{"id":1796,"date":"2016-11-30T15:35:36","date_gmt":"2016-11-30T20:35:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.darden.virginia.edu\/brunerblog\/?p=1796"},"modified":"2018-08-08T11:30:39","modified_gmt":"2018-08-08T15:30:39","slug":"liveblogging-financial-innovation-weeks-11-and-12-criticisms-and-defenses-of-financial-innovation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.darden.virginia.edu\/brunerblog\/2016\/11\/liveblogging-financial-innovation-weeks-11-and-12-criticisms-and-defenses-of-financial-innovation\/","title":{"rendered":"Liveblogging &ldquo;Financial Innovation&rdquo; Weeks 11 and 12: Criticisms and Defenses of Financial Innovation"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span class=\"has-dropcap\">A<\/span>pproaching the end of our course on financial innovation, it is appropriate to review the pluses and minuses of such activity.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>We deferred this until after our survey of the different kinds of innovations so that our reflection on criticisms and defenses would be more acute.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>I have combined our reading and discussions across two weeks into one post in order to synthesize some larger insights.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>How one views financial innovation depends on how one views the pluses and minuses to society\u2014and in particular, the effect of financial innovation on stability of the financial system.<\/font><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Today, a conversation about the criticisms and defenses of financial innovation is framed by recent experience.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The Panic of 2008 has become the dominant reference point for critics and defenders.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Therefore, before getting into the pros and cons of financial innovation, it is useful to sketch some highlights about the late unpleasantness.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><b><u><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">The Financial Crisis as the Stage for Debate<\/font><\/font><\/u><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">By year 2000, economists seemed to declare victory over the recurrence of depressions and panics.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Olivier Blanchard and John Simon (2001) reported that since the mid-1980s, variability of GDP growth had declined by half and variability of inflation had declined by almost two-thirds.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Nobel Laureate Robert Lucas, in his Presidential Address to the American Economic Association in 2003 said, <\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0.5in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cmacroeconomics in this original sense has succeeded: the central problem of depression prevention has been solved, for all practical purposes, and has in fact been solved for many decades\u2026the potential for welfare gains from better long-run supply-side policies exceeds by far the potential from further improvements in short-run demand management.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Lucas (2003) page 1.))<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">And a study by Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz, Jonathan Orszag and Peter Orszag (2002) found a smaller than 1:500,000 chance that Fannie Mae would fail.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>And in a speech to the Eastern Economic association in 2004, Federal Reserve Board Governor Ben S. Bernanke attributed \u201cthe Great Moderation\u201d to the structural supply-side changes to which Lucas earlier referred, to improved monetary policies, and to good luck.<\/font><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 8pt;line-height: 12pt\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Then the panic hit, and economists resurrected notions that the capitalist economy was prone to financial instability.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Financial innovation was an obvious target.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>New markets, new technologies, new institutions, and new instruments\u2014many with unpronounceable names and inscrutable justifications\u2014surfaced at the center of institutional insolvencies and bailouts.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Investigative journalists reported practices by mortgage loan administrators, bond rating agencies, lenders, traders, and investors that illustrated the propensities toward neglect, deception, corruption, and predation that Minsky and others hypothesized.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Nolan McCarty, Keith T. Poole, and Howard Rosenthal (2013) wrote,<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0.5in 8pt;line-height: 12pt\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cIn addition to deregulation, financial innovation was central to the crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The problems in the home mortgage market would not have produced a crisis bubble without important changes in how these loans were securitized.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The innovations involved the development of three new products: privately issued mortgage-based securities, the tranching of the securities, and the swaps market that insured the securities.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>But perhaps the most important innovation involved the extent to which these investments were leveraged.\u201d <span>&nbsp;<\/span>((McCarty et alia, (2013) page 140.))<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 8pt;line-height: 12pt\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">The report of the U.S. Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (2011) highlighted \u201cgaps in oversight of critical areas with trillions of dollars at risk, such as the shadow banking system and over-the-counter derivatives markets.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Financial Crisis Inquiry Report (2011) page xviii.)) <span>&nbsp;<\/span>The Commission was not able to agree on causes and remedies.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Six of the ten Commission members were appointees of the Democratic Party, and concluded:<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0.5in 8pt;line-height: 12pt\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cBut underneath, something was going wrong.