunted) version of social democracy. Obama has been our Herbert Hoover so far, but we could come up with something more like FDR, or better yet, change the system entirely through a new kind of widespread political engagement prefigured by the Occupy movement. European countries have an equal or better chance at this. All it will take, in both regions, is a total breakdown of the current system in order to find out what happens next. And that is essentially what Soros is predicting. Well, actually, he is predicting a "lost decade" for Europe comparable to the "lost decade" of Latin America in the 1980s. However, I think he is underestimating the real effects of a serious and prolonged decline in the demand of the world's biggest consumer market. This is the part I don't understand though: the precise mechanism of the breakdown which Soros thinks will happen (if it happens) in the next three months or so: [snip] "At the onset of the crisis a breakup of the euro was inconceivable: the assets and liabilities denominated in a common currency were so intermingled that a breakup would have led to an uncontrollable meltdown. But as the crisis progressed the financial system has been progressively reordered along national lines. This trend has gathered momentum in recent months. The Long Term Refinancing Operation (LTRO) undertaken by the European Central Bank enabled Spanish and Italian banks to engage in a very profitable and low risk arbitrage by buying the bonds of their own countries. And other investors have been actively divesting themselves of the sovereign debt of the periphery countries. "If this continued for a few more years a break-up of the euro would become possible without a meltdown -- the omelet could be unscrambled -- but it would leave the central banks of the creditor countries with large claims against the central banks of the debtor countries which would be difficult to collect. This is due to an arcane problem in the euro clearing system called Target2. In contrast to the clearing system of the Federal Reserve, which is settled annually, Target2 accumulates the imbalances. This did not create a problem as long as the interbank system was functioning because the banks settled the imbalances themselves through the interbank market. But the interbank market has not functioned properly since 2007 and the banks relied increasingly on the Target system. And since the summer of 2011 there has been increasing capital flight from the weaker countries. So the imbalances grew exponentially. By the end of March this year the Bundesbank had claims of some 660 billion euros against the central banks of the periphery countries." [snip] I don't get how the interbank market worked before 2007. What I do get is that the German Bundesbank is now hugely exposed to the sovereign default risk of the weaker Eurozone countries, who have gradually had to buy up the debt of their private banks and have financed this debt-buying activity through bond issues and EU emergency loans that lead back to Germany. The Bundesbank (and the private banking interests it represents and incarnates) wants to collect on this debt, but at the same time, they don't want to throw good money after bad. They want the proper rules, but because of their Hayeckian ordoliberal approach they can only suggest belt-tightening and austerity which provokes a severe and spreading political crisis in the endebted states. The break-up scenario would then arise from this insistence on restoring equilibrium. So we are back to where we started: the insufficiency of neoclassical economics in the face of complex social dynamics in open, second-order systems. In fact, this has ever been the problem of capitalism, not since Adam Smith but since the days of Malthus and Ricardo. To understand that genealogy, and a lot of other things, I can only recommend rereading my favorite anthropology book, Polanyi's Great Transformation. Where did all this come from? Where are we now? What's gonna happen? How to model the probabilities? How to prepare for the different scenarios? Once again, these are the questions I would like to raise in an intensive one-week seminar, "Three Crises: 30s-70s-Today," which is gonna happen next week in Berlin. The new homepage is here (just scroll down a little): http://occupybb7.org/node Hope to see you and anyway, good luck to all, Brian -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web.com ? 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