Deep Blue Group Publications LLC: The slumps that shaped modern finance
What is mankind’s greatest
invention? Ask people this question and they are likely to pick familiar
technologies such as printing or electricity. They are unlikely to suggest an
innovation that is just as significant: the financial contract. Widely disliked
and often considered grubby, it has nonetheless played an indispensable role in
human development for at least 7,000 years.
At its core, finance does just
two simple things. It can act as an economic time machine, helping savers
transport today’s surplus income into the future, or giving borrowers access to
future earnings now. It can also act as a safety net, insuring against floods,
fires or illness. By providing these two kinds of service, a well-tuned
financial system smooths away life’s sharpest ups and downs, making an
uncertain world more predictable. In addition, as investors seek out people and
companies with the best ideas, finance acts as an engine of growth.
Yet finance can also
terrorise. When bubbles burst and markets crash, plans paved years into the
future can be destroyed. As the impact of the crisis of 2008 subsides, leaving
its legacy of unemployment and debt, it is worth asking if the right things are
being done to support what is good about finance, and to remove what is poisonous.
History is a good place to
look for answers. Five devastating slumps—starting with America’s first crash,
in 1792, and ending with the world’s biggest, in 1929—highlight two big trends
in financial evolution. The first is that institutions that enhance people’s
economic lives, such as central banks, deposit insurance and stock exchanges, are not the products of
careful design in calm times, but are cobbled together at the bottom of
financial cliffs. Often what starts out as a post-crisis sticking plaster
becomes a permanent feature of the system. If history is any guide, decisions
taken now will reverberate for decades.
This makes the second trend
more troubling. The response to a crisis follows a familiar pattern. It starts
with blame. New parts of the financial system are vilified: a new type of bank,
investor or asset is identified as the culprit and is then banned or regulated
out of existence. It ends by entrenching public backing for private markets: other
parts of finance deemed essential are given more state support. It is an
approach that seems sensible and reassuring
But it is corrosive. Walter
Bagehot, editor of this newspaper between 1860 and 1877, argued that financial
panics occur when the “blind capital” of the public floods into unwise
speculative investments. Yet well-intentioned reforms have made this problem
worse. The sight of Britons stuffing Icelandic banks with sterling, safe in the
knowledge that £35,000 of deposits were insured by the state, would have made
Bagehot nervous. The fact that professional investors can lean on the state
would have made him angry.
These five crises reveal where
the titans of modern finance—the New York Stock Exchange, the Federal Reserve,
Britain’s giant banks—come from. But they also highlight the way in which
successive reforms have tended to insulate investors from risk, and thus offer
lessons to regulators in the current post-crisis era. Read
more
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