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Like a science fiction movie in which ordinary household objects turn hostile, familiar market mechanisms were being transformed.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The time-tested 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, with a 20% down payment, went out of style.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>There was a burgeoning global demand for residential mortgage-backed securities that offered seemingly solid and secure returns.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Investors around the world clamored to purchase securities built on American real estate, seemingly one of the safest bests in the world.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Wall Street labored mightily to meet that demand.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Bond salesmen earned multimillion-dollar bonuses packaging and selling new kinds of loans, offered by new kinds of lenders, into new kinds of investment products that were deemed safe but possessed complex and hidden risks\u2026\u201dAll this financial creativity was a lot like cheap sangria,\u201d said Michael Mayo, a managing director and financial services analyst at Calyon Securities (USA) Inc.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>\u201cA lot of cheap ingredients repackaged to sell at a premium,\u201d he told the Commission.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>\u201cIt might taste good for a while, but then you get headaches later and you have no idea what\u2019s really inside.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The securitization machine began to guzzle these once-rare mortgage products with their strange-sounding names: Alt-A, subprime, I-O (interest-only), low-doc, no-doc, or ninja (no income, no job, no assets) loans; 2-28s and 3-27s; liar loans; piggyback second mortgages; payment-option or pick-a-pay adjustable rate mortgages.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>New variants on adjustable-rate mortgages, called \u201cexploding\u201d ARMSs, featured low monthly costs at first, but payments could suddenly double or triple, if borrowers were unable to refinance.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Loans with negative amortization would eat away the borrower\u2019s equity.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Soon there were a multitude of different kinds of mortgages available on the market, confounding consumers who didn\u2019t examine the fine print, baffling conscientious borrowers who tried to puzzle out their implications, and opening the door for those who wanted in on the action\u2026The instruments grew more and more complex: CDOs were constructed out of CDOs, creating CDOs squared.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>When firms ran out of real product, they started generating cheaper-to-produce synthetic CDOs\u2014composed not of real mortgage securities but just of bets on other mortgage products.<span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/span>Each new permutation created an opportunity to extract more fees and trading profits.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>And each new layer brought in more investors wagering on the mortgage market\u2014even well after the market had started to turn.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>So by the time the process was complete, a mortgage on a home in South Florida might become part of dozens of securities owned by hundreds of investors\u2014or parts of bets being made by hundreds more.\u201d <span>&nbsp;<\/span>((Financial Crisis Inquiry Report (2011) pages 6-8.))<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 8pt;line-height: 12pt\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Four of the ten members of the Commission were Republicans and wrote dissents to the majority report. <span>&nbsp;<\/span>One dissenter argued that the crisis was attributable to the creation of government-sponsored entities combined with aggressive lending mandates from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. <span>&nbsp;<\/span>Three of the dissenters acknowledged that financial innovations played a role in the onset of the crisis, but that the impact of these innovations was dwarfed by a confluence of ten causes.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((The ten causes were credit bubble, housing bubble, nontraditional mortgages, credit ratings and securitization, financial institutions that concentrated correlated risks, leverage and liquidity risk, risk of contagion, common shock, financial shock and panic, and an ensuing economic crisis.)) The dissenters wrote, <\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cSome focus their criticism on the <i>form<\/i> of these financial instruments [mortgage-backed securities].<span>&nbsp; <\/span>For example, financial instruments called collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) were engineered from different bundled payment streams from mortgage-backed securities.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Some argue that the conversion of a bundle of simple mortgages to a mortgage-backed securities, and then to a collateralized debt obligation, was a problem.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>They argue that complex financial derivatives caused the crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>We conclude that the details of this engineering are incidental to understanding the essential causes of the crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>If the system works properly, reconfiguring streams of mortgage payments has little effect.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The total amount of risk in a mortgage is unchanged if the pieces are put together in a different way\u2026.Rather than \u201cderivatives and CDOs caused the financial crisis,\u201d it is more accurate to say<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 0pt 1in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.5in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Securitizers lowered credit quality standards;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 0pt 1in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.5in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Mortgage originators took advantage of this to create junk mortgages;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 0pt 1in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.5in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Credit rating agencies assigned overly optimistic ratings;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 0pt 1in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.5in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Securities investors and others failed to perform sufficient due diligence;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 0pt 1in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.5in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">International and domestic regulators encouraged arbitrage toward lower capital standards;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 0pt 1in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.5in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Some investors used these securities to concentrate rather than diversify risk; and<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpLast\" style=\"margin: 0in -9pt 8pt 1in;line-height: 12pt;text-indent: -0.5in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Others used synthetic CDOs to amplify their housing bets.