By George Friedman
Financial panics are an integral part of capitalism. So are economic
recession. The system generates them and it becomes stronger
because of them. Like forest fires, they are painful when they occur,
yet without them, the forest could not survive. They impose discipline,
punishing the reckless, rewarding the cautious. They do so imperfectly,
of course, as at times the reckless are rewarded and the cautious
penalized. Political crises — as opposed to normal financial panics
— emerge when the reckless appear to be the beneficiaries of the
crisis they have caused, while the rest of society bears the burdens of
their recklessness. At that point, the crisis ceases to be financial or
economic. It
becomes political.
The financial and economic systems are subsystems of the broader
political system. More precisely, think of nations as consisting of
three basic systems: political, economic and military. Each of these
systems has elites that manage it. The three systems are constantly
interacting — and in a healthy polity, balancing each other,
compensating for failures in one as well as taking advantage of success.
Every nation has a different configuration within and between these
systems. The relative weight of each system differs, as does the
importance of its elites. But each nation contains these systems, and no
system exists without the other two.
Limited Liability Investing
Consider the capitalist economic system. The concept of the
corporation provides its modern foundation. The corporation is built
around the idea of limited liability for investors, the notion that if
you buy part or all of a company, you yourself are not liable for its
debts or the harm that it might do; your risk is limited to your
investment. In other words, you may own all or part of a company, but
you are not responsible for what it does beyond your investment. Whereas
supply and demand exist in all times and places, the notion of limited
liability investing is unique to modern capitalism and reshapes the
dynamic of supply and demand.
It is also a political invention and not an economic one. The
decision to create corporations that limit liability flows from
political decisions implemented through the legal subsystem of politics.
The corporation dominates even in China; though the rules of liability
and the definition of control vary, the principle that the state and
politics define the structure of corporate risk remains constant.
In a more natural organization of the marketplace, the owners are
entirely responsible for the debts and liabilities of the entity they
own. That, of course, would create excessive risk, suppressing economic
activity. So the political system over time has reallocated risk away
from the owners of companies to the companies’ creditors and customers
by allowing corporations to become bankrupt without pulling in the
owners.
The precise distribution of risk within an economic system is a
political matter expressed through the law; it differs from nation to
nation and over time. But contrary to the idea that there is a tension
between the political and economic systems, the modern economic system
is unthinkable except for the eccentric but indispensible
political-legal contrivance of the limited liability corporation. In the
precise and complex allocation of risk and immunity, we find the origins
of the modern market. Among other reasons, this is why classical
economists never spoke of “economics” but always of “political
economy.”
The state both invents the principle of the corporation and defines
the conditions in which the corporation is able to arise. The state
defines the structure of risk and liabilities and assures that the laws
are enforced. Emerging out of this complexity — and justifying it —
is a moral regime. Protection from liability comes with a burden: Poor
decisions will be penalized by losses, while wise decisions are rewarded
by greater wealth. Because of this, society as a whole will benefit. The
entire scheme is designed to increase, in Adam Smith’s words, “The
Wealth of Nations” by limiting liability, increasing the willingness
to take risk and imposing penalties for poor judgment and rewards for
wise judgment. But the measure of the system is not whether individuals
benefit, but whether in benefiting they enhance the wealth of the
nation.
The greatest systemic risk, therefore, is not an economic concept but
a political one. Systemic
risk emerges when it appears that the political and legal
protections given to economic actors, and particularly to members of the
economic elite, have been used to subvert the intent of the system. In
other words, the crisis occurs when it appears that the economic elite
used the law’s allocation of risk to enrich themselves in ways that
undermined the wealth of the nation. Put another way, the crisis occurs
when it appears that the financial elite used the politico-legal
structure to enrich themselves through systematically imprudent behavior
while those engaged in prudent behavior were harmed, with the political
elite apparently taking no action to protect the victims.
In the modern public corporation, shareholders — the
corporation’s owners — rarely control management. A board of
directors technically oversees management on behalf of the shareholders.
