An Interview With Joseph Stiglitz -- Regulation and the Euro Zone

Stiglitz explains the future of the Euro Zone, how it was possible to create a moral vacuum on Wall Street, why US citizens do not take their anger to the streets and how the US should follow Greece and start regulating now.
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Nobel Prize winner and Professor for Economy at Columbia University, Joseph Stiglitz, just returned from a book tour in Europe where he introduced his widely acclaimed analysis of the Financial Crisis, called Free Fall. In an interview he explains the future of the Euro Zone, how it was possible to create a moral vacuum on Wall Street, why US citizens do not take their anger to the streets and how the US should follow Greece and start regulating now.


Lia Petridis Maiello:
During the Financial Crisis I was surprised by the moral vacuum that has been created on Wall Street. When the case Bernie Madoff took place I heard people on Wall Street wondering in Admiration how he was able "to pull this off". Last week I saw that John Paulson was motivating Americans on Marketwatch to buy houses again and I was thinking that he had forfeit somewhat of his credibility with what has happened related to the Goldman Sachs scandal. What is your explanation?

Joseph Stiglitz:
The problem on Wall Street is that we had bought into the idea that
money is everything, and that the metric of whether you are doing well for the economy is how much money you were making for yourself. To me there were two very serious moral failings. One is that so much energy went into exploiting the poorest Americans; selling them houses they knew were beyond their ability to pay, with mortgages that were exploitive. There were people who called themselves mortgage brokers supposedly looking for the best mortgage, but in fact were looking for the worst mortgage. The whole hosts of mortgages that are designed to maximize fees basically rob the poorest people of all their life savings. The irony was that the financial markets were hoisted on their own petard, as I point out in my book. That is to me, one of the most serious moral failings on the part of the financial markets. The second is while Bernie Madoff represented a pyramid scheme engaging in illegal activity, much of what the financial markets were doing was perhaps legal, but clearly unethical, or borderline. That the financial markets did not seem to see much distinction is a severe criticism. A good example is what Goldman Sachs did; how they sold products that they knew were bad, so bad that they were actually selling them short, betting on the fact that they would lose money. The whole debate in their mind is whether what they did was legal or not. The unanimity that it was immoral that they did not disclose to the buyers that they thought these were so crappy that they were going to lose money on them and the fact that they see nothing wrong with that suggests that they live in a parallel universe, a different world, a different moral compass than the rest of society.

LPM: I read repeatedly now, not only in your book, that it would have made sense to nationalize the banks for a while, sort out the bad assets and then privatize them again. That idea created back then a big outcry on Wall Street. Why the hysteria?

JS: It's hard to understand. I think it was the banks that perhaps stirred it up, because they didn't want the normal rules of capitalism to be followed. The normal rules of capitalism say that when a bank can not pay what it owes it is going to be placed under conservatorship, the bond holders become the new share holders. If the bondholders don't have enough to meet the obligations, the government fills in the gap because of its insurance of deposits. But this is not nationalization, this is simply a financial restructuring facilitated by government because of its role in insuring depositors. What we wound up with is an aberration from market economics, "ersatz capitalism," where you socialize losses and privatize gains. Not only is it inequitable, it's actually distortionary because it leads to incentives that are perverse, excessive risk taking, and it undermines faith in the market economy.

LPM: Regarding the economical situation in Europe right now, do you think that that crisis could lead to another crisis of the financial markets with further write-offs?

JS: "Yes it can, and one can view what Europe is doing as a valiant attempt to prevent that. It has finally dawned on some of the leaders that were reluctant to act, that if they didn't intervene, Greece and perhaps other countries might have to default. If that happened the banks that hold large amounts of those bonds would be in an even weaker position. Many of the European banks are highly leveraged so that a relatively small change in the value of their assets could wipe out significant amounts of their net worth, leaving them to be undercapitalized. From the perspective of many this was not so much a bailout of Greece or Spain as it was of the banks to protect them
from the consequences."

LPM: Do you think Greece's bankruptcy is still an option?

