Thursday, October 9, 2008

Where We're Going

Today, on Paul Krugman's blog, I posted the following comment:

  • 87.

    When investors see a concerted effort by governments to deal with this crisis in a global, and guaranteed government manner,i.e, with governments pledging whatever resources are necessary to deal with this crisis, the situation will stabilize and improve. What that means for free market economics is going to be a huge issue going forward, since it isn’t clear that investors actually believe in it.

    — Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat

Here's from Brad DeLong's blog:

"Barry Eichengreen and Richard Baldwin: Rescuing our jobs and savings: What G7/8 leaders can do to solve the global credit crisis: Without rapid and coordinated action by G7/8 leaders, this financial crisis could turn into a jobs crisis, a pension crisis and much more. This column introduces a collection of essays by leading economists on what the G7/8 leaders should do this weekend. The dozen essays present a remarkable consensus on a few points: we need immediate, coordinated global action that includes recapitalisation of the banks."

And here's Gordon Brown via Calculated Risk:

"But because this is a global problem, it requires a global solution. Indeed this now moves to a global stage with a range of international meetings starting this week with the G7 and the IMF and, we propose, culminating in a leaders meeting in which we must lay down the principles and the new policies for restructuring our banking and financial system all around the globe.

... I believe through wider European co-operation and also co-ordination among the leading economies, there are four broad steps we must now all take to restore our international financial system.

First, every bank in every country must meet capital requirements that ensure confidence. Just as in the UK we have made at least £50 billion of new capital available, so other countries where banks have insufficient capital will need to take measures to address this. Only strong and solid banks will be able to serve the global economy.

Secondly, short-term liquidity is simply a means of keeping the system going. What really matters for the future is to open the money markets that have been closed for medium-term funding from the private sector. ...

Thirdly, we must have stronger international rules for transparency, disclosure and the highest standards of conduct. ...

And fourthly, national systems of supervision are simply inadequate to cope with the huge cross-continental flows of capital in this new, ever more interdependent world. ..."

And Bob McTeer gave this as his reason for advocating a rate cut
:

"Wednesday morning it announced a half-point cut in the federal funds and discount rates coordinated with the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and several others. In a posting in my other blog Tuesday, I urged the Fed to do exactly what it did, not so much because it would do much good in the United States, which has already reduced rates substantially, but because it would give the E.C.B. cover to cut its rate."

It's very clear where this crisis is leading. What's less clear is what it means for our economies or economics in the future.

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