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AFTER THE SUBPRIME MORTGAGE CRISIS: WHAT STRATEGY FOR EUROPE? Robert BOYER PSE (Paris-Jourdan Sciences Économiques) Babbot Room, The Octagon, Amherst College, March 26, 2008 INTRODUCTION • Entering a new and quite uncertain epoch: What will be the consequences for the US of the sub-prime mortgage crisis? How interdependent is the world with respect to the American economy? Is a finance-led growth regime a fatality? How should new regulations restore the structural stability of such a regime? Will Europe be drastically affected by the sub- prime mortgage crisis? What alternative strategies for the European Union? • The strategy of this presentation An institutional analysis of the origins of financialization A simple macro model of finance-led growth An interpretation of the origins of financial crises Diversity and legacy of European institutional configurations: an alternative to financialization SYNOPSIS OF PRESENTATION I. The pressures towards a finance-led regime. II. The homeland of financialization is the US…but potential macroeconomic instability. III. From the Internet bubble to the subprime mortgage crisis. IV. How Europe will be affected? V. The European Union: the search for alternative models. VI. Conclusions I. THE PRESSURES TOWARDS A FINANCE-LED REGIME Back to social history The 60s: a de facto compromise between managers and wage earners Consumers Patient financial market Managers Permissive international regime Wage-earners Strong links Weak links Direction of influence The 80s: An international competition led regime weakens the bargaining power of wage earners Consumers Gain from trade Managers More international competition Discipline Erosion of past compromise Wage-earners Strong links Weak links Direction of influence The 90s: The ex post alliance of investors and managers Consumers Transparency Managers Large and powerful financial markets Share holder value More risk Financialisation of income and pensions Wage-earners Strong links Weak links Direction of influence The 2000s: The emerging tensions within the finance industry and the rise of the lawyer State, as the last resort THE LAWYER Institutional Investors Managers Auditors Financial Analysts Rating Agencies Fund Mangers Pension funds Flow of information Financial flow Intermediation of conflicts and related income Financialization is part of a long term structural transformation of contemporary capitalism, after the crisis of Fordism International opening Crisis of the Fordist growth regime Regained power of managers Demand addressed to managers = shareholder value Surge of CEO compensation Erosion of wageearners bargaining power Acceptance of pension funds Inflow on the stock market Conservative backlash Financial deregulation Multiple innovation in finance Financial bubble II.THE HOMELAND OF FINANCE LED GROWTH: THE US… An accumulation regime at odds with Fordism: the centrality of the stock market + Dividends and Pension funds + High stock market price + Easy access to credit Profit + + Consumption + Production + Employment Diffusion of Financial norms - Careful management of investment + Globalised Financial regime Shareholder value as a new form of competition and governance mode Highly reactive wage labour nexus The multiple channels of financialization + Monetary policy, Financial market stabiliser + Limitation of public borrowing G Credibility of Government actions - Public expenditure + Stock Market prices F E Tax system favourable to the most mobile factors + + + Industrial specialisations, Financial concentration Raising the required rate of return - Productive investment A FINANCIAL SYSTEM Management of firms for shareholders B + + Labour contract flexibility + + Productive capacity “Patrimonial” Equity based Household behaviour C Privatisation of elements of social security D Wealth effect on Savings/Consumption Allocation + + Current consumption + Pensions via stock market Purchase of housing and durable goods + + + Effective demand - Employment, wages + + + Profit Secured borrowing + A simple macroeconomic model Various regimes A finance-led regime is possible if: – The financial wealth / income ratio is high – The investment is profit led This regime is structurally stable if: Wage formation is not too much competitive The rate of return required by shareholders is not too high The Central Bank has to react quickly to financial bubbles Testing the model for some OECD countries The US: the only finance-led regime …..BUT A POTENTIAL MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY The development of financial market first extends the likelihood of a finance-led regime… But up to some threshold, the economy enter into a zone of structural instability. III. FROM THE INTERNET BUBBLE TO THE SUB-PRIME MORTGAGE CRISIS. • This regime is generating speculative bubbles that burst out… • …But are cured by an active monetary policy… • …And the positive impact of financial innovations… • …For instance the securitisation first prevents the fragility of banks A strong paradox: an unstable accumulation regime rescued by the deepening of financial innovations • …But private innovations, such as subprime loans, exploit this opportunity to shift the risk… • …The boom of this market reaches its limits, the reversal of confidence challenges macroeconomic stability… • …And again the Central Bank is the rescuer of last resort in order to preserve the viability of the financial system Figure 1 – A typical sequencing of financial crises Viability of the regulated innovation New cycle Regulation by the government Lender as a last resort Private innovation Success / High profit Rapid adoption Entry in the zone of financial fragility No public intervention: collapse of the