JS: "There is no reason why Greece needs to go bankrupt. Greece has the capability of paying the loans that are due provided markets have confidence in Greece. Even at a 120 percent debt-to-GDP ratio, if interest rates were low, at 3 percent, that's only 3.6 percent of GDP, a small enough number that it could clearly service that debt. On the other hand, if markets don't have confidence and interest rates soar, then even a country with a much lower debt-to-GDP ratio, like Spain,
will face difficulties. It is a situation that economists refer to as a multiple-equilibrium. If the markets lose confidence, interest rates will go high, and the market's beliefs will become self-fulfilling. The hope is that by Europe coming to the rescue, Greece won't have to turn to the markets for rolling over its debt and financing its new deficits. Greece will be able to meet its debt obligations, markets will calm down, and then in fact it won't cost Europe anything. They will get repaid."

LPM: In that context how do you feel about European Central Banks starting to buy government bonds of threatened countries like Greece and Spain?

JS: "It's a very normal course for Central Banks to buy bonds of the country for which they serve as the Central Bank. The problem is that when the EU was created, in particular the Euro, there wasn't sufficient attention to the institutional structure that would be necessary to make the Euro work. Of course as long as things were going well, the Euro would work fine. The question is what would happen if a country like Spain or Greece had an aftershock. The Euro took away two of the critical instruments of adjustment, the exchange rate and interest rate. It didn't put anything in its place. In the absence of an adjustment mechanism, there is a problem. A very severe problem. My hope is that Europe, having finally realized that there was this institutional deficiency, will now repair it. But what is needed is a more permanent institutional framework."

LPM: What sort of framework do you mean in particular? Is there a global scheme of market regulation you could think of?

JS: "There are two things that need to be put on the table. The first is a better regulatory system. What is clear is that the financial markets did not perform the social functions for which they are well rewarded. There was a massive market failure. The United States and Europe are now engaged in extensive discussions of how to fix the regulatory framework. The big banks are pushing back. They are doing everything they can, they made big investments in political capital. They have already gotten high returns in the deregulation that occurred in the 90's, the bailouts that occurred in recent years, and they hope to continue to reap dividends from their investments in political capital, by stopping the regulatory process.

I'm hopeful though that the anger is so great, the anger among the American people, people in Europe and all over the world, that something significant will happen and it appears that that will be the case. The second issue is not the question of how to make the financial sector work well, but how to make the Euro system work well, and that is where I think there need to be better systems of fiscal coordination and fiscal assistance. When the EU was created they created solidarity funds to help new entrants, but they didn't create any solidarity funds to help a country that is facing an aftershock. That was a very big gap and I hope they will do something to fill that gap. What worries me about the rescue package that has been put together is that it is accompanied by severe austerity measures that are likely to lead to a weaker European economy. A weaker European economy is going to increase the deficit so that in fact the deficit reduction that people hope for will not fully be realized. There may be some, but it will be limited.

The risk is that Europe goes into the kind of death spiral that Argentina went in when it had a fixed exchange rate with the United States. It did not want to abandon that fixed exchange rate, there was no assistance of a substantial kind coming. Eventually concretionary measures were imposed and the deficit reduction was not what they had hoped. Finally it abandoned the currency, the fixed exchange rate, and it defaulted on the debt."

LPM: Lets talk about ratings agencies, briefly. One obvious danger is that they have a strong commercial interest, to rate those corporations favorably that are paying them at the time. Now the Europeans are planning to register rating agencies. Do you think that will solve the problem?

JS: "No, the problem is obviously far deeper than that. We know the mailing address of S&P and Moody's. It's not a question of whether they are registered or not, the problem is that they have flawed incentives and they have flawed models. Their ratings of mortgages, mortgage bonds, and CDOs was abysmal. That facilitated the crisis to a very great extent. They had incentives to give excessively good ratings. Correcting the problem is not so easy. There are a few things that clearly have to be done. One of them is to change the incentive structures. A second thing is pension funds. Governments should not rely on these rating agencies delegating their oversight responsibility to a group of people that clearly have demonstrated incompetence. It is striking they maintain their role after their proven incompetence. In some cases they cause bubbles as in the case of the housing crisis, and in some they lead to crises as they did in Thailand and in Greece."

LPM: Europe is also considering the idea to create a European Rating Agency to create a balance between the European and the Anglo World. What do you think of that idea?

JS: "I think diversity is a good thing, but if they use the same flawed model, if they have the same flawed incentive structures, if they resort again to delegate responsibility for oversight through private parties with distorted incentives and limited competence, they are going to have the same problem. The evidence is that in many ways competition among the Rating Agencies was a race to the bottom. So that one should not think that just having more Rating Agencies by itself will solve the problem."

