A worthy winner: Simon Johnson, Professor at MIT, Peterson Institute fellow and former IMF chief economist
The financial crisis has destroyed both wealth and received wisdom. The idea that prices are always right and markets self-correct is fatally challenged. Even Alan Greenspan admits that the "whole intellectual edifice" of the efficient market hypothesis collapsed in the summer of 2008. The financial establishment is in a state of deep confusion. As the FT's Gillian Tett put it in September's Prospect: it is like "a priest who has lost faith in the Bible, but still has to go to church." But this is not a bad thing, for it has opened up new ways of thinking about markets, institutions and the all-important cause of financial reform.
Unfamiliar voices have come to prominence, aided by a new wave of financial bloggers eager to push fresh ideas. But who has made the most impact? Prospect assembled a panel of experts to draw up a list of leading "public intellectuals" of the financial crisis in 2009 and then decide on the most important. Our criteria were simple. Anyone who had made an impact on policy with their ideas, or who had changed the "public conversation" was a candidate.
The panel sifted hundreds of names, with an unavoidable bias towards Britain and the US, but felt the most important contributions had been in financial reform"”those trying to work out what to do next. The crisis has laid a staggering financial burden on the world, with some $14 trillion propping up US and EU banks. We cannot afford another one. Moreover, we urgently need a new regulatory philosophy. Are liquid markets always good? Is complexity in financial services harmful? Can finance firms stop "herding," creating wild booms and busts?
The role of the banks themselves is also being rethought. They have mushroomed in size without doing a better job"”Royal Bank of Scotland's balance sheet grew 20-fold in the decade from 1998. Some banks have become too big to fail and hence dangerous. Should we return to the strict division between commercial and investment banking, as proposed by Paul Volcker and Mervyn King? And how can we now rein in this super-sized financial system with its powerful lobby? Many of the surviving megabanks have pressured governments for a return to the status quo ante. They want their old economy back, with the implicit warning that if they don't get it there will be no recovery"”and politicians will be blamed.
We considered all of this, and gradually whittled the names down to a shortlist of just 25 (see facing page), and then a top three. In reverse order, the bronze medal went to Adair Turner, chairman of Britain's Financial Services Authority, who bravely questioned the social usefulness of some financial activity, and called for regulators to force banks to hold more capital against risky trades, cutting their profitability. Next, silver went to Avinash Persaud, a respected analyst who spotted nine years ago the dangerous interaction between firms "herding" and new risk management techniques. During 2009 he has been arguing for new "macro-prudential" regulation to stop what he discovered a decade ago.
But there was a clear winner. He is Simon Johnson, an economist at the prestigious Peterson Institute in Washington, DC, who has been leading the argument against overmighty banking. His ideas are well grounded in theory, but he has also done more than any academic to popularise his case: writing articles, a must-read blog, and appearing tirelessly on television. As the FT's Martin Wolf told Prospect: "Johnson's significance is that he is a member of the establishment"”a former IMF chief economist, no less"”who has emphasised the capture of the state by big finance, for the latter's own ends. An expert on crises in emerging countries and in transition from communism, he has called what he has seen: crony capitalism at the heart of the financial system." In particular Johnson's essay "The Quiet Coup," in the Atlantic of May 2009, is one of the great polemical essays of the crisis. Far from skulking in an ivory tower, he has urged citizens to the streets.
We need an informed debate about making finance safer. Johnson, Persaud and Turner led that debate in 2009.
PROSPECT’S TOP 25 BRAINS OF THE CRISIS
1. Simon Johnson Professor at MIT, Peterson Institute fellow, former IMF chief economist, blogger, troublemaker and scourge of once-mighty banks"”a worthy winner in 2009.
2. Avinash Persaud Financial liquidity analyst, adviser to governments around the world, the man who has studied "herd" behaviour in finance, and now the man trying to stop it.
3. Adair turnerAn unusually bold regulator, Turner made headlines worldwide slamming "socially useless" finance (in Prospect) and suggesting a Tobin tax to put sand in the wheels of global finance.
Ben Bernanke Cerebral Federal Reserve chairman, seen by many as saviour of the US economy while congress dithered.
Andrew Haldane Bank of England director who warned of a "doom loop" of perpetual banking bailouts.
Philip Hildebrand Swiss banker who boldly pushed cutting his country's banks to size.
John Kay Well-regarded British economist who wants a return to simple banking.
Mervyn King Bank of England boss, initially wrong-footed by the crisis, but had a better, more aggressive 2009.
Richard Koo Insider adviser to politicians and banks, an expert on the lessons from Japan, and deficit dove-in-chief.