innovation Figure 2 – A first example: energy derivatives and the ENRON collapse Energy derivatives Potential for new crisis A structural weakness Unprecedented profit Creative accounting Bankruptcy Prevention from any public control by lobbying But not any reform of accountability principles New rules of accountability for CEO and CFO Figure 3 – A second example: rise and collapse of Northern Rock Financing by bonds of mortgage loans High profit / Rapid capture of market shares More bonds issued Banking run No reaction of Financial Service Agency A failed innovation Worsening of the crisis Conflict between Bank of England, Treasury, FSA Nationalization of Northern Rock Initially, Bank of England did not bail out Search for self regulation Systemic crisis Figure 4 – A third example: the sub-prime mortgage Sub-prime mortgage Searching for new regulations A systemic financial crisis New and growing market Securitization shift the risk Reversal of the housing market Absence of public regulation Melting down of the subprime market Limited FED intervention Unlimited access to liquidity from FED Mergers among banks Recapitalization by sovereign funds A creeping banking crisis Diffusion of Non Performing Assets (NPA) IV.HOW EUROPE WILL BE AFFECTED? The financial led regime is not observed in Europe COUNTRIES PARAMETERS 1.Average propensity to consume (1996) 2. Wealth in disposable (1997) % United States Great Britain Canada Japan Germany 0.95 0.926 0.956 0.869 0.884 France 0.908 shares/ income 145 75 95 30 25 20 3. Extent of capital gains /disposable income (%) 35.5 15 11 -7 7 5 4. Proportion of shares and bonds in households’ financial assets 28.4 52.4 n.a. 25.3 21.3 1.Monetary market rate 1.Return on bonds 1.Reference profitability 5.34 6.51 12%-16% 7.38 5.59 5.20 0.32 3.5 7.30 1.06 3.97 5% 6% -7% 12%-16% 12 - 16% 14.5 3.46 4.23 9% Actually, in other OECD countries alternative alliances may exist and govern different accumulation regimes Managerial expertise THE AMERICAN FIRM Governance under shareholder value The firm as a bundle of competences Financial capital Firm specific competences ESOP Employee ownership/ co-management THE GERMAN FIRM THE JAPANESE FIRM The different channels of the diffusion of American financial crisis Many European financial institutions have non performing sub-prime loans or derivatives: how important are they? The impact of the American recession upon world trade…possibly compensated by Asian dynamism. The negative impact of the appreciation of the euro upon growth and employment in Europe. A long lasting revaluation of financial risk, as a source of credit crunch. The imperfection of the European policy mix (a single monetary policy but contrasted national budgetary policies): a clear limitation to the reactivity of the EuropeanUnion. V. THE EUROPEAN UNION: THE SEARCH FOR ALTERNATIVE MODELS A change of epoch: from the primacy of the wage labor nexus to the omnipresence of a financial logic The European treaties codify this swing in the hierarchy of the economic institutions Figure 1 – The hierarchy of the European procedures: the primacy of the monetary regime Any growth strategy has to take into account the shift in the conception of economic policy Source : Freely inspired of EC/DGE "Reinforcement of mechanisms for economic policy coordination", July 28, 1999. A survey of alternative strategies S1 – Promote a better policy mix in order to rejuvenate growth S2 - Convert Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) into a knowledge based economy (KBE) S3 - Gender equality and the response to ageing as sources of a welfare / services driven growth S4 - A recurring temptation of some member states riding the financial globalisation Figure 2 – First strategy: A pragmatic coordination of monetary and fiscal policies in order to promote growth and creation of jobs. Table 2 – Institutional conditions of this first strategy Figure 3 – Second strategy: convert Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) into a knowledge based economy (KBE) Table 3 – Institutional conditions of this first strategy Figure 4 – A third strategy: gender equality and the response to ageing as sources of a welfare / services driven growth Figure 5 – Strategy four : Riding the financial globalisation, as a recurring temptation of some member states Table 2- What growth regime for the early 21st century? CONCLUSION C1 - The US is the first economy to experience the benefits and the risks of a finance-led regime. C2 - The recurrence of powerful financial innovations is at the origin of most financial crises in the US, but their macroeconomic consequences differ drastically. C3 - The collapse of the sub-prime mortgage is the last one and the most severe since WWII. It sheds a crude light upon the danger of a bold financial liberalization C4 - This is an incentive to reassess the role of financial re-regulation, in order to try to reduce the instability potentially associated to intense financial innovations. C5 – With the possible exception of UK, no European economy is following the American trajectory. This reduces the risk of an equivalent melting down, but many channels will diffuse the American recession to the rest of the world. C6 - A priori, financialization may well be detrimental to most non US economies. Consequently they should resist to further financial liberalization. C7 – The mission of European Union should be to contribute to the disciplining of the international finance and the promotion of welfare enhancing growth strategies. MANY THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION Robert BOYER CNRS (PSE- Paris Jourdan Sciences Economiques), EHESS, CEPREMAP 48, Boulevard Jourdan 75014 PARIS + 33 (0)0 43 13 62 56 [email protected] Site WEB : http://www.jourdan.ens.fr/~boyer/