Sections
Home » YES! Blogs » David Korten » Beyond the Bubble Economy

Beyond the Bubble Economy

We’ve finally learned that a growing financial sector isn’t the same thing as actual economic improvement. So how can we stimulate the real economy?

Bubble economy, photo by zzub nik

Photo by zzub nik

 

Public anger at the 2008 Wall Street bailout, concerns about debt, and a deep and pervasive fear that another financial crash is just a matter of time create an important moment of opportunity for a long overdue public conversation about the purpose of financial services and the necessary steps to assure that the financial sector fulfills that purpose.

Much of the recent discussion of financial reform has centered on limiting Wall Street excesses to curb fraud and reduce the risk of another financial crash. This is vitally important, but it does not address the issue raised by Sheila Bair shortly before she stepped down last year as FDIC chair:

“In policy terms, the success of the financial sector is not an end in itself, but a means to an end—which is to support the vitality of the real economy and the livelihood of the American people. What really matters to the life of our nation is enabling entrepreneurs to build new businesses that create more well-paying jobs, and enabling families to put a roof over their heads and educate their children.”

It is very straightforward. The proper purpose of the financial services sector is to serve the real economy on which everyone depends for their daily needs, their quality of life, and their opportunity to be creative, contributing members of their communities.

The proper purpose of the financial services sector is to serve the real economy on which everyone depends for their daily needs. By this standard of performance, Wall Street does not serve us well.

By this standard of performance, Wall Street does not serve us well. Indeed, Wall Street’s most lavish rewards go not to those who enable others to create wealth, but rather to those most skilled and ruthless in expropriating the wealth of others—behavior condemned as immoral by every major religion. To justify their actions, Wall Street players and their apologists turn reality and logic on their heads by treating growth in the size and profitability of the financial sector as an end in itself, and a measure of increasing sector efficiency.

Because financial services are a means, not an end, they are properly treated as an overhead cost to be minimized. By this reckoning, growth in the size of the financial sector as a percent of GDP represents growth in Wall Street’s overhead burden on the real economy from a highly efficient one percent in 1850 to a grossly inefficient 8.5 percent in 2010:

Financial Sector as Percent of U.S. GDP

The following graph gives us a similar perspective on the growth in Wall Street profits. From 1929 to the mid-1980s, profits of the financial sector tracked right along with those of the profits of non-financial (read real economy) corporations. As Wall Street became increasingly predatory in the 1980s, its profits relative to profits in the real economy began to grow exponentially. That may look like an increase in efficiency from a Wall Street perspective. From the perspective of the society, however, it is another measure of Wall Street’s increasing overhead burden. 

Real Corporate Profits, Financial vs. Nonfinancial Sectors

Market advocates correctly note that markets have a wonderful ability to self-regulate in the public interest. When market advocates go on to argue, however, that the solution for market failure is to get government out of the way, they demonstrate remarkable ignorance of basic market economics. Markets self-organize in the public interest only if incentives align with the public interest.

As Nobel Economist Joseph Stiglitz correctly observes: “When private rewards are well aligned with social objectives things work well; when they are not, matters can get ugly.”

As the 2008 crash revealed, Wall Street’s reward system renders it incapable of self-regulation in the public interest. Furthermore, Wall Street financial institutions have become so over leveraged and so interconnected that the collapse of one threatens the collapse of all—and thereby potential total collapse of the global economy. Corrective action necessarily falls to government, which can deal with Wall Street’s failure to self-regulate in one of four ways.

  1. Continue to bail out failed banks at taxpayer expense.
  2. Build a countervailing external regulatory system equal to or greater than the size and power of the financial system, spell out detailed lists of prohibited behaviors, and impose fines and jail sentences for each violation sufficient to make good behavior more attractive than bad behavior.
  3. Implement a system of taxpayer funded financial incentives for good behavior to achieve the same outcome, or
  4. Create a system of incentives that drive a reorganization of the financial system and a realignment of its internal rewards to favor transparency, accountability, and public service. A basic framework for such a reorganization is spelled out in the New Economy Working Group report, Liberating Main Street from Wall Street Rule.

The first option rewards ever greater risk-taking and will ultimately bankrupt even the wealthiest government. Options two and three are enormously complex, set up an intense competition between private and public institutions, invite massive corruption, and require huge public expenditure.

Only the fourth option can create a system that is adaptive, self-regulating, and relatively inexpensive to maintain with modest government oversight. Here are two examples. 

  • Basic Banking Services. This need is best met by a system of small and locally owned banks that function as well-regulated public utilities supported by deposit insurance and access to low cost credit. To provide appropriate incentives to keep individual banks relatively small, insurance fees, interest rates, and reserve & capital requirements should be based on the bank’s total assets. Larger banks will pay higher fees and interest rates and be required to maintain higher reserves and capital to loan ratios—thus giving an inherent competitive advantage to banks that remain small. 

Banks organized as cooperatives, such as credit unions and cooperative banks directly accountable to those they serve, might enjoy especially favorable terms to encourage cooperative ownership.
  • Proprietary Trading. If a group of investors or money managers chose to join together to create a firm to engage in proprietary trading, they could do so. The firm must, however, be organized as a partnership with all debts and losses backed by the personal assets of the partners to provide a powerful incentive for responsible self-regulation. Propriety trading would be its only allowed function. Such firms would not enjoy any government guarantee or tax incentive and they would be prohibited from accepting investments from retirement or other funds held and managed in trust.

Independent record store in Nashville, Tenn.Growing Local
Local, durable economies are  taking root. How can we help them along?