LPM: Do you think that the "Financial Transaction Tax" to curtail speculation might help?

JS: "Yes, I think it would help. I think that it would help in two ways. First, the Financial Sector has gotten bloated. It has been subsidized massively and repeatedly by the rest of the economy. We bailed out the banks over and over again. And we forget that. In the United States we had the S&L bailout, globally we have had the "Mexican Bailout." That was not a bailout of Mexico, but of American financial institutions that made bad credit assessments. Again the same thing is true of Indonesia, Korea, Thailand, Russia, Brazil and I could go on. Each of these were instances of the financial markets failing to do their jobs in assessing credit worthiness and then being bailed out by governments. So we have a bloated financial sector that failed to perform its societal functions. Secondly, a well-designed Financial Transaction Tax could be useful in providing incentives to make the market work better. The basic principle on taxation is you should tax bad things, not good things. We want encourage work, we want encourage savings, we want to discourage speculation, we want to discourage pollution. And that is what the Financial Transaction Tax is intended to do. America's financial sector polluted the entire world with its toxic mortgages. Every economist believes that we ought to tax toxic waste, we ought to tax the producers of this kind of toxicity as well."

LPM: Germany is also debating to introduce some kind of a "bank fee" where banks are paying into a fund to provide for their next bail out. Does that make sense to you?

JS: "I very strongly support this! It seems to me that is part of banking, evidently, that they continue to make bad mistakes and it is part of the cost of running the financial system that ought to be borne by the financial system, not by the rest of the economy. If you don't do that, you will get an over-bloated financial sector. If it's well designed, it can improve the efficiency of the financial markets, for instance, the real risk is associated with the "too big to fail" banks. In the United States last year we had a 140 small banks go bankrupt. The cost for the tax payer was very limited. It is the big banks that represent the real threat to our economy and to our society.

If you had a tax that was related to the risk, the risk associated with size, the risk associated with flawed incentive structures, the risk associated with leverage, the risk associated with excessive risk taking. That kind of levy on the banks would in fact discourage the bad behaviour, and at the same time would raise revenues that would provide a kitty for the times in which its needed."

LPM:You were talking about the anger of US citizens before. Why do you think there is no social movement resulting from the Financial Crisis?

JS: "Part of the problem in America is unfortunately the passivity. What they have seen is the banks destroy our economy, the rescue of the banks putting the fiscal health of the United States and Europe in a precarious position, but these same banks then speculating against the countries the governments that rescued them, biting the hand that fed them, the bank officers receiving huge bonuses even in the years in which there were massive losses. Resisting regulations that would prevent this from recurring, and then going on with practices that include exploiting credit card users, pushing for bankruptcy reform that encourages borrowing beyond people's means, they can not get out from under the burdon of the debt that has been created."

LPM: Where is 14 trillion US dollars of debt leaving the United States these days? Is the US that much more stable then Europe?

JS: "The United States is perhaps in a better position then Europe, because most of the debt is in dollars, and we can print dollars. There is no real question of our ability to meet our obligations, if only in a phony way. But I think that the worry, the recognition is that we, like Greece, are in a situation that is probably unsustainable. Greece has already started to take measures. We haven't done that, at least not fully. The magnitude of the problem is illustrated by the fact it is estimated that in the not too distant future, the debt-to-GDP ratio in the United States will be a hundred percent, which is not that different from Greece. Its interest rate is five percent. That means five percent of GDP will be required every year to service the debt. The interest rate could even be higher, but federal tax revenues have only been about eighteen percent. We would be devoting almost a third of our total tax revenues to just servicing the debt, but when you look at the problems posed by the aging of the population, even without this we will face a massive shortfall. There are some answers, for example cutting back on weapons that don't work against enemies that don't exist, our bloated military. Also imposing taxes of the kind we talked about, a financial transaction tax, and bank levies, but these are not easy measures in the United States. The military industrial complex has been pushing for a larger and larger military. Yet, the opposition to any tax is so great while people demand the services the government provides. It is an impossible situation something will have to give! It's just a matter of time, but making things more difficult is that timing is critical and if we start cutting back now we could go into a double dip recession. I have advocated that this is not the time to cut back spending, but this is a time to refocus spending on investments that yield high returns. If we do that we can actually lower the long term national debt, even if we have higher short term deficit."

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