The first difference is the unique conditions existed for the advent and large scale proliferation of derivatives in the financial system. The second difference is this led to tremendous consolidation in the banking system leading up the the crisis so that only a few international scale banks and trading houses remained, who then essentially seized control of the political system. The third difference is that the government (or Central Bank) attempted to backstop the derivatives to keep the key international scale banks and trading houses from unravelling. The fourth difference is that both the 14th Century and current crisis are on a global scale where there are linkages between countries and domino effects. The last difference is that the citizens have not demanded accountability or change until things were in a later stage of decay. So this time really is different in that nothing this similar has been seen for 7 centuries.vincecate wrote:I think this pattern has been repeated over and over, at least that was my take from reading "This Time is Different". To me the pattern seems to be:Higgenbotham wrote: I like the part where it says in so many words that the Bardi was thought to be "too big to fail" so the Florentine government "kicked the can down the road" at taxpayer expense. I know of no other situation in world history this similar to the financial events of 2008-2011.
1) Banks take in demand deposits and loan most of them out long term like 10 or 20 years
This is called "fractional reserve banking" but should be called "not matching terms on
deposits and loans" or "fraudulently telling depositors they can take their money at
any time when really the bank is not always able to handle it".
2) At some point banks are sure to get in trouble because there is always some amount
of withdrawls from the demand deposit accounts that they can not handle.
= "Banking Crisis"
3) Government bails out the banks.
4) Government get too much debt and get in trouble = "sovereign debt crisis"
5) Central bank bail out the government = monetizing debt = printing money
6) Currency Crisis
To me it looks like this happens over and over and over again in any place where banks do not match the terms on deposits and loans, which seems to be all Western banking.
http://www.amazon.com/This-Time-Differe ... =pd_cp_b_1
The glibness and lack of rigor of these authors, academics in general, leaders, and the citizenry is the reason we're in this very large scale mess. They would prefer to think it's normal folly; it's anything but.