Economics

ConservativeHome, Steve Baker MP: The greatest threat to civilisation is not climate change but bad economics

Over at ConservativeHome, I have set out the case that The greatest threat to civilisation is not climate change but bad economics:

Unfortunately, an economic science has grown up which claims to be a positive applied science despite the inability of its practitioners to foresee events such as a massive credit-fuelled boom which caused a bank collapse and recession. I have lost count of the number of articles in which economists have argued about whether circumstances are inflationary or deflationary. If economics were really a positive applied science, they would know and be able to prove their case conclusively. In reality, economists cannot agree whether circumstances are inflationary or deflationary because our money supply depends on bank lending and whether or not banks are lending depends upon individuals’ subjective choices. The extent to which people wish to hold cash balances matters too, but that is also a subjective choice made by millions of individuals.

There is much that is useful in the contemporary mainstream of economics, but I felt it was time for a little polemic.

Please see ConservativeHome for the rest of the article.

Economics

Tonight: Britain’s Trillion Pound Horror Story

Film maker Martin Durkin explains the full extent of the financial mess we are inBritain’s Trillion Pound Horror Story will be transmitted on Channel 4, tonight Thursday, 11 Nov at 9pm:

Film maker Martin Durkin explains the full extent of the financial mess we are in: an estimated £4.8 trillion of national debt and counting. It’s so big that even if every home in the UK was sold it wouldn’t raise enough cash to pay it off.

Durkin argues that to put Britain back on track we need to radically rethink the role of the state, stop politicians spending money in our name and introduce, among other measures, flat taxes to make Britain’s economy boom again.

This is a polemical film presented by Martin Durkin. The film brings economic theory to life and makes it hit home. It includes interviews with academics, economic experts, entrepreneurs and four ex-Chancellors of the Exchequer.

A number of members of the team gave interviews and we look forward to seeing the final result.

Press

Some site statistics

October 2010 was our best-ever month, with over 24,000 hits.

Our top five downloads are:

Visitors came from most of the world but the top five countries were UK, USA, Canada, Spain and Germany. Courtesy of Google Analytics for the year to date, our visitor locations:

Via Google AnalyticsAll in all, quite satisfactory.

Economics

Sound bedfellows who need to walk the walk

Much to the annoyance of more tribal associates, I have long argued that there are natural friends of liberty to be found amongst elements of all our mainstream political parties.

In this context, mindful of the history and heritage of classical liberalism, I have long admired features of the Orange Book crowd in the Liberal Democrats. Recognising that the party leader, Nick Clegg, combines an interest in fiscal conservatism with the ideals of liberal social reform, I am not surprised by his recent assertion that he is an admirer of Margaret Thatcher.

While I am no aficionado of psephology or electoral politics, it makes strategic sense to me if the Lib Dems continue their drift away from the politics of top down and bloated social democracy, towards more open, inclusive and market-oriented perspectives. In so many ways, the Lib Dems could again become an engine of genuine out of the box radicalism. In defiance of the political class and their stultifying corporatism, surely thinking Lib Dems would find little to disagree with when it comes to the principles of honest money, sound banking and the benefits of free trade. But the key here is not just to talk the talk. At some point, it becomes necessary to walk the walk.

Press

Law and Order

I am delighted to announce that from next week David Carr of Carr and Kaye, will become the TCC’s solicitor and as such our partner in keeping law and order. A staunch and long time friend of freedom, David, has very kindly offered the organisation a gracious discount so as to help us on our way. Like many in London’s free market community I have known him for years and am really looking forward to working with him.

Economics

Alchemists of Loss, Prof. Kevin Dowd

Dowd, Alchemists of Loss

We are delighted to announce a forthcoming book by Cobden Centre Senior Fellow Professor Kevin Dowd and US-based journalist and former investment banker Martin Hutchinson: The Alchemists of Loss: How Modern Finance and Government Intervention Crashed the Financial System. The book contains some delightfully simple insights into a complex subject. For example:

The credit default swap sneaked up on everybody, becoming a $62 trillion market, without anyone outside the business knowing much about it. As the Bear Stearns, Lehman and AIG debacles revealed, these instruments also involved highly non-transparent credit risks of their own. As a holder of a CDS you don’t know whether your counterparty has issued only a few of your CDS, in which case you’ll probably get paid in a bankruptcy, or whether he has issued fifty times the outstanding debt you’re trying to hedge, in which case you’re unlikely to get paid.

And moreover:

Financial engineering’s benefit to the global economy is highly questionable and the proliferation of financially-engineered products of recent years has brought few benefits and led to huge losses for society at large. As we have seen, one quarter’s bad losses in late 2008 wiped out all the accumulated financial engineering profits of the last quarter century and saddled taxpayers with a bill for hundreds of billions, if not more.

Prof. Dowd has kindly agreed to pre-release two chapters through The Cobden Centre:

From Chapter 16:

Alert readers will have already picked up some of the advice we would give investors and clients of financial institutions:

  • take a longer-term perspective and return to investment rather than speculation;
  • do not seek to ‘enhance’ yields, because this always exposes investors to hidden costs and risks, whilst firms seeking finance should resist cutting corners on their financing costs, for the same reason; thus, both parties should be realistic in their expectations;
  • avoid frequent trading, focus on static over dynamic strategies, buy and hold over activist portfolio management;
  • pay more attention to costs and hidden charges, and work on the assumption that higher charges are usually a good signal of a bad deal;
  • distrust commission-based salespeople;
  • if you use derivatives, be clear why and use them only for risk management and not speculation;
  • avoid complicated opaque products; and
  • do not take liquidity for granted and ensure that your liquidity is protected in a crisis.

