Ph.D. programme on global financial markets and international financial stability at Jena University and Halle University, Germany

Donnerstag, 27. November 2008

A proposal to avoid deep recession

I am afraid to say this: We have to take Keynes‘ General Theory from our backmost shelf: Financial markets currently exhibit something similar to what Keynes told us is a liquidity trap. Not in a sense of people hoarding money but treasuries. The Fed has finally started to encounter this by a policy of quantitative easing inter alia by taking corrective actions directly in private credit markets.

The recent decline in treasury yields below 3 per cent does not incite private investors to put their money into firms. Given the uncertainty and gloomy prospects it is likely that firms do not want to raise a loan because there is no business to finance. Is that what Keynes called an investment trap?

What remains for policy makers to do about this misery? Taxes down, government expenditures up? Monetary policy? Given that Keynes is even right about effectiveness of economic policy in times of severe distress, lowering direct taxes will not work as private savings will simply eat them up without having any effect on interest rates (rates are already at historical lows). Other riskier investments than treasuries will not be made because of uncertainty and gloomy prospects. Even if savings finally find their way to banks, it is most likely that banks will put most of them into treasuries in order to clear their balance sheets at least as long as the financial crisis continues to hold.

In the light of its importance for economic activity, economic policy must do anything suited to foster consumption. For this we need a temporary and sharp reduction in the real interst rate that rapidly affects foremost consumption. Given dysfunctional financial markets, the traditional interest rate pass through from monetary policy instruments to consumption relevant interest rate is broken. Traditional monetary policy hence does not help. Only if central banks intervene directly in markets for private credit (what the Fed‘s new TARF instrument seems to aim at) one may expect a monetary impulse. This, however, can turn out badly in terms of allocative efficiency as it cannot be warranted that funds will flow where they are needed most. Effective fiscal policy seems more appropriate to boost consumption when it reduces value added tax or sale tax temporarily and surprisingly (admittedly, this proposal is in sharp contrast to what Taylor suggests) because that way the real interest rate that is directly relevant for consumption will decrease.

But there is a problem at least for continental Europe: price rigidity. It cannot be expected that firms will reduce prices in an instant when sale taxes fall even if competition is fierce. However, price rigidity also means that they will not increase simultaneously when consumption gains momentum.

What about this: At the end of, let say, each month, households can present their bills and receipts to fiscal authorities or tax offices to get allowances for their tax expenditures. For this being most effective, sale taxes are refundable in full and limited for one year.

Mittwoch, 26. November 2008

IMF Working Paper - The Task Ahead

An interesting IMF Working Paper

IMF Working Paper
Research Department
The Tasks Ahead
Prepared by Olivier J. Blanchard
November 2008

Download

Dienstag, 18. November 2008

Vorträge im Rahmen des Graduiertenkollegs am 27. November in Jena

Das Graduiertenkolleg
„Global Financial Markets“
der Universitäten Jena und Halle-Wittenberg
lädt zu folgenden Vorträgen ein:

„The Current Financial Crisis: Iceland – A Case Study in Societal Collapse”
Jón Baldvin Hannibalsson
Finanz- und Außenminister Islands 1987-1995

„Die aktuelle Finanzkrise als Herausforderung für Ökonomie und Jurisprudenz“
Prof. Dr. Christoph Ohler, LL.M.
Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena

Zeit: 27.11.2008, 16:30 Uhr
Ort: Senatssaal, Universitätshauptgebäude, Universität Jena

Montag, 17. November 2008

Calls for Papers

Financial Markets and Portfolio Management, the quarterly finance journal published by the Swiss Society for Financial Market Research, has two very interesting Calls for Papers which I find fit very well in our program:

Regulation after the Crisis

Monetary Policy and Financial Markets

German loan guarantees for Adam Opel...

...might soon prove a huge mistake. Adam Opel, a German carmaker, has been heading for government loan guarantees in order to close its current liquidity gap (although it has been officially declared that this step is only a precautionary step and not a sign of Opel's financial weakness). German government says ready to help Opel.

But what is most likely to happen when government steps in? Will this measure calm financial markets? In a multinational corporation like GM, with the firm internal use of funds being hardly controllable or at least observable by financial markets, it is most likely that headquarters will abuse any additional dollar raised externally. In particular, anyone who is providing fresh funds to GM (or guarantees newly issued debt) will have to face the risk of huge losses in the case of bankruptcy, because of funds having been invested into almost intangible assets. And this danger is real -- given the enormous liabilities which GM has for example vis-a-vis its pensioners. Any dollar that is used to meet the pensioners' demands, though it may help GM in the short-run, could not be recovered in the case of bankruptcy.

Hence, either Opel has to be spun off first, or there is a fair amount of risk that the government will throw its money away by guaranteeing Opel's debt.

Samstag, 15. November 2008

The summit labored ...

... and brought forth a joint declaration. The declaration - together with further information - can be found on the summit website of the White House. The first sentence reads:

We, the Leaders of the Group of Twenty, held an initial meeting in Washington on November 15, 2008, amid serious challenges to the world economy and financial markets.
Quite obviously this is a nod to another famous opening phrase: We the People This sets a high benchmark for the results that should be expected from the work agenda spelled out in the declaration.

