Willem Buiter proves to be provocative once again in the FT:
"I propose the following form of forced lending by banks to non-financial businesses. Every loan that matures during the coming year gets extended/renewed for another year on the same terms as the maturing loan. This applies to both secured and unsecured loans. Likewise every credit line or overdraft facility that expires during the coming year gets extended/renewed for another year. Expiring loans, credit lines or overdraft facilities that had an original maturity of less than a year or more than a year will have the same interest rate and other conditions for the one-year extension/renewal as the original arrangement."
Wow.I must say that I didn't see that on the horizon. Here are my comments:
“Now, from my view as a novelist and philosopher, there’s something irrational at work here. The Human Agency type of explanation would recommend combating the irrational fear and aversion to risk. How to do that?
For Corporate Bonds, I would think tax breaks down the line will help, but now? How about Agencies? Fully back them, or not? Into this mix the auto maker’s bailout fits, which is why it is such a hard call in this crisis. But not to understand the effects of human agency in this crisis, is to resort to the kind of mechanistic explanation that got us into this mess in the first place, although not by itself, by any means”
I wrote that this morning about the flight to Treasuries and the problem of getting people to lend to corporations ( Bonds ).
“But given the capital injections, guarantees and other forms of financial support extended by the state, a lot of banks are liquid and capable of lending. They refuse to do so.
“Where just a year and a half ago, hubris, recklessness, overconfidence and rampant optimism ruled, we now have fear bordering on panic, total lack of confidence, timidity and pessimism verging on institutional clinical depression. The loan officers are brow-beaten and rendered impotent by internal risk controllers. The bean counters are in charge. ‘What you don’t lend, you can’t lose’ is the new micro-prudential ethic. The macroeconomic consequences of this lending paralysis are potentially disastrous. It could turn a global recession into a global depression, with many years of stagnation and cumulative declines of GDP of 10 percent or more.
So, what is to be done? These are extraordinary times that could become desperate times.”
So say you. Also this morning, I read this post on BBC by Peston:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/robertpeston/
Here’s what I wrote:
“I should hope that they are called to account. But, I also want to file this one, unless otherwise informed, under panic selling or deal making. I simply wonder how much, in retrospect, of this kind of panic will turn up.”
I have been collecting posts documenting panic behavior and cases where the fundamentals are being ignored because of the fear and aversion to risk. The evidence is everywhere.
You are correct, this is the opposite of what we just went through going up. Namely, not paying attention to fundamentals and allowing emotion to overly influence our behavior.
What we now need are policies and incentives that can help us combat this fear and aversion, not to fool ourselves, to be view our situation as it really is. All human knowledge and expertise was not lost in this crisis.
Oddly, this is one case where a novelist and philosopher can help. Not me, but someone else, in helping us confront the human agency problems we’re facing in this crisis, not simply throwing numbers around like the quants whose sagacity worked so well in getting us here. We can use the numbers, but they’ll only be as useful as the wisdom of the men and women using them.
Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | November 20th, 2008 at 3:37 am |
I did wonder if you were being provocative. I’ve been thinking about offering incentives, but you know more than I do. Cheers. Don
Posted by: Don the libertarian Democrat | November 20th, 2008 at 7:46 am |
No comments:
Post a Comment