Money and Finance
A Series of Unfortunate Events: Common Sequencing Patterns in Financial Crises - By Carmen Reinhart
ABSTRACT
We document that the global scope and depth of the crisis the began with the collapse of the subprime mortgage market in the summer of 2007 is unprecedented in the post World War II era and, as such, the most relevant comparison benchmark is the Great Depression (or the Great Contraction, as dubbed by Friedman and Schwartz, 1963) of the 1930s. Some of the similarities between these two global episodes are examined but the analysis of the aftermath of severe financial crises is extended to also include the most severe post-WWII crises as well. As to the causes of these great crises, we focus on those factors that are common across time and geography. We discriminate between root causes of the crises, recurring crises symptoms, and common features (such as misguided financial regulation or inadequate supervision) which serve as amplifiers of the boom-bust cycle. There are recurring temporal patterns in the boom-bust cycle and their broad sequencing is analyzed.
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Deleveraging, What Deleveraging? - The 16th Geneva Report On The World Economy
Link to report: Deleveraging, What Deleveraging? It is widely accepted that high levels of debt (of various forms) have played a central role in the 2008-09 global financial crisis, the 2010-12 euro crisis and many previous crisis episodes. The adverse...
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They Did Their Homework (800 Years Of It)
Found via Simoleon Sense. THE advertisement warns of speculative financial bubbles. It mocks a group of gullible Frenchmen seduced into a silly, 18th-century investment scheme, noting that the modern shareholder, armed with superior information, can avoid...
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Carmen M. Reinhart: Eight Hundred Years Of Financial Folly
The economics profession has an unfortunate tendency to view recent experience in the narrow window provided by standard datasets. With a few notable exceptions, cross-country empirical studies of financial crises typically begin in 1980 and are limited...
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A Crisis Of Understanding - By Robert J. Shiller
Found via Simoleon Sense. Few economists predicted the current economic crisis, and there is little agreement among them about its ultimate causes. So, not surprisingly, economists are not in a good position to forecast how quickly it will end, either....
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Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Credit Crises Generally Require Multi-year Adjustments
There are some good graphs and quotes from Ken Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart’s book in the latest Hussman piece linked below. Some things in this piece reminded me of something Howard Marks wrote in his memo entitled The Long View: “In my opinion, there...
Money and Finance