Sunday, February 24, 2019

Josh Ryan-Collins - Debunking Deregulation: Bank Credit Guidance and Productive Investment

Deregulated banking in rich countries delivers more “investment” in speculative asset markets, not productive businesses.


Deregulation of the financial sector has not improved growth as it was said it would, but rather the opposite has happened, as money went mainly into the speculation of assets instead. 

I read years ago in the financial section of the Guardian, when it was still a decant paper, how the pension funds were just putting all their money into property creating house price booms. As property prices skyrocket, pension fund profits dramatically increased creating huge bonuses for pension funds managers, but when the crashes came and everyone lost money, the pension fund managers kept their massive bonuses. 

The article then went on to say that the pension funds should have been regulated to invest in industry instead, especially new industries, like green technology, computer and software design, etc. Even the British inventors of graphine, a remarkable new substance, had trouble getting British finance interested, and now the Chinese are world leaders in it. And Dyson wanted his company to be British but he had to take it to China instead.

In these emerging new industries young people could have got well paid, highly skilled jobs, with university degrees that would have been worth having. And there would have been more apprenticeships and good jobs for unskilled people. Then they would have produced the profits to keep the pension funds in good order, giving retired people excellent pensions. 

Most people who vote for right-wing parties have no idea how much they and their children have lost, while a few at the top raked it in. Now these people want to privatise the NHS so they can take off half the money the government spends on healthcare, while whacking prices up as well. And if you add in the squandered North Sea oil, you can see how the British people have been had over.

Just think, excellent highly skilled well paid jobs, less reliance on fossil fuel helping to mitigate the Middle Eastern problem, low cost renewable energy, better pensions with perhaps earlier retirement creating more jobs for young people. All lost because of right-wing economics - neoliberalism! Now a third of the British people are the poorest in Northern Western Europe. 

These new empirical findings support a much older body of theory that argues that credit markets, left to their own devices, will not optimise the allocation of resources. Instead, following Joseph Schumpeter’s, Keynes’ and Hyman Minsky’s arguments, they will tend to shift financial resources away from real-sector investment and innovation and towards asset markets and speculation; away from equitable income growth and towards capital gains that polarises wealth and income; and away from a robust, stable growth path and towards fragile boom-busts cycles with frequent crises.

7 comments:

Andrew Anderson said...

The article then went on to say that the pension funds should have been regulated to invest in industry instead, especially new industries, like green technology, computer and software design, etc. Kaivey

And eliminate even more less skilled jobs and increasingly their own jobs too? With the legally stolen purchasing power of the entire population but for private gain?

Sure let's have automation but let's finance it ethically, eh?

Or do you think progress requires injustice?

Kaivey said...

I was talking in generalities, so I've added:

And there would have been more apprenticeships and good jobs for unskilled people.

Konrad said...

Deregulation is when an oligarch personally controls something that was previously controlled by society and government.

This is a cornerstone of neoliberalism. It’s what Bernie Sanders wants to impose on Venezuela. Tulsi Gabbard probably wants the same. All candidates for the US Presidency want the same.

Andrew Anderson said...

And there would have been more apprenticeships and good jobs for unskilled people. Kaivey

And when automation, AI, and robots have eliminated almost all jobs then what? Government privileged banks, a few rich, and the rest of the population, their victims, as wage-slaves to government?

And that's your idea of justice?

You should forget about forks with long handles and read what the Bible actually says about JUSTICE, as well as mercy. But if you won't then recognize that the God of the New Testament is the same as the God of the Old Testament and your blood is on your own head if you choose ignorance of what He requires.

Konrad said...

I stopped needing pages from the Old Testament when my pet parakeet died, and I threw out his cage.

Andrew Anderson said...

away from equitable income growth and towards capital gains that polarises wealth and income; and away from a robust, stable growth path and towards fragile boom-busts cycles with frequent crises.

Please note that "equitable" derives from "equity" and that government privileges for private credit creation allow those who own equity to avoid "sharing" it (via common stock issuance (shares in equity)).

So one cannot be for equitable sharing while supporting government privileges for the banks.

Noah Way said...

Dead horse, meet Andrew Anderson,