SECCION Crisis monetaria: US/EURO, dolar vs otras monedas

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17 jul 2009

SPAIN: ¿El fin de la cuesta abajo?, LVanguardia


Germà Bel - 17/07/2009

El temor es que las reformas perjudiquen electoralmente al Gobierno

La cuesta abajo que enfiló la economía española en el 2008 ha sido recorrida en gran medida, y se ha aminorado la velocidad de la caída. La conjunción de circunstancias estacionales y medidas adoptadas lo explica. Por un lado, la temporada de verano, que anima la actividad. Por otro, la aplicación de importantes paquetes de estímulo fiscal de la economía. Todo esto ha contribuido a las mejores cifras de paro en junio, situación que puede prolongarse durante el verano. En otoño es muy probable que vuelva a aumentar mucho el desempleo, aunque esperemos que no tanto como en el pasado reciente. Esto no implica que estén floreciendo brotes verdes. El relativo sostén actual de la actividad y el empleo guarda paralelismo con el efecto de los abonos de cultivo industrial sobre las plantas de jardinería: proporciona un vigor inusitado al principio, pero exige mantener el tratamiento de forma indefinida. No es posible en las plantas de jardín, ni tampoco con los paquetes de estímulo fiscal. Por un lado, el 2010 será el último ejercicio en que será posible un déficit fiscal superlativo; por otro, el aumento de impuestos ya iniciado, que continuará en el futuro, tendrá efecto contractivo sobre el consumo e inversión privados. Quizás ahora no sea muy relevante, pero sí lo será cuando el sector privado de la economía esté dispuesto al remonte. ...

USA: SUMMERS, RIESGO DE CATASTROFE SUPERADO

Los EE.UU. ha superado el riesgo de una catástrofe

No obsatnte, el principal asesor económico de la Casa Blanca reconoce que el nivel de desempleo en Estados Unidos es mayor del previsto


17/07/2009 | Actualizada a las 17:28h | Economía

Washington (EFE).- La economía de Estados Unidos estuvo "al borde de una catástrofe" en enero, pero ha logrado progresos "sustanciales" desde entonces, ha dicho Lawrence Summers, el principal asesor económico de la Casa Blanca.

No obstante, Summers alertó contra realizar "una declaración prematura de victoria y retirar las medidas de estímulo" económico. Director del Consejo Económico Nacional, Summers ha hablado en el Instituto Peterson de Economía Internacional, donde ha hecho balance de los primeros seis meses de mandato del presidente Barack Obama.

"La economía estaba en caída libre a principios de año, sin un límite aparente a lo mal que las cosas podía llegar a estar", ha dicho Summers, quien ha afirmado que "el miedo era generalizado y la confianza escasa". Pero ahora "nos hemos apartado bastante del abismo", ha agregado Summers, quien ha subrayado que la nueva economía estadounidense debe depender menos del consumo y más de la exportación, menos de los combustibles fósiles y más de las energías alternativas.

Nivel de desempleo mayor del previsto
Summers ha reconocido que el nivel de desempleo es mayor que el previsto, pero lo ha atribuído a la alta productividad, entre otros factores, y ha explicado que el impacto total de las medidas de estímulo sobre el empleo se sentirá a finales del 2010.

Actualmente un 9,5 de los estadounidenses están sin trabajo. Al mismo tiempo, Summers ha enfatizado que el ritmo de caída del Producto Interno Bruto (PIB) se ha ralentizado y que muchos analistas privados auguran que la economía volverá a crecer en la segunda mitad del año. "La confianza y la esperanza están volviendo", ha dicho Summers, quien ha resaltado que "la economía estadounidense vuelve a progresar".

El funcionario ha reiterado el compromiso del Gobierno a favor del libre comercio y ha dicho que cuando se resuelvan los temas pendientes en los tratados comerciales con Colombia y Panamá "nos gustaría mucho que se completaran", con su aprobación en el Congreso.

Summers ha denunciado también que algunos países "han dado pasos atrás, en favor del nacionalismo económico" y ha resaltado que su gobierno acudirá a la Organización Mundial de Comercio (OMC) cuando haya violaciones de sus normas que perjudiquen a Estados Unidos.

El economista ha explicado que al llegar al poder, el equipo de Obama entendió que la situación a la que se enfrentaba Estados Unidos era similar a la que sacudió a Japón en la década de los años 90 y a la de los primeros momentos de la Gran Depresión, dos crisis que se alargaron porque los Gobiernos tomaron "medidas insuficientes". Por ello, la Casa Blanca decidió adoptar medidas de rescate de la economía "que no fueran demasiado tímidas ni demasiado tardías".

Sus prioridades han sido restablecer la confianza y romper "el ciclo vicioso de contracción económica y fallos financieras", así como establecer un crecimiento a largo plazo basado en la inversión, explicó el economista.

What went wrong with economics (The Economist)


Leaders

Economics

What went wrong with economics

Jul 16th 2009
From The Economist print edition

And how the discipline should change to avoid the mistakes of the past

Illustration by Jon Berkerly

OF ALL the economic bubbles that have been pricked, few have burst more spectacularly than the reputation of economics itself. A few years ago, the dismal science was being acclaimed as a way of explaining ever more forms of human behaviour, from drug-dealing to sumo-wrestling. Wall Street ransacked the best universities for game theorists and options modellers. And on the public stage, economists were seen as far more trustworthy than politicians. John McCain joked that Alan Greenspan, then chairman of the Federal Reserve, was so indispensable that if he died, the president should "prop him up and put a pair of dark glasses on him."