In the crisis of 2008, we saw behavior that devastated shareholder value
while appearing to enrich the management — the corporation’s
employees. In this case, the protections given to shareholders of
corporations were turned against them when they were forced to pay for
the imprudence of their employees — the managers, whose interests did
not align with those of the shareholders. The managers in many cases
profited personally through their compensation system for actions
inimical to shareholder interests. We now have a political, not an
economic, crisis for two reasons. First, the crisis qualitatively has
moved beyond the boundaries of a cyclical event. Second, the crisis is
rooted in the political-legal definitions of the distribution of
corporate risk and the legally defined relations between management and
shareholder. In leaving the shareholder liable for actions by
management, but without giving shareholders controls to limit managerial
risk taking, the problem lies not with the market but with the political
system that invented and presides over the limited liability
corporation.
Financial panics that appear natural and harm the financial elite do
not necessarily create political crises. Financial panics that appear to
be the result of deliberate manipulation of the allocation of risk under
the law, and from which the financial elite as a whole appears to have
profited even while shareholders and the public were harmed, inevitably
create political crises. In the case of 2008 and the events that
followed, we have a paradox. The 2008 crisis was not unprecedented, nor
was the federal bailout. We saw similar things in the municipal bond
crisis of the 1970s, and the Third World Debt Crisis and Savings and
Loan Crisis in the 1980s. Nor was the recession that followed anomalous.
It came seven years after the previous one, and compared to the 1970s
and early 1980s, when unemployment stood at more than 10 percent and
inflation and mortgages were at more than 20 percent, the new one was
painful but well within the bounds of expected behavior.
The crisis was rooted in the appearance that it was triggered by the
behavior not of small town banks or third world countries, but of the
global financial elite, who took advantage of the complexities of law to
enrich themselves instead of the shareholders and clients to whom it was
thought they had prior fiduciary responsibility.
This is a political crisis then, not an economic one. The political
elite is responsible for the corporate elite in a unique fashion: The
corporation was a political invention, so by definition, its behavior
depends on the political system. But in a deeper sense, the crisis is
one of both political and corporate elites, and the perception that by
omission or commission they acted together — knowingly engineering the
outcome. In a sense, it does not matter whether this is what happened.
That it is widely believed that this is what happened alone is the
origin of the crisis. This generates a political crisis that in turn is
translated into an attack on the economic system.
The public, which is cynical about such things, expects elites to
work to benefit themselves. But at the same time, there are limits to
the behavior the public will tolerate. That limit might be defined, with
Adam Smith in mind, as the point when the wealth of the nation itself is
endangered, i.e., when the system is generating outcomes that harm the
nation. In extreme form, these crises can delegitimize regimes. In the
most extreme form — and we are nowhere near this point — the
military elite typically steps in to take control of the system.
This is not something that is confined to the United States by any
means, although part of this analysis is designed to explain why the
Obama administration must go after Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers and
others. The symbol of Goldman Sachs profiting from actions that
devastate national wealth, or of the management of Lehman wiping out
shareholder value while they themselves did well, creates a crisis of
confidence in the political and financial systems. With the crisis of
legitimacy still not settling down after nearly two years, the reaction
of the political system is predictable. It will both anoint symbolic
miscreants, and redefine the structure of risk and liability in
financial corporations. The goal is not so much to achieve something as
to create the impression that it is achieving something, in other words,
to demonstrate that the political system is prepared to control the
entities it created.
The Crisis in Europe
We see a similar crisis in Europe. The financial institutions in
Europe were fully complicit in the global financial crisis. They bought
and sold derivatives whose value they knew to be other than stated, the
same as Americans. Though the European financial institutions have
asserted they were the hapless victims of unscrupulous American firms,
the Europeans were as sophisticated as their American counterparts.
Their elites knew what they were doing.
Complicating the European position was the creation of the economic
union and the euro by the economic and political elite. There has always
been a great deal of ambiguity concerning the powers and authority of
the European Union, but its intentions were always clear: to harmonize
Europe and to create European-wide solutions to economic problems. This
goal always created unease in Europe. There were those who were
concerned that a united Europe would exist to benefit the elites, rather
than the broader public. There were also those who believed it was
designed to benefit the Franco-German core of Europe rather than Europe
as a whole. Overall, this reflected minority sentiment, but it was a
substantial minority.
