By William Tucker on 10.8.08 @ 12:08AM
A very good perspective on the current meltdown -- though watch your back.
The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The
Credit Crisis of 2008 and What It Means
By George Soros
(Public Affairs, 208 pages, $22.95)
"All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the
part of every organism to live beyond its income." -- Samuel
Butler
I'm frankly worried not just about the financial meltdown but
about how the increasing polarization in this country. It's not
just that the Internet has allowed people to live only within their
affinity groups. Even the mainstream media are losing their
perspective.
Last week, for example, while every paper in the country had the
bailout settlement across its front page, the New York
Post, New York's only conservative newspaper, ran the story on
page 5. Apparently it was too embarrassing for President Bush and
therefore not worth reporting. Meanwhile, from the Post's
vice presidential debate coverage, you'd think Sarah Palin walked
off with a knockout victory.
Therefore I wasn't at all disappointed the other day when I was
walking out of the library and spotted George Soros's new book on
the "Just Arrived" shelf. Why not give it a try? I grind my teeth
over Soros just as much as any other conservative. After all, he's
the man who helped pass McCain-Feingold to "take the money out of
politics" and then turned around and spent $25 million to defeat
George Bush in 2004. It turned out he only wanted everybody
else's money out of politics. Still, Soros has made billions
playing the international currency markets. He must know
something.
Soros, it turns out, has a very good perspective on the current
meltdown. He says it's a system-wide overextension of credit,
mainly through novel financial instruments and the housing market.
Conservatives may fret that it all comes down to Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac and their subprime mortgages for low-income minorities,
but it was a universal phenomenon.
Martin Feldstein, a former chairman of the Council of
Economic Advisors [under Ronald Reagan], estimated that from 1997
to 2006, consumers drew more than $9 trillion in cash out of their
home equity. A 2005 study led by Alan Greenspan estimated that in
the 2000s, home equity withdrawals were financing 3 percent of all
personal consumption. By the first quarter of 2006, home equity
extraction made up nearly 10 percent of disposal personal
income.
Obviously vast numbers of people were shoehorning money out of
their home values and into present consumption. Something had to
implode somewhere. Sure, Congress might have regulated more. And
sure, Republicans should have steamrolled Barney Frank and borne
down harder on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But basically everyone
took part. I still owe quite a bit on my home equity loan. So now
we're suffering the consequences.
The problem for Republicans is that George W. Bush was in charge
when all this was happening and now the blame is also shifting to
John McCain. Barack Obama, who doesn't know anything more about
finance than you or I, will be the beneficiary. Who knows, he may
even choose George Soros as chairman of his Council of Economic
Advisers.
SO WHAT WILL Soros advise? His criticism of Bush is more political
than economic. We never should have gone into Iraq -- it's costing
too much and the War on Terror is a phony. Of course all that is a
little outdated. With Iraq stabilizing and the Taliban renouncing
al Qaeda in Afghanistan, it appears George Bush may have drawn a
winning hand after all.
Soros's overall view of America's situation in the world,
however, extends far beyond Iraq and is not so easily dismissed.
Like many other market watchers (James Grant of Grant's
Interest Rate Observer, for instance), Soros believes America
is essentially living off the reputation of the dollar and is
headed for a fall. The only reason the U.S. Treasury will be able
to come up with $700 billion to bail out the banks is that China
will lend us the money. But countries are getting tired of
accepting a currency that is worth less and less. At some point
there is going to be a run on the dollar and every American could
lose a significant portions of his wealth overnight. George Soros,
on the other hand, will do well. He's shorting the dollar.
Much of this book is spent explaining Soros's idea of
"reflexivity." This is one of those "theories of everything" that
your grandfather forces on you at Thanksgiving. Like every liberal
who ever breathed, Soros disputes Adam Smith's economics. Markets
do not tend toward equilibrium, he says. Instead they tend toward
disequilibrium and can fall apart altogether. The reason, says
Soros, is that while information is imperfect, people often act on
this wrong information, making the situation worse.
The idea that classical economics depends on perfect information
was discredited long ago by Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and
the Austrian school. They argued that markets are a system for
distributing information, with prices a search process by
which players use their imperfect knowledge to discover true value.
Liberal critics, on the other hand, want to short-circuit the
process, saying that since markets are imperfect, governments must
intervene to set them right.
Soros is at least modest honest enough to admit that government
regulators don't have perfect knowledge either. Still, he somehow
works around this, saying it's important to have them in the mix
anyway.
[C]ontrary to market fundamentalist beliefs, the
stability of financial markets is not assured; it has to be
actively maintained by the authorities.
Soros's countertheory -- "reflexivity" -- actually seems to be
based more on his own experience than objective reality.
Reflexivity says that classical theory doesn't work because the
players themselves can change reality, even while they are relying
on imperfect information. This only makes things more unstable.
Soros speaks from experience. In the early 1990s, he
single-handedly destroyed the Thai baht, bringing down the
governments of Prime Minister General Chavalit Yongchaiyudh and
President Suharto of Indonesia. The result was rising anti-Western
sentiment and the strengthening of Islamic separatist groups.
Whereas the Austrian School posits there is economic reality,
reflexivity ends up saying that economics is just history and
nothing can be predicted with certainty. Those most experienced in
reading the animal entrails, however, can still make a lot of
money. (Soros's son, who has also written his own book, reports
that the real way his father judges investments is by how much pain
they create in his back.)
Right now Soros recommends going short on the American dollar
and long on China, India, and the Persian Gulf oil sheikdoms.
"Saturday Night Live" satirized him for this vulture position last
week but it probably isn't a bad bet. Americans must recognize we
are going through our inheritance by ignoring technologies such as
nuclear energy and living off foreign oil.
On the other hand, just think, this guy could end up chief
financial officer of a Barack Obama administration. Imagine that,
the Secretary of the Treasury trying to reduce the deficit by
speculating against the U.S. dollar. That should be
interesting.
topics:
John McCain, Barack Obama, Sarah Palin, Mainstream Media, Economics, Islam, Iraq, Energy, Oil