The Wall Street experience has demonstrated why it is important to confine different financial functions to separate smaller institutions that hold managers accountable to those who bear the risk.

Get the system’s internal incentives right and the priorities and risk calculations of the financial sector will shift dramatically, its size will shrink, real efficiency will increase, and regulatory costs and failures will plummet. Restructuring to get the internal incentives right should be a foundation of all future financial reform efforts.


David Korten is board chair of YES! Magazine and the author of Agenda for a New Economy,TheGreat Turning: From Empire to Earth Community, and the international bestseller When Corporations Rule the World. He is co-chair of the New Economy Working Group, and a founding board member of the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies.

Interested?

 

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Korten, D. (2012, February 02). Beyond the Bubble Economy. Retrieved May 16, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://cms.yesmagazine.org/blogs/david-korten/beyond-the-bubble-economy. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


You won’t see any commercial ads in YES!, in print or on this website.
That means, we rely on support from our readers.

||   SUBSCRIBE    ||   GIVE A GIFT   ||   DONATE   ||
Independent. Nonprofit. Subscriber-supported.




Reader Comments

Beyond the Bubble Economy

Posted by Linda at Feb 03, 2012 04:10 PM
Interesting. How do I read more? I can't figure out how to see the other comments.

Beyond the Bubble Economy

Posted by Brian Leslie at Feb 09, 2012 03:57 PM
Sound comment - as far as it goes!

My father was arguing in the 1920s for the need for fair distribution to all, of the benefits of the increasing use of machines to supplement/replace human labour, to be paid as 'National Dividends', as the movement for reform then termed what are now better known as 'Basic Incomes'. The 'Social Credit' movement he supported also demanded the ending of the banks' privilege of money-creation by way of interest-bearing loans.

Consider the difference, if we had a money supply originating as State-created money (created, as banks now do, 'out of thin air', but) *spent* into circulation, so not having any interest-bearing loans trying to cancel it out of circulation, and so not rewarding banks in this process, or giving them the power over society they now have, of deciding who can get the new money, how much, and for what purpose. The money, once spent into circulation, would remain in circulation, until/unless the monetary authority determined that too much was circulating, and so withdrew some part of the government's funds to be cancelled.

With this change, we would no longer have the imperative of 'economic growth' to keep outstanding loans 'serviceable' and avoid 'recession' or worse.

With the elimination of the vast majority of loans, as there would then be adequate money in circulation to facilitate needed exchanges,
if adequate Basic Incomes are in place (funded by Land Value and Resource Taxation?) we could move to a true 'economy' - of economy of use of resources and production of waste, with increasing levels of leisure, freeing people for more worthwhile use of their time than so much of present 'employment'!

The American Monetary Institute proposes to end banks' power to create money, as does Positive Money, in the UK. Both have drafted legislation to achieve this, with accompanying explanatory text.

This is just the first essential step needed for the fundamental reforms we desperately need.


Read Yves Smith

Posted by Adam Eran at Feb 10, 2012 09:19 AM
This is a rather abbreviated looka at what might work to revive the economy. I recommend Yves Smith's "Econned" for at least the beginning of the full story. Australian economist Steve Keen also has a convincing debunk of conventional economics' role in guiding public policy (wrongly).

Keen's key point: The direct predictor of the troubles we've recently experienced is debt (mostly private, but some public) as a percentage of GDP. He suggests governments create a credit to those in debt to reduce debt levels, and predicts increasingly bad bubbles and busts if we don't address the debt overhang.

He, along with Modern Monetary Theorists generally, does not make the mistake of conflating currency users with currency issuers. A country like the U.S., with sovereign control of its currency, can issue dollars without limit. The recent audit of the Fed revealed that it issued $16 - $29 trillion to bail out the Finance / Insurance / Real Estate (FIRE) sectors of the economy.

On the other hand, social safety net programs are threatened (sorry Grandma) because the "deficit is too high."

So FIRE gets trillions at the drop of a hat, but Social Security and Medicare have to cut back. Notice a pattern.

Q: How much risk do lenders take when making a loan to a borrower who can (legally) issue infinite legal tender with which to repay it?
A: None.

So the U.S. Treasury could mint a few trillion-dollar coins tomorrow and pay the entire deficit off.

The threats to safety net programs, and the looting of the Treasury, are politically-motivated. They are not the result of some secular or divine "TINA" ("There Is No Alternative").

Korten's advice is certainly worthwhile here too.

Beyond control by special interests

Posted by Todd Phillips at Feb 10, 2012 04:57 PM
This is a very important issue, and it's not just the financial industry that is predatory but all special interests who are able to control government in a way that favors themselves over the public. It seems the question we should be asking is not how can our exiting government fix these problems but how we can fix our government. Our democracy is broken. A recent New York Times poll found that 12% of people have confidence in the US Congress but as Senator Tom Colburn said (paraphrased) in many recent election cycles more members of congress died than lost reelection. The government does not reflect the needs or desires of the public. This is not democracy, it's chaos. There is little point in expecting change from our current government. Check out localelectors.com for a possible solution.

Interview requested for a book

Posted by Anonymous User at Mar 11, 2012 05:38 PM
Hello David,
I really enjoy your magazine and the website (with the videos on karma kitchen!). Thank you for sharing this. I would love to make a short interview with you for my book called "Hartz IV Möbel - build more buy less". There is a chapter about "Karma Economy" inside of it. May I ask you 2 questions? Van Bo, berlin-based architect (Germany). For more info about the book please watch the video with english subtitle www.startnext.de/hartz-iv-moebel-buch

People Who Love YES! Find Out Why... Subscribe Today

Personal tools