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Financial Crisis Inquiry Report (2011), pages 425-427.))<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><u><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">VIEW CON: Financial innovation is pernicious.<\/font><\/u><\/b><u><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/u><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">The indictment of financial innovation rests on at least four avenues of criticism: economic productivity, financial stability, culture, and ideology.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Consider each of these in turn.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Financial innovation degrades the stability of the financial system.<span>&nbsp; <\/span><\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Hyman Minsky (1986) argued that financial innovation contributes to instability of the financial system and thus, to the occurrence of financial crises.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The invention of new money was driven by<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 8pt 0.5in;line-height: 12pt\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">\u201c\u2026profit-seeking activities by businesses, financial institutions, and households as they manage their affairs.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>In this process innovation occurs, so that new financial instruments and institutions emerge and old instruments and institutions are used in new ways.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>These changes, along with legislated and administrative changes that reflected the aura of success of this period, transformed the financial and economic system from one in which a financial crisis was unlikely into one that was vulnerable to crises.\u201d <span>&nbsp;<\/span>((Minsky (1986) pages 78-79.))<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Ongoing innovations in markets, institutions, and instruments ensure ongoing systemic vulnerability.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The solution to cycles triggered by the instability of the financial system, said Minsky, was both increased regulation of the financial sector and very liberal management of the demand side of the economy i.e., through public works programs, full-employment schemes, and so on.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Bruner, Carr and Mehedi (2016) examined five major U.S. financial crises to explore the relation between financial innovation and crises.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The natural functioning of markets, in which prices adequately reflect the current situation and outlook for the future, was impaired.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>While financial innovations don\u2019t necessarily <i>cause <\/i>financial crises, they may well increase the <i>propensity <\/i>for crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Financial innovation seems to promote systemic fragility by: <\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Making it easier for participants to access the capital markets and to increase leverage.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Securitization enhanced the ability of subprime borrowers to obtain mortgages in the early 2000s.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Bank notes made it easier for frontier borrowers to obtain loans in the early 1830s. <span>&nbsp;<\/span>The introduction of interest-bearing checking accounts attracted consumers to trust companies.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>HELOCs (home equity lines of credit) made it possible for consumers to obtain loans in the 2000s.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Financial innovations made it easier for participants to act on euphoric expectations.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Every crises is preceded by a bubble, founded on unsustainable expectations.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Increasing complexity, which creates information asymmetry.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Information problems create risks of adverse selection (i.e., exploitation of the less-well informed by the better informed), amplify the sensitivity to signals about the state of the market, and promote herd-like behavior (where the less-well informed seek to emulate actions by the better-informed.)<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The account of Bookstaber (2007) suggests that the traders of a major financial institution really did not understand the risks of mortgage-backed securities that the traders were buying in advance of the Panic of 2008.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Deepening connectedness among participants in the financial markets.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>In 1837, banks held bank notes issued by other banks.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>In 2008, large banks linked more broadly to other banks, shadow banks, and corporations through the repo, ABCP, and CDO markets <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpLast\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Shifting risk in new ways.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The extension of credit spread beyond the chartered banking system into the shadow banking system in 1837, 1907, and 2008.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>In the 2000s, Structured Investment Vehicles shifted risk from the balance sheets of banks to these affiliates.<span>&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/span><\/font><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Financial crises occur a matter of years (in some cases, decades) after the introduction of the financial innovations that were indicted in the crises.