By Brandon Crocker on 3.11.09 @ 6:05AM
Considering the subject and the time at which it appears, not to
mention its star author, Niall Ferguson's new book is a huge
disappointment.
The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the
World
By Niall Ferguson
(The Penguin Press, 432 pages, $29.95)
With the way the world has been turned upside down lately with
financial calamity, Niall Ferguson and his publishers at the
Penguin Press hit a home run with the release of The Ascent
of Money. Ferguson is an accomplished writer and historian,
a professor of history at Harvard, and author of The House of
Rothschild. His latest effort, however, is a big
disappointment.
The book is often disjointed, with a blend of scant overviews and
more in-depth portrayals of selective significant events, such as
the John Law's ill-fated experiment with inflating France's money
supply with bank notes in the early 18th century, and the S&L
Crisis of the early 1990s in the United States, as well as the
insignificant, such as the workings of modern British loan shark
Gerard Law (complete with photo). If the structure has the feel
of a book designed around a British television mini-series,
that's because it is. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/ascentofmoney/) The
presentation is usually fine, factually (except for his brief
discussion of Roman Imperial coinage, which is completely wrong).
But the writing is not particularly engaging or instructive.
Ferguson does make some good points. For instance, in his
discussion of Spain's exploitation of the silver and gold of the
New World, he makes clear the distinction between wealth and
money. Silver and gold from the New World did not make Spain a
wealthy country, as silver and gold do not produce goods and
services. What Spain's new store of money achieved was merely
some modest inflation in Europe, but not any lasting wealth. The
most valuable part of Ferguson's book, however, is the following
quote from Chilean economist José Piñera in discussing the rise
of the welfare state (out of the concept of insurance):
"What had begun as a system of large-scale insurance had simply
become a system of taxation, with today's contributions being
used to pay today's benefits, rather than to accumulate a fund
for future use. This 'pay as you go' approach had replaced the
principle of thrift with the practice of entitlement…[But this
approach] is rooted in a false conception of how human beings
behave. It destroys, at the individual level, the link between
contributions and benefits. In other words, between effort and
reward. Wherever that happens on a massive scale and for a long
period of time, the final result is disaster."
Unfortunately, we in the United States seem determined not to
heed Piñera's warning.
Ferguson finished writing this book in May of 2008 and so it does
not discuss the most recent traumatic events in the U.S. and
world financial markets. The real lessons, however, as
demonstrated in the financial history of the world, are simple:
leverage equals risk, and increasing the level of leverage
throughout the financial system will eventually lead to collapse
as people and institutions inevitably at some point make bad
decisions and/or succumb to various frauds. Financial crises are
an on-going fact of life, but their severity can be contained
through appropriate regulation and governing authorities and
central banks working to keep leverage in the system at moderate
levels, and stepping in to provide liquidity when necessary to
stem financial panic. In the present situation, we saw a failure
on all fronts: government allowed greater leverage (which many
financial firms injudiciously used), did not regulate the new
credit default swap market, and actually mandated poor lending
practices to allow more low-income homeowners, while executives
and risk managers throughout the industry failed to recognize the
abuses in the mortgage markets and the resultant degraded quality
of mortgage-backed securities.
Being based on leverage, the financial industry is susceptible to
collapse as a result of lost confidence and panic, even if the
better part of the participants are in fine shape -- just as a
wild fire starting in dry grass can take out huge areas of
forests and homes. As Jimmy Stewart explained to his panicked
depositors in the Bailey Building and Loan in It's a
Wonderful Life, he didn't keep their deposits in a vault,
but rather they were loaned out, with only a fraction held in
reserve to meet withdrawals. New Deal reforms such as the FDIC
were meant to give greater confidence to depositors to reduce
future bank runs. But the panic caused by the collapse of Bear
Sterns and Lehman Brothers and the exposure of the weakness
behind prevalent items on bank balance sheets such as
questionable mortgage backed securities (erroneously given high
credit ratings by the rating agencies), which were in turn backed
by insurance policies (credit default swaps) that were
inadequately underwritten and which the issuers (like AIG) had no
hopes to make good on in the event of large defaults, was all too
much for the existing circuit breakers. The level of truly
"toxic" assets in the system is likely significantly less than
indicated by current depressed bank stock prices. But the complex
nature of these assets makes their valuation hard to discern.
Uncertainty breeds fear, and fear destroys the value of
credit-based financial assets.
Unlike any other industry, financial services are the foundation
on which our economy rests. It might hurt if the auto industry
suffers bankruptcies, but a meltdown of the financial system
would ravage all sectors of the economy. Fortunately, the Federal
Reserve learned the lessons of the 1930s and acted appropriately
to stem the panic. The continued reaction of politicians in
Washington, however, has been muddled and mangled in both
conception and execution. That should come as no surprise.
Ferguson takes us through a journey of bond markets and stock
markets and insurance and mortgages. But he barely talks about
commercial paper, lines of credit for business working capital,
commercial construction lending, and other aspects of the
financial services industry that make the modern economy run.
Even more stunning, Ferguson wholly neglects the area of consumer
credit, and the extension of consumer credit not just from
financial institutions, but from merchants themselves, that
ignited the industrial revolution in the United States in the
19th century and has been a large driver of economic activity
ever since all over the world. These things may be less sexy than
stocks and bonds and hedge funds, but by virtually ignoring them,
and instead focusing on market bubbles, manipulations, and the
trading strategies of George Soros, Ferguson helps to encourage
the view held by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus
that the financial services industry is not part of the "real
economy."
To punctuate the uselessness of The Ascent of Money,
Ferguson spends his final dozen or so pages talking about
understanding financial history in Darwinian evolutionary terms.
So he assaults the reader with absurdities like "the financial
services sector appears to have passed through a twenty-year
Cambrian explosion, with existing species flourishing and new
species increasing in number" or "there remains considerable
biodiversity" in retail and commercial banking. There is a far
better way to explain the history of financial markets and
products than through biology. A serious discussion of the
subject would be based on micro and macroeconomics.
Unfortunately, few readers of The Ascent of Money will
come away with any greater understanding of how the banking
system works or the role finance plays in the modern economy.
Save your time and money for better uses.