Monday, September 21, 2009

An Indictment of the Economic Failure

Here is an excellent post by Dwight Furrow that looks at the moral underpinnings of the financial collapse.

The following is just the opening bit of this posting. Read this, then go read the whole post:
Since the beginning of our economic meltdown, economists from George Soros to Richard Posner to Brad Delong have been offering explanations for how we got here. Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman argued recently that the cause of our financial crisis can be traced all the way back to Ronald Reagan’s repeal of legislation regulating the mortgage industry.

I am not an economist so I don’t have a view on who is correct. But I think Paul Krugman is at least aiming in the right direction. The sainted Ronald Reagan surely bears some responsibility but in a more profound sense than having short-circuited a regulation. He was a key player in a “moral” revolution responsible for turning greed into a virtue, a revolution that was carried out by many actors, some famous and some obscure.

The ethos of this “moral” revolution was best captured by the Gordon Gekko character (played by Michael Douglas) in the film Wall St:
The point is, ladies and gentleman, that greed — for lack of a better word — is good. Greed is right. Greed works. Greed clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit.Greed, in all of its forms — greed for life, for money, for love, knowledge — has marked the upward surge of mankind.
Economic explanations can only go so far in accounting for the wholesale acceptance of something as implausible as the sentiments mouthed by Gekko. One of the above mentioned economists may have the economics right. But why did virtually an entire culture come to believe that excessive debt, whiz-bang investment instruments, lax regulation, minimal taxes, and magical thinking about market equilibria were sustainable, and why did these beliefs persist despite evidence to the contrary?

Economics tells only part of the story; we need to tell a moral tale as well.

The belief that greed is good is the real toxic asset that underlies the persistence of bad economic policies. Of course, greed is nothing new to the human condition. All of us are greedy much of the time, and I doubt that human desires had suddenly became more powerful in the generations coming of age since the early 1980’s. What changed? Not religious belief which has been remarkably persistent over the last few decades, suffering only modest declines in recent years. What changed is the loss of moral sensibilities that have traditionally constrained and competed with greed—a sense of responsibility, community, and mutual dependence that encourages us to recognize limitations on our individual aspirations. The problem with the mantra that “greed is good” is not that it promotes excessive desire. The problem is that it makes invisible the tools we have to restrain that excess. Re-conceiving greed as a virtue gives everyone an incentive to write out of existence those human capacities that constrain greed.

Desire inflation is, and should be, an important human motivation. The Gekko character is not wrong in viewing greed as a motive that encourages growth. But it is not a moral virtue.

Who was responsible for this revaluation of values? Ronald Reagan was a particularly glib and careless proponent; but not its source. I would point to three factors:

1. A modern conservative movement willing to abdicate its principles;

2. A liberal movement unable to articulate a credible, alternative political morality;

3. And a public willing to believe in magical ponies. (Costless solutions)

I've highlighted the last bit in bold because it property spreads the responsibility far and wide. There's more to Furrow's critique, go read the original posting.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Here is the quote I was looking for a while back when I wrote a post on this subject:

Thoughts From Roger Babson
A character standard is far more important than ever a gold standard. The success of all economic systems is still dependent upon both righteous leaders and righteous people. In the last analysis, our national future depends upon our national character-that is, whether it is spiritually or materially minded.

RYviewpoint said...

Thomas: I fully agree.

The word "credit" comes from credere, to believe. In business you were extended credit because your were honourable and your creditors believed you were good for the debt.

I remember reading that Chinese firms could never compete with Western corporations because Oriental business trust was limited to "the family" whereas the Western corporation allowed strangers to be stock holders relying on a legal system to ensure their rights in the corporation. So Western corporations have a competitive advantage because they can grow larger.

A financial crisis cuts deep because it breaks that trust. My father who died last year went to the grave holding dear to two things he learned during his life.

First, he refused to ever buy any Japanese auto because he learned to hate the Japanese for WWII which cost him 3 years in the Pacific to fight.

Second, his childhood memories of the Great Depression meant that he never trusted the stock market and refused to invest.

This current catastrophe has repercussions because many people are like my father. They will not trust because the system failed them. The ethos of "government is bad" and "trust business to look after itself" meant that we had the corruption of the Enrons, the WorldComs, the Adelphias, etc. and then we have the corruption of the Wall Street banks who over-leveraged and took on risk that collapsed the world economy.

There is a need for honest government, strong government, that regulates to keep the crooks from getting their hands on power. The economists and the libertarians who deny social ties and insist everybody is only out for themselves have created this mess with their pathetic philosophy. Ultimately we are only as strong as our social network. If we don't act with honour and have good character, then the social bonds are destroyed and we sink into Hobbes' "war of all against all".