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Clearly, the <i>introduction <\/i>of the innovation did not spark the crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The long elapsed time allows for any number of factors to create a crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Yet, something about the way in which financial innovations disseminated and were used <i>contributed to <\/i>the crises.<span>&nbsp; <\/span><span>&nbsp;<\/span>For instance, securitization of mortgages began in the 1920s.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>But it was not until the aggressive engineering of securitized mortgages (with tranching and high leverage) that such securitizations became toxic.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><b><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoEndnoteText\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><font color=\"#000000\" face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Perhaps financial innovations contribute to the slow-fast occurrence of a crisis: innovations spread gradually, like an epidemic or social fad and then morph as financial entrepreneurs apply increasingly aggressive tactics to increase the returns and other measures of attractiveness.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Gradually, these financial products become more complex, customized, and opaque, as Richard Bookstaber has written<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Richard Bookstaber, \u201cDoes Financial Innovation Promote Economic Growth?\u201d Blog, November 4, 2009, at <\/font><\/font><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>http:\/\/www.economonitor.com\/blog\/author\/rbookstaber3\/.)<\/u><\/font><\/a><\/font><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">) <span>&nbsp;<\/span>\u2014and they become more destabilizing to the financial system.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Andrew Palmer described this process:<\/font><\/font><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0.5in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cIn simple terms, finance lacks an \u201coff\u201d button.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>First, the industry has a habit of experimenting ceaselessly as it seeks to build on existing techniques and products to create new ones (what Robert Merton, an economist, termed the \u201cinnovation spiral\u201d).<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Innovations in finance\u2014unlike, say, a drug that has gone through a rigorous approval process before coming to market\u2014are continually mutating.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Second, there is a strong desire to standardize products so that markets can deepen, which often accelerates the rate of adoption beyond the capacity of the back office and the regulators to keep up.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Andrew Palmer, \u201cPlaying with Fire,\u201d <i>the Economist, <\/i>February 25, 2012, page 5 at heep:\/\/www.economist.com\/node\/21547999.))<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Financial innovation does not strengthen economic productivity, growth, or welfare.<span>&nbsp; <\/span><\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Echoing Minsky, Luigi Zingales has written that \u201cThere is no theoretical basis for the presumption that financial innovation, by expanding financial opportunities, increases welfare.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Zingales (2015) page 9.))<span>&nbsp; <\/span>He notes that research by Oliver Hart (1975) and Ronel Elul (1995) challenged the idea that completing markets is always beneficial: Hart found that in the case of incomplete markets (which is likely the reality today) adding another market can worsen welfare.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>And Elul affirmed Hart\u2019s finding and suggested that the welfare loss is even more pervasive than previously believed.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Elsewhere, Zingales explored the darker attributes of financial innovations.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>He wrote, \u201cI fear that in the financial sector fraud has become a feature and not a bug.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Zingales (2015, page 19.))<span>&nbsp; <\/span>In 2009, former Fed Chairman, Paul Volcker, said, \u201c<span lang=\"EN\">The most important financial innovation that I have seen the past 20 years is the automatic teller machine\u2026I have found very little evidence that vast amounts of innovation in financial markets in recent years has had a visible effect on the productivity of the economy.\u201d <span>&nbsp;<\/span>((<\/span>Paul Volcker, quoted in <i>New York Post,<\/i> December 13, 2009, accessed at <\/font><\/font><\/font><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>http:\/\/nypost.com\/2009\/12\/13\/the-only-thing-useful-banks-have-invented-in-20-years-is-the-atm\/<\/u><\/font><\/a><\/font><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">.<span lang=\"EN\">))<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Paul Krugman added, \u201cit\u2019s hard to think of any major recent financial innovations that actually aided society, as opposed to being new, improved ways to blow bubbles, evade regulations and implement de facto Ponzi schemes.\u201d ((<\/span>Krugman (2009).<\/font><span lang=\"EN\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">))<\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Financial innovation distorts culture.<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><span>&nbsp; <\/span>The article by Per Hansen argued that the Panic of 2008 was a tipping point for reaction against <\/font><\/font><\/font><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>financialization<\/u><\/font><\/a><font color=\"#000000\"><font face=\"Calibri\"> and that financial innovation was the bandwagon by which financial ideas and norms came to dominate society.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>\u201cFinancialization\u201d refers to the perceived reduction of social values into financial transactions and values\u2014for instance, care for the poor and elderly is reduced to social relief payments; increased social inclusion is reduced to democratization of credit and increased financial access; risk-sharing is reduced to insurance.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Financialization results in the increasing intrusion of financial markets, institutions, and products into the real economy and into daily life.