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TAKING SERIOUSLY FINANCE Macroeconomics after the crisis

TAKING SERIOUSLY FINANCE Macroeconomics after the crisis. Robert BOYER Conference “Toward an alternative macroeconomic analysis of microfoundations , finance-real economy dynamics and crises”, Budapest, September 6-8 th , 2010. INTRODUCTION. The core arguments of this presentation

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TAKING SERIOUSLY FINANCE Macroeconomics after the crisis

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  1. TAKING SERIOUSLY FINANCEMacroeconomics after the crisis Robert BOYER Conference “Toward an alternative macroeconomic analysis of microfoundations, finance-real economy dynamics and crises”, Budapest, September 6-8th, 2010

  2. INTRODUCTION • The core arguments of this presentation • The failure of contemporary macro-modeling dates back to the inadequate formalization of General Theory • The irrelevance has been widening with the neo-Walrasian conception embedded into RBC and DSGE models • This is especially detrimental since the present crisis largely originated from a cluster of financial innovations with a large destabilizing role at the macro level

  3. There is an opportunity for developing new macroeconomic paradigms that would build upon: • An updating of political economy analyses of financial crises • A clear compatibility with the major stylized facts exhibited by the history of financial crises • The formalization of some robust mechanisms linking finance to economic activity.

  4. The presentation proposes at least four strategies: Modeling the contemporary finance-led regimes within an institutional macro theory Formalizing the resilience and crisis of financial networks Extending a model of stock market bubbles to the banking system and the real economy Learning and forgetting the origins of crises at the micro and institutional levels.

  5. I. The failure of contemporary macro-modeling dates back to the inadequate formalization of General Theory

  6. Figure 1 – Half a century in macroeconomic theorizing

  7. II. The irrelevance has been widening with the neo-Walrasian conception embedded into RBC and DSGE models

  8. Table 1 – From the failures of DSGE models to new research agenda

  9. III. This is especially detrimental since the present crisis largely originated from a cluster of financial innovations with a large destabilizing role at the macro level

  10. Figure 2 – The recurrence of bubbles and financial crises: a synthetic index

  11. Figure 3 – Growth of Assets of Four Sectors in the United States (March 1954 = 1) (Log scale) (source: Federal Reserve, Flow of Funds, 1954-2009)

  12. Figure 4 – Household Sector Leverage and Total Assets (Source: U.S. Flow of Funds, Federal Reserve, 1963-2007)

  13. Figure 5 – Broker Dealer Sector Leverage and Total Assets(Source: U.S. Flow of Funds, Federal Reserve, 1963-2007)

  14. Table 2 – Various research programs facing the major stylized facts revealed by the present crisis

  15. IV.An updating of political economy analyses of financial crises

  16. Table 4 – Back to the political economy of financial crises

  17. V.Taking into account some robust mechanisms linking finance to economic activity

  18. The procyclicity of credit and economic activity Figure 6 – US Private Demand Growth and the Credit impulse

  19. The Yield Curve and Future Economic Activity • Figure 7 – Forecasted probability of recession based on the slope of the yield curve 4 quarters earlier

  20. The related Mechanisms: Impact upon the Shadow Banks Credit Supply via Profitability Table 3 – A macro financial intermediary VAR, US 1990 Q3 – 2008 Q3

  21. The impact of financial wealth upon the real economy Figure 8 – U.S. stock market and productive investment (% of GDP)

  22. Figure 9 – U.S. Firms debt and stock market valuation (% of GDP)

  23. Figure 10 – U.S.: total debt and financial and real estate wealth of household (% of real disposable income)

  24. Figure 11 – U.S.: Total subprime credit (billion dollars) and housing prices (100 = 2002.1)

  25. VI.Modeling the contemporary finance-led regimes within an institutional macro theory

  26. Figure 12 – An institutionally grounded macro modeling: A given configuration of a capitalist economy

  27. Figure 13 – The Channels of finance to real economy in the era of finance led capitalism

  28. VII. Formalizing the resilience and crisis of financial networks

  29. Source: Gai Prasanna, and Sujit Kapadia (2010), p. 11, 22, 24.

  30. VIII. Two other strategies • Extending a model of stock market bubbles to the banking system and the real economy • Learning and forgetting the origins of crises at the micro and institutional levels.

  31. CONCLUSION C1 – The present crisis has revealed the many structural deficiencies of DSGE models: representative agent hypothesis, full rationality,…. C2 – Nevertheless its main weakness might well be the absence of a fully fledged financial system. C3 – This has been taking into account by the most recent researches within the DSGE paradigm. Can it succeed?

  32. Table 4 – Recent extensions of GSGE models: at last “Banks matter”

  33. C4 – The neo-Walrasian legacy of these models makes problematic the rescue of the DSGE approach: basic neutrality of money and underlying hypothesis of financial markets efficiency. C5 – This opens an opportunity for the emergence of old and new alternative paradigms but there are many of them. C6 – A discriminating criteria should be their respective ability to incorporate the basic mechanisms linking finance to real economy, while reproducing the major stylized facts exhibited by long run history of financial crises.

  34. C7 – A possible dilemma: The search for a quite general model that could fit with all the previous financial crises, only the value of some parameters A special model coping with the specificities of the present crisis: the clustering of powerful financial innovations with strong negative externalities upon macroeconomic stability.

  35. Thanks for your attention and patience Robert BOYER CEPREMAP 140, Rue du Chevaleret 75013 PARIS (France) + 33 (0)1 40 77 84 12  robert.boyer@ens.fr Site WEB : http://www.jourdan.ens.fr/~boyer/

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