In the wake of the biggest economic calamity in 80 years that reputation has taken a beating. In the public mind an arrogant profession has been humbled. Though economists are still at the centre of the policy debate—think of Ben Bernanke or Larry Summers in America or Mervyn King in Britain—their pronouncements are viewed with more scepticism than before. The profession itself is suffering from guilt and rancour. In a recent lecture, Paul Krugman, winner of the Nobel prize in economics in 2008, argued that much of the past 30 years of macroeconomics was "spectacularly useless at best, and positively harmful at worst." Barry Eichengreen, a prominent American economic historian, says the crisis has "cast into doubt much of what we thought we knew about economics."

In its crudest form—the idea that economics as a whole is discredited—the current backlash has gone far too far. If ignorance allowed investors and politicians to exaggerate the virtues of economics, it now blinds them to its benefits. Economics is less a slavish creed than a prism through which to understand the world. It is a broad canon, stretching from theories to explain how prices are determined to how economies grow. Much of that body of knowledge has no link to the financial crisis and remains as useful as ever.

And if economics as a broad discipline deserves a robust defence, so does the free-market paradigm. Too many people, especially in Europe, equate mistakes made by economists with a failure of economic liberalism. Their logic seems to be that if economists got things wrong, then politicians will do better. That is a false—and dangerous—conclusion.

Rational fools

These important caveats, however, should not obscure the fact that two central parts of the discipline—macroeconomics and financial economics—are now, rightly, being severely re-examined (see article, article). There are three main critiques: that macro and financial economists helped cause the crisis, that they failed to spot it, and that they have no idea how to fix it.

The first charge is half right. Macroeconomists, especially within central banks, were too fixated on taming inflation and too cavalier about asset bubbles. Financial economists, meanwhile, formalised theories of the efficiency of markets, fuelling the notion that markets would regulate themselves and financial innovation was always beneficial. Wall Street's most esoteric instruments were built on these ideas.

But economists were hardly naive believers in market efficiency. Financial academics have spent much of the past 30 years poking holes in the "efficient market hypothesis". A recent ranking of academic economists was topped by Joseph Stiglitz and Andrei Shleifer, two prominent hole-pokers. A newly prominent field, behavioural economics, concentrates on the consequences of irrational actions.

So there were caveats aplenty. But as insights from academia arrived in the rough and tumble of Wall Street, such delicacies were put aside. And absurd assumptions were added. No economic theory suggests you should value mortgage derivatives on the basis that house prices would always rise. Finance professors are not to blame for this, but they might have shouted more loudly that their insights were being misused. Instead many cheered the party along (often from within banks). Put that together with the complacency of the macroeconomists and there were too few voices shouting stop.

Blindsided and divided

The charge that most economists failed to see the crisis coming also has merit. To be sure, some warned of trouble. The likes of Robert Shiller of Yale, Nouriel Roubini of New York University and the team at the Bank for International Settlements are now famous for their prescience. But most were blindsided. And even worrywarts who felt something was amiss had no idea of how bad the consequences would be.

That was partly to do with professional silos, which limited both the tools available and the imaginations of the practitioners. Few financial economists thought much about illiquidity or counterparty risk, for instance, because their standard models ignore it; and few worried about the effect on the overall economy of the markets for all asset classes seizing up simultaneously, since few believed that was possible.

Macroeconomists also had a blindspot: their standard models assumed that capital markets work perfectly. Their framework reflected an uneasy truce between the intellectual heirs of Keynes, who accept that economies can fall short of their potential, and purists who hold that supply must always equal demand. The models that epitomise this synthesis—the sort used in many central banks—incorporate imperfections in labour markets ("sticky" wages, for instance, which allow unemployment to rise), but make no room for such blemishes in finance. By assuming that capital markets worked perfectly, macroeconomists were largely able to ignore the economy's financial plumbing. But models that ignored finance had little chance of spotting a calamity that stemmed from it.

What about trying to fix it? Here the financial crisis has blown apart the fragile consensus between purists and Keynesians that monetary policy was the best way to smooth the business cycle. In many countries short-term interest rates are near zero and in a banking crisis monetary policy works less well. With their compromise tool useless, both sides have retreated to their roots, ignoring the other camp's ideas. Keynesians, such as Mr Krugman, have become uncritical supporters of fiscal stimulus. Purists are vocal opponents. To outsiders, the cacophony underlines the profession's uselessness.

Add these criticisms together and there is a clear case for reinvention, especially in macroeconomics. Just as the Depression spawned Keynesianism, and the 1970s stagflation fuelled a backlash, creative destruction is already under way. Central banks are busy bolting crude analyses of financial markets onto their workhorse models. Financial economists are studying the way that incentives can skew market efficiency. And today's dilemmas are prompting new research: which form of fiscal stimulus is most effective? How do you best loosen monetary policy when interest rates are at zero? And so on.

But a broader change in mindset is still needed. Economists need to reach out from their specialised silos: macroeconomists must understand finance, and finance professors need to think harder about the context within which markets work. And everybody needs to work harder on understanding asset bubbles and what happens when they burst. For in the end economists are social scientists, trying to understand the real world. And the financial crisis has changed that world.


ENTREVISTAS TV CRISIS GLOBAL

NR.: Director, no presidente ---------------------------------------------- Bruno Seminario 1 ------------------------- Bruno Seminario 2 -------------------- FELIX JIMENEZ 1 FELIZ JIMENEZ 2 FELIX JIMENEZ 3, 28 MAYO OSCAR DANCOURT,ex presidente BCR ------------------- Waldo Mendoza, Decano PUCP economia ---------------------- Ingeniero Rafael Vasquez, parlamentario 24 set recordando la crisis, ver entrevista en diario

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