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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: The Minsky Moment. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

The Minsky Moment
by noteworthy at 8:24 pm EST, Jan 31, 2008

If you still haven't read The Next Bubble, you might try this article. Minsky's theory of the market seems broadly consistent with Janszen's, but his regulatory remedy sounds unfortunately similar to Mihm's, and therefore hopeless. Even more unfortunately, he is dead, and therefore unable to defend himself or revise his prescription for the bubble of the moment.

Twenty-five years ago, when most economists were extolling the virtues of financial deregulation and innovation, a maverick named Hyman P. Minsky maintained a more negative view of Wall Street; in fact, he noted that bankers, traders, and other financiers periodically played the role of arsonists, setting the entire economy ablaze. Wall Street encouraged businesses and individuals to take on too much risk, he believed, generating ruinous boom-and-bust cycles. The only way to break this pattern was for the government to step in and regulate the moneymen.

Many of Minsky’s colleagues regarded his “financial-instability hypothesis,” which he first developed in the nineteen-sixties, as radical, if not crackpot. Today, with the subprime crisis seemingly on the verge of metamorphosing into a recession, references to it have become commonplace on financial Web sites and in the reports of Wall Street analysts. Minsky’s hypothesis is well worth revisiting. In trying to revive the economy, President Bush and the House have already agreed on the outlines of a “stimulus package,” but the first stage in curing any malady is making a correct diagnosis.

...

There are basically five stages in Minsky’s model of the credit cycle: displacement, boom, euphoria, profit taking, and panic.

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You might think that the best solution is to prevent manias from developing at all, but ... the greatest need is for intellectual reappraisal, and a good place to begin is with a statement from a paper co-authored by Minsky that “apt intervention and institutional structures are necessary for market economies to be successful.” Rather than waging old debates about tax cuts versus spending increases, policymakers ought to be discussing how to reform the financial system so that it serves the rest of the economy, instead of feeding off it and destabilizing it.


 
 
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