Paul Krugman Celebrated economist and author of a must-read New York Times essay on the failures of economics.
Christine Lagarde French minister of economic affairs who got just the right mix of stick and carrot for French banks. donald mackenzie Edinburgh professor, author of many sharp LRB essays unpicking the anthropology of finance.
Lucy Prebble 28-year-old British author of Enron, the best play yet on irrational exuberance.
Nouriel Roubini Legendarily gloomy, normally correct finance analyst whose blogs alone can move markets.
Brad Setser Young policy wonk, co-blogger with Simon Johnson and author of Bailouts or Bail-ins? with Roubini.
Robert Shiller Credit-crunch US sage and behavioural economics pioneer.
Jon Stewart Brainy American satirist whose Daily Show has made finance a laughing stock.
Joseph Stiglitz Nobel laureate, chair of UN commission on financial reform and harsh critic of finance-as-usual.
Matt Taibbi US journalist, wrote a celebrated scathing attack on Goldman Sachs.
Paul Volcker Ex-Fed chair, pushing for splitting up investment and savings banks.
Elizabeth Warren Harvard professor, consumer rights watchdog, leads the panel watching over Obama's bailout money.
Martin Wolf FT writer and the Anglosphere's most influential finance journalist.
Paul Woolley Innovative LSE thinker on "capital market dysfunctionality."
Yu Yongding Influential economist at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Zhou Xiaochuan Bank of China head, architect of China's response to the crisis.
Thanks to those who helped us pick a list or select winners, including: Rudi Bogni, Diane Coyle, Will Davies, Meghnad Desai, John Eatwell, Christopher Hird, Will Hutton, Faisal Islam, Stephanie Flanders, George Magnus, Jasper McMahon, Felix Salmon, Richard Sennett, Rohan Silva, Laura Tyson, Isabel Hilton and Graham Turne
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Comments (3):
Cincinattus Jr. says: December 17, 2009 at 1:33 pmI can only assume you are being facetious in naming Jon Stewart to your list of “intellectuals,” although I suppose in the context of the others named, such a person could be seen as serious given the liberal penchant for shallowness of thought as long as it is sufficiently emotive.
Ted Ditchburn says: December 17, 2009 at 1:54 pmThe main thrust of the Quiet Coup is the reason I feel the debate about how best to dampen the bonus culture and it’s perceived tendency to encourage short term thinking over longer term planning (Like planning on keeping a coherent society in place next year).
It is why I feel we shouldn’t be using fiscal or taxation measures to do this but instead use the criminal justice system.
The main levers to behavioural change, would be the widespread sight of major Finance industry figures cuffed up amidst uniformed police officers on their way to long spells on remand in prison —and completely random selection of the people to be investigated.
Trials need not be expensive because they need never take place—
In this way the punishment meted by society would be arbitrary, cruel, disproportionate and violate ‘natural justice’ (whatever that means these days)—and so match precisely the effects caused by the actions of these people in the wider society.
After a few such episodes ‘they’ might even begin to finally ‘get it’….
(I am joking…at least I think I am)
GulfBreeze says: December 17, 2009 at 2:20 pmCurious omissions:
– Nassim Nicholas Taleb (author of the Black Swan)
– Niall Ferguson (’Chimerica’ theory proponent)
– William Buiter (Economist and FT columnist)
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© 2009 Prospect AdvertisingContact UsFAQTerms & ConditionsPrivacy PolicyListingsIntellectuals var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E")); try { var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-267930-5"); pageTracker._trackPageview(); } catch(err) {}Comments (3):
I can only assume you are being facetious in naming Jon Stewart to your list of “intellectuals,” although I suppose in the context of the others named, such a person could be seen as serious given the liberal penchant for shallowness of thought as long as it is sufficiently emotive.
The main thrust of the Quiet Coup is the reason I feel the debate about how best to dampen the bonus culture and it’s perceived tendency to encourage short term thinking over longer term planning (Like planning on keeping a coherent society in place next year).
It is why I feel we shouldn’t be using fiscal or taxation measures to do this but instead use the criminal justice system.
The main levers to behavioural change, would be the widespread sight of major Finance industry figures cuffed up amidst uniformed police officers on their way to long spells on remand in prison —and completely random selection of the people to be investigated.
Trials need not be expensive because they need never take place—
In this way the punishment meted by society would be arbitrary, cruel, disproportionate and violate ‘natural justice’ (whatever that means these days)—and so match precisely the effects caused by the actions of these people in the wider society.
After a few such episodes ‘they’ might even begin to finally ‘get it’….
(I am joking…at least I think I am)
Curious omissions:
– Nassim Nicholas Taleb (author of the Black Swan)
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