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Critics point to the growth of the financial sector (in terms of percent of GDP and employment): in 1870, the total economic cost of financial intermediation was less than 2% of GDP to 5% in 1980 to almost 9% in 2010.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Source: <span>&nbsp;<\/span>Thomas Philippon, <i>Rethinking the Financial Crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span><\/i>See summary at<span>&nbsp; <\/span><span>&nbsp;<\/span><\/font><\/font><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>https:\/\/tcf.org\/content\/commentary\/graph-how-the-financial-sector-consumed-americas-economic-growth\/<\/u><\/font><\/a><font color=\"#000000\" face=\"Calibri\"> .)) <span>&nbsp;<\/span><span>&nbsp;<\/span>And financial industry profits as a share of business profits have grown over the last three decades (the following figure is from James Kwak.)<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((See <\/font><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>https:\/\/baselinescenario.com\/2012\/02\/29\/why-is-finance-so-big\/)<\/u><\/font><\/a><\/font><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">)<\/font><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><span><a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.darden.virginia.edu\/brunerblog\/files\/2016\/11\/clip_image002.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"clip_image002\" style=\"border-top: 0px;border-right: 0px;border-bottom: 0px;padding-top: 0px;padding-left: 0px;border-left: 0px;padding-right: 0px\" border=\"0\" alt=\"clip_image002\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.darden.virginia.edu\/brunerblog\/files\/2016\/11\/clip_image002_thumb.jpg\" width=\"777\" height=\"539\"><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">The critics of financialization assert that it distorts democratic politics (through campaign finance and regulatory capture), misallocates human talent away from productive uses in the real economy, promotes economic inequality, and increases the use of leverage and risk-taking.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Securitization, derivatives, shadow banking, private equity and other manifestations of financial innovation are lightning-rods for critics.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font color=\"#000000\" face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Reading into the critics of financialization one finds strong ideological currents, such as populism, communitarianism, egalitarianism, and a profound distrust of finance.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Common to many of these is an appeal to fairness and equity.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Such sentiments represent common ground for social protest movements such as Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Per Hansen points to an asymmetry of outcomes from financialization: \u201cprofits are privatized while the costs of the financial crisis have been socialized.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Because of the asymmetry, government intervention in markets is warranted.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>And predation figures importantly in movies such as \u201cWolf of Wall Street\u201d and in the infamous <\/font><\/font><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>article by Matt Taibbi<\/u><\/font><\/a><\/font><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\"> which characterized Goldman Sachs as a <span>&nbsp;<\/span>\u201cvampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity.\u201d <span>&nbsp;<\/span><span>&nbsp;<\/span>And the movie, \u201cThe Big Short,\u201d conveys incompetence, inattention, a lack of fiduciary duty, and perhaps self-dealing among investment managers leading up to the Panic of 2008.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>All of this fed the anger with financialization and financial innovation.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><u><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">VIEW PRO: Financial innovation is largely benign.<\/font><\/u><\/b><u><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/u><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Financial innovation is a systemic stabilizer<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">.<span>&nbsp; <\/span><\/font><\/font><\/font><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>Neoclassical economists<\/u><\/font><\/a><\/font><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"> hold that economies are self-correcting and will tend toward equilibrium and that instability is due not to the internal structure of the economy or to innovation, but to shocks from outside (e.g., wars, natural disasters, poor harvests, etc.) <span>&nbsp;<\/span>Market participants are assumed to be rational; and markets are assumed to be efficient.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>There is a role for government in stabilizing economic cycles, but not for deep and longstanding intervention.<\/font><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">From this perspective financial innovation seems largely benign: new markets, new institutions, and new instruments arise to <i>complete <\/i>the markets, match investment returns to consumption needs over time, provide diversification for portfolios, shift risk, reduce transaction costs, increase liquidity, reduce agency costs among different parties, or adapt to changes in technology and other environmental conditions.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Among these environmental conditions could be taxes and regulation: Merton Miller suggested that financial entrepreneurs innovate in an effort to <i>arbitrage <\/i>(or avoid) such constraints.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>To advance innovation, government should eliminate policies that discourage investment and innovation, tax schemes that produced legal but arduous tax-avoidance behavior, rigidities in the labor market, and generally a suppression of risk-taking.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Along these lines, Peter Wallison, a member of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission contended that structural impediments to healthy market function, many of them imposed by government, had caused the Panic of 2008.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">In the midst of strong civic reaction to the Panic of 2008, Robert Shiller, Nicholas Barberis, and Michael Haliassos (2013) contended that the problem was not too much financial innovation, but <i>too little<\/i>.