Title: Financial Crisis- I
1Financial Crisis- I
2Pre-Capitalist Finance
- Money lenders loaned their own money
- From ancient times
- Money was loaned to
- Individuals for consumption
- The state, governments, for roads, wars,
exploration - Merchants for trade
- Rise of Banking
- Loans from deposited monies
- Renaissance Italy in 14th Century
- See Shakespeares Merchant of Venice
-
3Capitalist Finance
- Commercial credit finances trade
- Just as before, money borrowed to buy cheap and
sell dear - Industrial credit finances real investment
- Money borrowed to build plants, buy machinery and
raw materials and hire workers - Consumer credit finances personal consumption
- From pawnbrokers through installment plans to
credit cards - Mortgages to buy homes
- State credit Governments borrow and lend
- Borrows to finance expendiures gt tax revenues
- Lends at home and abroad, e.g., foreign aid
4Financial Institutions - 1
- Banks
- Private banks
- Lend to consumers, business governments
- Objective profit
- National banks
- Central Banks regulate money supply, oversee
private banking sector - Development Banks fund investment, consumption,
buy political support - Supranational Banks
- International private banks
- World Bank
5Financial Institutions - 2
- Stock markets
- Buy sell stocks
- Stocks are ownership shares, of various sorts
- e.g., some pay dividends, some dont
- Commodity Markets
- Buy sell commodies, e.g., metals, soy beans,
pork bellies, spot sales futures contracts
(that can be bought and sold - Foreign exchange markets
- Buy sell currencies
- Bond Markets
- Buy sell bonds
6Crises Financial Crises
- Many kinds of crises
- Commercial crises
- Industrial crises
- Financial crises
- All are Interrelated
- Remember discussion of growth what has to
happen - M-C(MP,L) . . . P . . . C-M
- Or, to be more complete
7Interrelationships
- L - M - C(MS)...P(2)...L . L - M - C(MS)
- M - L M - L
- . . . P(1)... C - M .
. . . P . . . - M - MP M - MP
- A rupture at one point circulates to others,
e.g., if money (M) cant be had for investment,
then M-L and M-MP cant take place, then no P(1),
etc.
8Circulation of Crisisin Industrial Circuit - 1
- Crisis of Industrial credit means no M
- No M (no bank credit, no stock sales, etc.), then
no M-L, M-MP, P, C, M - No L (refusal of labor market), or no MP (trade
disruption), then no PC, M - No P, then no C, M
- No C-M, then no revenue, no profit, no
beginning again in new period
9Circulation of Crisisin Industrial Circuit - 2
- Crisis of Commerical Credit means breakdown in
C-M - Expand C-M.
- C sold to wholesalers (who need credit)
- C sold by wholesalers to retailers (who need
credit) - Breakdown in C-M circulates
10Circulation of Crisisin Reproduction of Labor - 1
- No L-M (refusal to enter labor market), then no
wage), more P(2) , Life but no L. (assuming
ability to produce consumer goods) - E.g., frontier, unsubordinated colonials
- No L-M (no jobs), then no wage, less C(MS), more
P(2) , less L. (assuming some MS purchased with
savings) - E.g., downturn, rising unemployment
- In other words a breakdown in the subordination
of life to labor, or in the reproduction of labor.
11Circulation of Crisisin Reproduction of Labor - 2
- Crisis of Consumer Credit
- E.g., default on consumer debt ? repos
- E.g., defaults on mortgages ? foreclosures
- Surge in Consumer defaults
- ? collapse in consumer demand for durables and
housing - Collapse in consumer demand
- ? drop in aggregate demand, drop in both C-M
and in M C(MS) which provokes fall in
investment, employment etc. - Collapse in market for consumer debt
- E.g., mortgages and mortgage-based securities
12Finance Keynesian Models - 1
- All the major components of aggregate demand C,
I, G, X and M depend on finance - C consumer demand, depends on consumer credit
- I investment demand, depends on capital markets
(loans, stocks, bonds, etc.) - G government expenditures, depend upon
borrowing, e.g., in US Treasury Bills - X exports, depend upon commercial credit
- M imports, depend upon commercial credit
13Finance Keynesian Models - 2
- Two-way relationship
- Healthy credit ? growth in C,I,G,X,M.
- Healthy growth ? confident credit markets, but.
- Breakdown in credit ? breakdown in C,I,G,X,M
- Breakdown in C,I,G,X,M ? breakdown in credit
markets. - Monetary Policy
- Central bank affects finance through interest
rates and handling of government debt - Via reserve requirements, discount rate, open
market operations - Regulation of finance part of monetary policy
14Financial Crises Regulation - 1
- Regulations were created because
- the free market was subject to manipulation and
abuse and regularly produced crises that
undermined part or all of the economy. - Examples
- Tulip Mania (1634-1637)
- Bank Panics and Crises of 1792,
1796-1797,1819,1825,1837,1847,1857,1866, 1873,
1884, 1893, 1896, 1907 - Wall Street Crash of 1929.
15Financial Crises Regulation - 2
- Primary purposes of regulation
- To create and maintain confidence in various
financial institutions and their operations - In order to create and maintain useful flows of
money to finance consumption, investment, trade
and government expenditures - To protect those who depend upon credit from
misconduct and exploitation
16Financial Crises Regulation - 3
- Financial regulation includes
- Specification of what actions are legal and
which ones are illegal and - Specification of what institutions can do what
- Broadly this involves laws passed by congress
- Supervision to enforce laws, prosecute violations
of laws - Institutions to supervise, to check to see if
regulations are being adhered to, investigate
violations and prosecute them.
17Financial Crises Regulation - 4
- Regulatory institutions in the US include
- Federal Reserve System (Fed)
- Regulates member banks reserves, etc.
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
- Insures deposits, regulates bank deposit behavior
- US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
- Regulates securities markets (stock, bonds, etc.)
- National Credit Union Administration (NCUA)
- Licences, supervises and regulates credit federal
credit unions - Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
- Oversee and regulate commodities markets, futures
options
18Great Depression Financial Regulation
- Stock Market Crash of 1929
- October 29, 1929 Black Tuesday
- Financial collapse contributed to collapse of
economy more generally - Despite Federal Reserve Act of 1913
- New financial regulations in 1930s
- Farm Credit Administration,
- Federal Securities Act, Glass-Steagall Act
(creates FDIC, lets Fed set max interest rates on
SL, splits commercial and investment banking), - Export-Import Bank created,
- Exchange Stabilization Fund created, Federal
Farm Mortgage Corporation, SEC created, etc.
19Keynesian Era financial Crises
- Comprehensive financial regulation at home meant
virtually no domestic financial crises - Bretton Woods agreement on fixed exchange rates
with IMF as overseer and lender of last resort - UNTIL accelerating inflation and growing gov.
debt, trade deficits and speculative attacks on
the dollar lead to abandonment of Bretton Woods,
volitile flexible exchange rates and negative
interest rates.
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