Detailed analysis & discussion of the summit declaration will follow on these web pages.

Für eine deutsche Version bitte hier klicken: Der Weltfinanzgipfel kreißt ...

Call for papers - Finlawmetrics 2009

I just came across this interesting Call for Papers which some of us may be aware of...

http://portale.unibocconi.it/wps/allegatiCTP/call%20for%20papers%20071108.pdf

Donnerstag, 6. November 2008

U.S. Does Not Support a Global Crisis Regulator

The New York Times reports on the preparations for the world financial summit in Washington on November 15. It becomes increasingly clear that no major decisions on changing the regulatory framework for financial markets can be expected from this summit. The Bush administration is opposed to this, while President-elect Obama clearly distances himself from the summit so as to avoid - according to the article - "being pinned down by commitments made by his predecessor". The article concludes by suggesting that the only concrete result that could be expected from the summit in the given situation is an agreement about a coordinated fiscal stimulus in the leading economies. This would be in line with the latest IMF recommendations.

PS: Dani Rodrik (Harvard) is critical vis-à-vis the current US stance.

Mittwoch, 5. November 2008

EU urges reform of the IMF

According to EuropeanVoice.com, European leaders have agreed that the International Monetary Fund should be reformed to ensure that the institution is better able to anticipate future financial crises. Among other things, they agreed that developing countries should have a greater say in IMF decision making and that the Financial Stability Forum should be reformed and that its work should be better coordinated with the work of the IMF. While this is unequivocally positive, closer reading reveals the differences between member countries' positions. There are areas of agreement but there are other areas where the member countries agree to disagree. As a result, this European initiative will remain largely a French initiative and will be presented as such at the world financial summit in Washington on November 15 - which undoubtedly will reduce its effectiveness. If we combine this with the news that the President-elect will most likely not attend the summit, we come to the conclusion that no major policy decisions can be expected from this summit. Most likely any far-reaching reforms of the world financial system will have to wait until the new president takes office.  

Montag, 3. November 2008

DAX is going crazy due to VW

Last week has been unique in the history of Germany's most important stock exchange, Deutsche Börse. Although the shares of other companies were in free fall due to the financial crisis, the price of VW shares rose in the first two days of the week by 225% to more than 1000 Euro. This caused the DAX to raise instead to fall. As a consequence, Deutsche Börse was forced to change its rules, which now allow for an extraordinary diminution of a company's weight in the composition of the DAX. Although the reasons for the spectacular rise of VW shares have yet to be investigated, it seems that short sellers, especially hedge funds, needed to cover bets that had gone awry. There have been rumors that Porsche, the majority shareholder, itself has sold stocks to these funds. Legally speaking, this is a problem of “market abuse”. But has the market indeed been abused or have some market participants just bet on the wrong horse? And how much does an index need to be legally protected against transactions like these? It seems that these questions must be answered from an economic perspective.

Ph.D. Scholarships - Applications

Doctoral Fellowships - Post-Graduate Program
Fundamental Principles of Globalized Financial Markets – Stability and Change
The Ph.D. progamme "Fundamental Principles of Globalized Financial Markets – Stability and Change" is part of the research programme "Global Financial Markets" of the University Jena and the University Halle, Germany. The program initially offers 8 doctoral fellowships.
Candidates should have an excellent academic background and pursue a Ph. D. in the above mentioned fields of research, linking law and economics. Applications from abroad are welcome. The post graduate programme offers an interdisciplinary, four semester study program in German and English examining the current questions of international financial markets. Active participation as well as attendance in the research study program in Jena and Halle is expected from the candidates. The financial grant amounts to 1.150 Euro per month for 3 years maximum. Applications with the usual personal and academic record (vita, certificates, academic publications) have to be electronically submitted to both spokesmen of the post-graduate programme.
Prof. Dr. Christoph Ohler, LL.M. Rechtswissenschaftliche Fakultät Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena Carl-Zeiss-Str. 3 D-07743 Jena christoph.ohler@recht.uni-jena.de
Prof. Dr. Christian Tietje, LL.M. Juristische und Wirtschaftswissenschaftlich Fakultät Martin-Luther-Universität Halle Universitätsplatz 5 D-06099 Halle (Saale) christian.tietje@jura.uni-halle.de
Application has to be received by 31. March 2009.

Samstag, 1. November 2008

Vortrag Prof. Pohl zur Finanzmarktkrise

Am 23. Oktober 2008 hielt Prof. Dr. Rüdiger Pohl, Wirtschaftswissenschaftlicher Bereich der Juristischen und Wirtschaftswissenschaftlichen Fakultät der MLU und ehemals Direktor des Instituts für Wirtschaftsforschung Halle (IWH), am Institut für Wirtschaftsrecht der MLU einen Vortrag zum aktuellen Thema “Aus der Balance – Die Krise an den Finanzmärkten”. Die Audioaufnahme des Vortrags sowie Materialien sind hier verfügbar: