In
this paper the author attempts an analysis of the current
financial/economic crisis that is wider ranging and more fundamental
than he has been able to find. He discusses alternatives to the
financial bailouts and shows how the crisis could have been dealt with
more efficiently and at little cost to taxpayers. Finally, the author
discusses fundamental reforms that would reduce the volatility of
financial markets and increase their efficiency. He reviews some social
science literature that views the current crisis as an episode in the
secular decline of the United States and more generally of the Western
Democracies. The timidity of current reforms, which is striking when
compared to those that followed the excesses of the Gilded Age and the
Great Depression, can be understood in this framework. The author
concludes that the industrialized world is now dominated by a
"financial-political complex" that maximizes speculative profits in good
times and socializes losses in times of crisis.
As seen on:economics-ejournal.org
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