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Investors did not have the markets, institutions, and instruments by which they could hedge the risk of a collapse of housing prices.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The constraints imposed by political and regulatory scrutiny might be averse to the prevention and\/or recovery from financial crises.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>For instance, Robert Shiller wrote, <\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">\u201cI want to emphasize that the best process in fixing the economy after this crisis, or after any crisis, consists of moving ahead by all forms of new invention, including financial invention.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Financial crises are often tied up with the uncertainties associated with the recent application of some financial innovation.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The process of innovation creates the potential for accidents.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>But the response to accidents shouldn\u2019t be to reverse the innovation.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The response should be moving the economy ahead to be even better, not to patch holes in an existing theory.\u201d ((Haliassos, (2013) page 4.))<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">This echoed the view of Franklin Allen and Glenn Yago that, \u201cTrue innovation in capital markets and finance has made access to credit and the ability to build equity more flexible and less costly. \u2026We believe that financial innovations are the cure for instability, not the cause.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Allen and Yago (2010) page 21.))<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0.5in 0pt 0in;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Financial innovation promotes growth, productivity, and welfare.<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><span>&nbsp; <\/span>Many economists hold that a well-functioning financial system is essential for a nation\u2019s economic development and that an aspect of \u201cwell-functioning\u201d is financial innovation.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Joseph Stiglitz wrote, \u201cover the long sweep of history, financial innovation has been important in promoting growth.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Stiglitz (2010).))<span>&nbsp; <\/span>There seems to be a tradeoff between the costs of financial innovation (systemic fragility, market volatility) and its benefits (faster growth).<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Thorsten Beck <i>et alia <\/i>(2012) studied the investment in financial innovation across 32 countries and 21 years and confirmed the tradeoff: more investment in financial innovation was associated with faster GDP growth per capita; but countries with more innovation experienced more volatility and systemic fragility.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The authors wrote, \u201cOur findings show that financial innovation provides significant benefits for the real economy but also contains risks that have to be managed carefully.\u201d<span>&nbsp; <\/span>((Beck <i>et alia <\/i>(2012) page 3.))<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font color=\"#000000\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Financial innovation strengthens society and culture.<span>&nbsp; <\/span><\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">The ideology of many financial innovators is founded on values of freedom, accountability for one\u2019s own actions, and the virtue of increased connectivity with markets and with other individuals. <span>&nbsp;<\/span>Innovation brings lower costs, higher quality, greater convenience, more transparency\u2014all of which improve life. <span>&nbsp;<\/span>Sensible risk-taking is desirable as a stimulus for innovation.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Promoting investment in housing and financial securities by all social classes helps to create an \u201cownership society\u201d that gives a stake for everyone in the performance of the private sector.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>And an ownership society justifies a focus on shareholder value as a measure of the performance of an enterprise. <span>&nbsp;<\/span>Improved efficiency is desirable and private markets achieve higher efficiency better than the public sector. For that reason, deregulation, privatization, and tax cuts are warranted. <span>&nbsp;<\/span>Failure happens, but is not terminal.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Markets manufacture important information that helps people make better decisions.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Integration among markets (for instance, through lower tariffs) and greater engagement of individuals in those markets promotes a higher quality of life.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>No economic measure adequately captures the benefits of increased quality and convenience, entertainment, and connectivity.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The defenses of financial innovation are roughly associated with the ideology of <\/font><\/font><\/font><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>neoliberalism<\/u><\/font><\/a><font color=\"#000000\" face=\"Calibri\"> and <\/font><a><font color=\"#0563c1\" face=\"Calibri\"><u>laissez-faire<\/u><\/font><\/a><\/font><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><b><u><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Conclusions<\/font><\/font><\/u><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Our purpose in the course over these two weeks was not to drive an outcome in favor of either the critics or the defenses, but rather to build a familiarity with the key lines of argument.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>As a practical matter, it seems unlikely that public policy will be gravitate entirely into one camp or the other.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Anyway, we will spend the class meetings in Week 13 discussing the regulatory implications of financial innovation.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Therefore, the story is not yet complete.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>But the association of financial innovations with financial instability raises some final considerations.