Brad DeLong responds to Larry White's article "What Really Happened" at CATO Unbound by arguing that an understanding of the economic shocks that started the current crisis is not as important as is understanding why the shocks have been propagated into the worst global financial crisis since the Great Depression:
Update: Josh Hendrickson provides further thoughts on this discussion.
Thus we have an impulse — a $2 trillion increase in the default discount from the problems in the mortgage market — but the thing deserving attention is the extraordinary financial accelerator that amplified $2 trillion in actual on-the-ground losses in terms of mortgage payments that will not be made into an extra $17 trillion of lost value because global investors now want to hold less risky portfolios than they wanted two years ago.DeLong's point is a good one that could be leveled against me too, as I have spent most of my time writing about how we got here rather than why the fallout has been so pronounced. I do, though, disagree with DeLong's claim that the Fed had little influence on the housing boom. In evaluating the Fed's impact, he only looks at the dollar value of the Fed's open market purchases (OMP). The absolute dollar size of the OMP, however, is not important. What is important is whether these increases in liquidity were excessive relative to the demand for them. One only needs to look at the negative real federal funds rate that persisted over this period to see that these injections were excessive. (Read here and here for more on this view.) Still, DeLong's main point about the propagation mechanism is a good one. Probably the best analysis on this issue comes from Claudio Borio and others at the BIS. See here for a summary of some of their relevant research.
[...]
Thus my dissatisfaction with Larry White’s piece: he talks only about the impulse, while it is the propagation mechanism — the financial accelerator — that is the important part of the story...
Update: Josh Hendrickson provides further thoughts on this discussion.
The language of "Shock" and "propagation" mechanism is of course a dead giveaway. DeLong is analyzing the issue through the prism of a Slutzky-Frisch econometric version of a neoclassical synthesis model. It is not at all clear that is a useful way to view events. I think Hyman Minsky and the post-Keynesians would say it is not. So deLong's "puzzle" has no grounding outside of a special case economic model that has surely been found seriously wanting by the events of the last decade.
ReplyDeleteHendrickson was interesting.
ReplyDeleteAnd while it is certainly very germane to analyze the narrative of the current financial crisis, I wonder if we are losing sight of a bigger picture here. Since I started studying economics in the late 70s we have seen the S&L and banking crisis of the 80s/early 90s, the bursting Japan bubble, the Asian financial crisis, the tech bubble and now this. So there is clearly something systemic at work in the way global finance operates. This is why the language of "shocks" beloved of the mainstream neoclassicals such as deLong is so misleading. Instability appears endogenous to the way the system works, it is not the result of exogenous shocks.