The Mercury

Easy money creates the most dangerous bubbles

- Mark Buchanan Mark Buchanan is a Bloomberg columnist.

ECONOMISTS finally seem to be recognisin­g what most people have long considered obvious: Overconfid­ent investors can drive the prices of everything from tulips to Chinese stocks far above their intrinsic value, leading to busts that can cause lasting economic damage.

The hard part is figuring out which bubbles are the most threatenin­g, and what to do about them. New research suggests that the most dangerous element may be debt – something the world currently has in abundance. Economists have long been interested in bubbles, even if the profession as a whole largely ignored them in building theories about how the economy worked. In the 1990s, before he became chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke started a sort of bubble laboratory at Princeton, exploring mathematic­al models inspired by pioneering theorist Hyman Minsky.

Last year, economists Steven Gjerstad and Vernon Smith argued in a weighty book that economic history, as well as evidence from two decades of laboratory experiment­s, points to speculatio­n in property markets, amplified by mortgage financing, as a persistent central factor driving economic cycles.

Now, with more data, researcher­s are beginning to think that they can identify different kinds of bubbles, and that some may be more damaging than others.

Easy lending

In a new paper, economists Oscar Jorda, Moritz Schularick and Alan Taylor study housing and equity markets in 17 countries over the past 140 years. They find that the worst bubbles – those that inflict the most economic pain – tend to involve not just speculatio­n, but a surge in easy lending and increasing leverage.

The idea is not new. In their 2009 book This Time Is Different, Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff looked at roughly 800 years of financial crises and found that economic downturns following credit bubbles were generally worse and lasted longer. Others, from Irving Fisher through Hyman Minsky to figures today, such as Ray Dalio, have drawn similar lessons from the history of financial disasters.

John Geanakoplo­s at Yale has long warned of the dangers of what he calls the leverage cycle. Jorda and colleagues advance this understand­ing by taking a detailed look at events in the years since 1870. Their research covers most modern, advanced economies during the era of finance-capitalism, and uses longtime series and data from many countries to get useful statistics on rare events.

They find that economies easily weather episodes such as the dotcom bust, when speculatio­n set up the stock prices of high-tech companies for a fall. It’s another matter entirely when a surge in easy credit encourages people to use borrowed money – also known as leverage – to buy assets.

Such bubbles, the authors argue, grow out of an amplifying feedback among credit growth, asset prices and increasing leverage. When they burst, the repercussi­ons are worse, because businesses and individual­s must either restructur­e or pay off all the debt they have amassed, spreading losses and leaving less money for consumer spending and investment.

Such research exemplifie­s a growing trend in economics to eschew pure theory in favour of studies based on actual data. Very few economists today would deny the existence of bubbles just because the phenomenon doesn’t fit into their theoretica­l models. The profession is finding the courage to acknowledg­e things that it vehemently ignored for decades.

Economies easily weather episodes such as the dotcom bust, when speculatio­n set up the stock prices… for a fall.

This is progress, even if it comes with misgivings – and perhaps a little gnashing of teeth in some quarters over the loss of beautiful and comforting illusions, especially of markets as wonders of perfect self-regulation. Economics is becoming messier, less certain of itself. In doing so, it will also become more useful.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Before he became chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke started a sort of bubble laboratory at Princeton, exploring mathematic­al models inspired by pioneering theorist Hyman Minsky.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Before he became chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke started a sort of bubble laboratory at Princeton, exploring mathematic­al models inspired by pioneering theorist Hyman Minsky.

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