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><i><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Through history<\/font><\/i><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">, financial crises show some association with financial innovations<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>We have seen this before.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>This historical association is perhaps the main novelty of this essay and sustains other insights about crises, innovations and civic reaction.<span>&nbsp; <\/span><span>&nbsp; <\/span>But association cannot confirm causation: in the major financial crises in history, financial innovation figured prominently; but not every financial innovation in history is associated with a financial crisis.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>It might be more appropriate to say that financial innovation is an <i>instrument<\/i> of larger causes of financial crises.<\/font><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><b><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">What seems to threaten financial stability is the convergence of financial innovations with episodes of high growth.<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><span>&nbsp; <\/span>In the most buoyant times, innovations will be used more aggressively.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>And in those times, the infrastructure on which financial stability depends\u2014the technological, managerial, and regulatory spine of financial institutions and the financial sector\u2014fails to keep up with the more aggressive application of the innovations.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><b><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Financial innovations associate with financial crises in at least four important ways<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">:<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Make it easier for market participants to act on their euphoric expectations<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Every crisis is preceded by a boom or bubble, founded on unsustainable expectations (e.g., \u201chousing prices can only rise.\u201d)<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Make it easier to get money<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Many financial innovations create new money or enhance access to money.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>This can lead to increased leverage and bubble-like pricing of assets.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Make it hard to know what is going on<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Innovations bring complexity.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Complexity increases opacity.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The result is that some market players know more about the real state of the markets than do others.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>This information asymmetry fuels panic psychology.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpLast\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Deepen connectedness among participants in the financial system.<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><span>&nbsp; <\/span>As a result, instability in one part of the financial system can travel to other parts, despite shock-absorbers and regulatory fire-walls.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><b><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">If financial innovation contributes to financial crises, how can we anticipate the origination of destabilizing innovations?<\/font><\/b><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"><span>&nbsp; <\/span>The answer must entail actually <i>looking <\/i>for them, and in less-obvious places.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Innovation occurs at the frontiers, not at the centers of the business economy.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>Frontiers matter for the understanding of the processes and substance of innovation.<\/font><span><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">&nbsp; <\/font><\/span><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><u><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Demand:<\/font><\/u><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"> The frontiers are where one finds the unmet needs.&nbsp; Organizations at the center of the business economy focus intensively on efficiency, which tends to produce standardization of products and services.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>And the center tends to deepen its investment in incumbent technology, which produces a disbelief in the need for new products and services.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>The segments of world population that are \u201cunbanked\u201d and therefore cannot gain access to financial services is huge in absolute terms.<span>&nbsp; <\/span>New systems of micro finance and electronic payments are being developed to serve this need.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoListParagraphCxSpLast\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt 0.5in;line-height: normal;text-indent: -0.25in\"><font color=\"#000000\"><span style=\"font-family:\"><span><font face=\"Symbol\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">\u00b7<\/font><\/font><span style=\"font-family:;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Times New Roman\"><font style=\"font-size: 7pt\">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <\/font><\/font><\/span><\/span><\/span><font face=\"Calibri\"><u><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">Supply:<\/font><\/u><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"> And the frontiers are where one tends to find the outsiders&#8211;the entrants&#8211;who bring a fresh point of view.&nbsp; The centers of the business economy are dominated by incumbents, whose conventional thinking summon products and services that serve a predictable demand.&nbsp; Mind you, incumbents also invest in innovation, but the transformational innovations seem to emerge from entrants at the frontiers, not the center, of business economics.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 8pt;line-height: 12pt\"><b><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Works Referenced<\/font><\/font><\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Allen, F. &amp; Gale, D. (2000). Financial contagion. <i>Journal of Political Economy<\/i>, <i>108<\/i>(1), 1\u201333.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Allen, F. &amp; Gale, D. (1991) <i>Financial Innovation and Risk Sharing, <\/i>Cambridge: MIT Press.