The financial crisis came at Europe in three phases. The first was
part of the American subprime crisis. The second wave was a uniquely
European crisis. European banks had taken massive positions in the
Eastern European banking systems. For example, the Czech system was
almost entirely foreign (Austrian and Italian) owned. These banks began
lending to Eastern European homebuyers, with mortgages denominated in
euros, Swiss francs or yen rather than in the currencies of the
countries involved (none yet included in the eurozone). Doing this
allowed banks to reduce interest rates, as the risk of currency
fluctuation was pushed over to the borrower. But when the zlotys and
forints began to plunge, these monthly mortgage payments began to soar,
as did defaults. The European core, led by Germany, refused a European
bailout of the borrowers or lenders even though the lenders who created
this crisis were based in eurozone countries. Instead, the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) was called in to use funds that included American
and Chinese, as well as European, money to solve the problem. This
raised the political question in Eastern Europe as to what it meant to
be part of the European Union.
The third wave is represented by crisis in sovereign debt in
countries that are part of the eurozone but not in the core of Europe
— Greece, of course, but also Portugal and possibly Spain. In the
Greek case, the Germans in particular hesitated to intervene until it
could draw the IMF — and non-European money and guarantees — into
the mix. This obviously raised questions in the periphery about what
membership in the eurozone meant, just as it created questions in
Eastern Europe about what EU membership meant.
But a much deeper crisis of legitimacy arose. In Germany, elite
sentiment accepted that some sort of intervention in Greece was
inevitable. Public sentiment overwhelmingly opposed intervention,
however. The political elite moved into tension with the financial elite
under public pressure. In Greece, a similar crisis emerged between an
elite that accepted that foreign discipline would have to be introduced
and a public that saw this discipline as a betrayal of its interests and
national sovereignty.
Europe thus has a double crisis. As in the United States, there is a
crisis between the financial and political systems. This crisis is not
as intense as in the United States because of a deeper tradition of
integration between the two systems in Europe. But the tension between
masses and elites is every bit as intense. The second part of the crisis
is the crisis of the European Union and growing sense that the European
Union is the problem and not the solution. As in the United States,
there is a growing movement to distrust not only national arrangements
but also multinational arrangements.
The United States and Europe are far from the only areas of the world
facing crises of legitimacy. In China, for example, the growing
suppression of all dissent derives from serious questions as to whom the
financial expansion of the past 30 years benefits, and who will pay for
the downturns. It is also interesting to note that Russia is suffering
much less from this crisis, having lived through its own crisis before.
The global crisis of legitimacy has many aspects worth considering at
some point.
But for now, the important thing is to understand that both Europe
and the United States are facing fundamental challenges to the
legitimacy of, if not the regime, then at least the manner in which the
regime has handled itself. The geopolitical significance of this crisis
is obvious. If the Americans and Europeans both enter a period in which
managing the internal balance becomes more pressing than managing the
global balance, then other powers will have enhanced windows of
opportunities to redefine their regional balances.
In the United States, we see a predictable
process. With the unease over elites intensifying, the political
elite is trying to stabilize the situation by attacking the financial
elite. It is doing this to both demonstrate that the political elite is
distinct from the financial elite and to impose the consequences on the
financial elite that the impersonal system was unable to do. There is
precedent for this, and it will likely achieve its desired end: greater
control over the financial system by the state and an acceptable moral
tale for the public.
The European process is much less clear. The lack of clarity comes
from the fact that this is a test
for the European Union. This is not simply a crisis within national
elites, but within the multinational elite that created the European
Union. If this leads to the de-legitimization of the EU, then we are
really in uncharted territory.
But the most important point is that almost two years since a normal
financial panic, the polity has still not managed to absorb the
consequences of that event. The politically contrived corporation, and
particularly the financial corporations, stands accused of undermining
the wealth of nations. As Adam Smith understood, markets are not natural
entities but the result of political decisions, as is the political
system that creates the allocation of risk that allows markets to
function. When that system appears to fail, the consequences go far
beyond the particular financials of that event. They have political
consequences and, in due course, geopolitical consequences.
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