Besides this motherhood and apple pie stuff, investors should also be careful of correlation-based investment and risk management strategies, which work well when not needed but are apt to break down when they are. This is not to suggest that they should give up on diversification. People understood diversification long before Modern Portfolio Theory, but they tended to practice it differently and more wisely. Diversification was assessed by committees of experienced practitioners, who took a long-term view and relied on their judgment rather than unreliable correlation estimates – a far cry from modern practices of modern fund management, with its obsession with short-term performance assessment

Investors should demand transparency. Perhaps the most sobering lesson we have learned since the subprime crisis broke is the benefit of transparency in business dealings. Time after time, when a fiasco has occurred, a key contributing factors has lack of transparency. Subprime mortgages, CDOs and credit default swaps were all financial innovations that relied crucially on nobody asking too many questions. So too with the vast Madoff Ponzi scheme, involving some of the most sophisticated investors in the world,  which rested on the same fatal human omission.

Download Chapter 16 to read on.

From Chapter 17:

The restoration of a rational and stable financial system inevitably requires major reform on a number of fronts. History gives much guidance here and also a role model: the period we should seek to emulate is the nineteenth century. Then money was sound, the dominant currency of the time, the pound, was literally as good as gold, while financial institutions were conservative and generally stable, and an altogether healthier financial ethos reigned.

It is very common these days to sneer at the gold standard: after all, it was Keynes who once dismissed it as “a relic from a barbarous age”. We would suggest, on the contrary, that a gold standard or some suitably 21st Century commodity equivalent would be highly desirable, and put an end to the disastrous century-long experiment with fiat money and its attendant miseries of inflation and monetary instability. The fact that Keynes opposed the gold standard is a further reason to support it.

The nineteenth century model would also entail major reforms to financial institutions and the regulatory system: greater liability and greater responsibility, the repeal of deposit insurance and investor protection legislation and the abolition of the big financial regulatory bodies such as the SEC and FSA. And by nineteenth century standards, we really mean early nineteenth century standards, those that pertained to the period before the Bank Charter Act of 1844 and the Companies Act of 1862, when liability was very real.

As for the banking system, we would suggest that the role model is Scotland pre-1845, when the Scottish banking system was virtually free of state control, unhindered by a central bank, and equally admired and envied across the world – and copied by countries such as Canada and Australia. In all three countries, free banking systems operated highly successful for very long periods of time. Indeed, the Canadian system was widely admired in the United States – and many US reformers in the late nineteenth century saw it as their ideal. The Canadian system was highly stable – apart from the failures of two small Alberta banks in 1985, its last notable bank failure was that of the Home Bank of Canada back in 1923. There were no Canadian bank failures in the 1930s and, even after the establishment of the Bank of Canada in 1934, many still regard the Canadian banking system as the best in the world.

Our first choice environment would be one with a commodity standard, free banking (no central bank) and financial laissez-faire, restrictions on the use of the “limited liability” corporate form and the most limited government. Even if we don’t return all the way to these early nineteenth century standards (and we can imagine the opposition!), we should still move as much as possible in that direction, though we would not advocate the reintroduction of the notorious debtors’ prisons immortalized in the fiction of Charles Dickens! However, our proposed reforms herein are adapted to the “second best world” (if it’s actually that; it may be about thousandth best of all the ‘parallel universe’ possibilities) in which we live, with relatively large government, a fiat currency and a central bank.

The most important institutional policy that must be solved is that of an excessively expansionary monetary policy. Simply making the monetary authority “independent” does not achieve this if the monetary authority retains its interactions with politicians and the financial community, both of which want loose money. The ideal to aim at is a hard money Fed, a Paul Volcker Fed.

Download Chapter 17 to read on.

You can also pre-order Alchemists of Loss at Amazon.

Further Reading

Press

Global reach for honest money

Our visitor locations for the three months to 12 Feb 2010:

Visitor locations, 3 months to 2010 (Click to enlarge)

Press

Seafood Holdings 12th in Fast Track 100 Buy Out League

Our Founder and Chairman’s fish supply company, Seafood Holdings, came 12th in the weekend’s Sunday Times Fast Track 100 Buy Out League profits table:

Although the results show 2008 and not 2009, the continuing dedication to sound entrepreneurship that drives our Chairman continues apace and we wish Toby all the best in his endeavours.

Press

TCC Database Up and Running

While it is brilliant working alongside Steve Baker and the rest of the TCC team, I know when it comes to computer technology he finds me a nightmare! Usually out of my depth with anything beyond an on and off switch, I am profoundly grateful for his ongoing patience, support and persistence.

Unlike me, Steve is a genius when it comes to computers, programs and all those brushed steel gadgets that come with lots of buttons and features. Indeed, it is with no inconsiderable degree of admiration that I applaud his recent launch of the TCC’s database. Containing more than a thousand people already and growing every week it is great to have this aspect of our business plan put to bed. All too often, organisations struggle with databases. Not TCC. No doubt because I have kept a million miles away from it, Steve has been able to make it happen. Just like that. Brilliant.

Press

Eamonn Butler: The Alternative Manifesto


Eamonn Butler publishes another great book: The Alternative Manifesto: A 12-Step Programme to Remake Britain.

I really admire Eamonn Butler of the Adam Smith Institute – www.adamsmith.org. One of the nicest gents in the world of ideas, I also respect his boundless energy when it comes to the production of fascinating and thought providing books.

His latest offering is no exception. With good chapters on the economy, bureaucracy, regulation and what he terms the bully state, I urge you to buy a copy.