Comparing Financial & Other Disasters: A Conceptual Approach John Singleton, Sheffield Hallam
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Transcript of Comparing Financial & Other Disasters: A Conceptual Approach John Singleton, Sheffield Hallam
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Comparing Financial & Other Disasters: A Conceptual Approach
John Singleton, Sheffield Hallam
• Economists are parochial• They miss the parallels between events in the
economic sphere and events in other spheres• See economic & financial disasters as unique• But in fact they are only a subset of disaster• They might gain new perspectives from
comparing economic and other disasters
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Disaster Cycle or Wheel of Misfortune
Halifax Explosion 1917 inspired Samuel Prince’s Catastrophe and Social Change.
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What kinds of disasters will I examine through the DC lens?
• Today– Hurricane Katrina– Slump of 1930s
• Also in the paper– WW1– Smoking
• Others planned– Financial crisis since 2007 including euro– Coal mining disasters– Global warming ?(the trickiest of all)
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Hurricane Katrina 2005and
Depression early 1930s.
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Stage 1: Context & precautions
VULNERABILITY IN BOTH CASES• Katrina– Mississippi prone to flooding– Lots of hurricanes in the Caribbean– Development of system of levees and canals
• Depression– US financial sector prone to instability– Insecure postwar recovery in Europe– Establishment of Fed to dampen crises– Reconstruction of Gold Standard in 1920s
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Stage 2. Warnings (N.B. usually hard to interpret)
• Katrina– National Hurricane Center predicts Hurricanes– Katrina designated Hurricane on 25 August– Hard to predict where it will land– Hits New Orleans on 29th
• Depression– Concerns about speculative excess in US late 20s– Concerns about sustainability of German recovery– Neither Harvard nor Yale forecasting teams
anticipated the events of the early 1930
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Stage 3. Impact
HUGE COSTS IN BOTH CASES• Katrina– 1800 dead– 80% of New Orleans flooded– Disruption of port and oil and gas industries– Cost $81 billion (William Nordhaus)
• Depression– Millions unemployed– Bank failures– Stimulus for extreme political movements
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Stage 4. Rescue and relief
INADEQUATE & CONFUSED RESPONSES• Katrina– Evacuation of New Orleans began 19 hours before landfall but
never completed (disorganisation)– Many stayed behind e.g. in Convention Centre– Government payouts to insured and non-insured residents over
following months• Depression– Macroeconomic response was misconceived: fiscal and
monetary tightening– Higher tariffs– Unemployed could often obtain benefits
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Stage 5. Blame
SEARCH FOR CULPRITS• Katrina– All levels of government accused of incompetence over
botched rescue effort– Some also blamed residents for choosing to live in New
Orleans knowing its flood history• Depression– Fundamental lack of understanding of slump– Search for individual and group scapegoats– Sunshine Charlie (National City), bankers in general, Jews,
Americans, the French– Growing radicalisation
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Stage 6. Recovery and reconstruction
UNCLEAR STRATEGIES, SLOW RECOVERIES• Katrina
– Debate over whether New Orleans deserved to be rebuilt (city was declining before 2005)
– Politically there was no alternative to pouring billions in– By 2012 population back to 81% of pre-flood level
• Depression– Recovery by accident– Leaving Gold Standard (UK) or devaluing (US)– Looser monetary policy– Many recovery policies (e.g. New Deal) were stronger on rhetoric than
substance
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Stage 7. Regulatory reform
VARYING REGULATORY RESPONSE• Katrina– Regulatory response was insubstantial– National Flood Insurance Programme (set up 1960s) was
tweaked– But flood insurance did not become mandatory– Should it? Is mandatory insurance desirable?
• Depression– Tighter financial regulation globally– End of central bank independence– Beginning of move to managed economy
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Reflections
• 1. Similarities and differences between the Katrina and Depression cycles identified
• 2. Both are of interest• 3. Uncertainty, politics, doctrine/beliefs,
moral hazard are major themes• Comparison is worthwhile for putting
financial disasters into perspective