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Allen, F, and Yago, G. (2010) <i>Financing the Future: Market-Based Innovations for Growth, <\/i>Upper Saddle River, NJ: Wharton School Publishing.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Beck, T., Chen, T., Lin, C., Song, F. (2012) \u201cFinancial Innovation: the Bright and Dark Sides,\u201d VOX CEPR\u2019s Policy portal, at http:\/ voxeu.org\/article\/financial-innovation-good-and-bad.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Blanchard, Olivier, and John Simon (2001) \u201cThe Long and Large Decline in U.S. Output Volatility,\u201d <i>Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, <\/i>Vol. 1, pages 165-173.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Bookstaber, R. (2007). <i>A demon of our own design: Markets, hedge funds, and the perils of financial innovation<\/i>. Wiley.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Bookstaber, R. (2009). \u201cDoes Financial Innovation Promote Economic Growth?\u201d Blog, November 4, 2009, at http:\/\/www.economonitor.com\/blog\/author\/rbookstaber3\/<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Bruner, Robert F., Sean D. Carr, and Asif Mehedi, (2016), \u201cFinancial Innovation and the Consequencies of Complexity: Insights from Major U.S. Banking Crises,\u201d in <i>Complexity and Crisis in the Financial System: Critical Perspectives on American and British Banking, <\/i>edited by Matthew Hollow, Folarin Akinbami, and Ranald Michie, London: Edward Elgar Publishing.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Elul, R., (1995), \u201cWelfare Effects of Financial Innovation in Incomplete Markets with Several Consumption Goods,\u201d <i>Journal of Economic Theory, <\/i><span>&nbsp;<\/span>65, 43-78.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font color=\"#000000\"><i><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\">The Financial Crisis Inquiry Report: Final Report of the National Commission on the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis in the United States,<\/font><\/i><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\"> (2011) New York: Perseus Books.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Haliassos, M. (ed.) (2013). <i>Financial Innovation: Too Much or Too Little? <\/i>Cambridge: MIT Press.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Hanson, Per, (2014), \u201cFrom finance capitalism to financialization: A cultural and narrative perspective on 150 years of financial history,\u201d <i>Business History Conference, <\/i>pages 605-642.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Hart, O. (1975), \u201cOn the Optimality of Equilibrium When the Market Structure is Incomplete,\u201d <i>Journal of Economic Theory, <\/i><span>&nbsp;<\/span>11, 418-443.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Krugman, P., (2009), \u201cMoney for Nothing,\u201d <i>New York Times, <\/i>April 26, 2009, http:\/\/mobile.nytimes.com\/2009\/04\/27\/opinion\/27kurgman.html?<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Lucas, R. E. (2003) \u201cMacroeconomic Priorities,\u201d <i>The American Economic Review<\/i>, Vol. 93, No. 1. (Mar.), pp. 1-14.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Marshall, Alfred (1890), <i>Principles of Economics, <\/i>New York: Macmillan &amp; Co. (1938 edition).<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">McCarty, Nolan, Keith T. Poole, and Howard Rosenthal, 2013, <i>Political Bubbles: Financial Crises and the Failure of American Democracy, <\/i>Princeton: Princeton University Press.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Minsky, Hyman, (1986), <i>Stabilizing an Unstable Economy, <\/i>New York: McGraw-Hill.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Palmer, A. (2012) \u201cPlaying with Fire,\u201d <i>the Economist, <\/i>February 25, 2012, page 5 at heep:\/\/www.economist.com\/node\/21547999.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Shiller, R. (2012).<span>&nbsp; <\/span><i>Finance and the Good Society,<\/i> Princeton: Princeton University Press.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Shiller, R. (2000). <i>Irrational Exuberance, <\/i>Princeton: Princeton University Press.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Stiglitz, J. (2010), \u201cFinancial Innovation: Against the Motion that Financial Innovation Boosts Economic Growth,\u201d <i>The Economist, <\/i>February 23-March 3, http:\/\/www.economist.com\/debate\/days\/view\/471.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Wallison, P. (2011), \u201cDissenting Statement to the <i>Financial Crisis Inquiry Report\u201d <\/i>in <i>Financial Crisis Inquiry Report, <\/i>New York: Perseus Books.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Wicker, E. (2006). <i>Banking Panics of the Gilded Age<\/i>. Cambridge University Press.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">Zingales, L. (2015), \u201cDoes Finance Benefit Society?\u201d <i>Journal of Finance, <\/i>Vol. 70, Issue 4, pages 1327-1363..<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\" style=\"margin: 0in 0in 0pt;line-height: normal\"><font face=\"Calibri\"><font style=\"font-size: 11pt\" color=\"#000000\">&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Approaching the end of our course on financial innovation, it is appropriate to review the pluses and minuses of such activity.&nbsp; We deferred this until after our survey of the different kinds of innovations so that our reflection on criticisms and defenses would be more acute.&nbsp; I have combined our reading and discussions across two [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":18,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1796","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v20.10 (Yoast SEO v27.8) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Liveblogging &ldquo;Financial Innovation&rdquo; Weeks 11 and 12: Criticisms and Defenses of Financial Innovation - Robert F. 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Bruner - Liveblogging &ldquo;Financial Innovation&rdquo; Weeks 11 and 12: Criticisms and Defenses of Financial Innovation\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"November 30, 2016 - Approaching the end of our course on financial innovation, it is appropriate to review the pluses and minuses of such activity.&nbsp; We deferred this\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/blogs.darden.virginia.edu\/brunerblog\/2016\/11\/liveblogging-financial-innovation-weeks-11-and-12-criticisms-and-defenses-of-financial-innovation\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Robert F. 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