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Is a concentration of wealth at the top to blame for financial crises?

2012-03-22 10:11:01

Free exchange - Body of evidence

Mar 17th 2012 | from the print edition

IN THE search for the villain behind the global financial crisis, some have

pointed to inequality as a culprit. In his 2010 book Fault Lines , Raghuram

Rajan of the University of Chicago argued that inequality was a cause of the

crisis, and that the American government served as a willing accomplice. From

the early 1980s the wages of working Americans with little or no university

education fell ever farther behind those with university qualifications, he

pointed out. Under pressure to respond to the problem of stagnating incomes,

successive presidents and Congresses opened a flood of mortgage credit.

In 1992 the government reduced capital requirements at Fannie Mae and Freddie

Mac, two huge sources of housing finance. In the 1990s the Federal Housing

Administration expanded its loan guarantees to cover bigger mortgages with

smaller down-payments. And in the 2000s Fannie and Freddie were encouraged to

buy more subprime mortgage-backed securities. Inequality, Mr Rajan argued,

prepared the ground for disaster.

Mr Rajan s story was intended as a narrative of the subprime crisis in America,

not as a general theory of financial dislocation. But others have noted that

inequality also soared in the years before the Depression of the 1930s. In 2007

23.5% of all American income flowed to the top 1% of earners their highest

share since 1929. In a 2010 paper Michael Kumhof and Romain Ranci re, two

economists at the International Monetary Fund, built a model to show how

inequality can systematically lead to crisis. An investor class may become

better at capturing the returns to production, slowing wage growth and raising

inequality. Workers then borrow to prop up their consumption. Leverage grows

until crisis results. Their model absolves politicians of responsibility;

inequality works its mischief without the help of government.

New research hints at other ways inequality could spur crisis. In a new paper*

Marianne Bertrand and Adair Morse, both of the University of Chicago, study

patterns of spending across American states between 1980 and 2008. In

particular, they focus on how changes in the behaviour of the richest 20% of

households affect the spending choices of the bottom 80%. They find that a rise

in the level of consumption of rich households leads to more spending by the

non-rich. This trickle-down consumption appears to result from a desire to

keep up with the Joneses. Non-rich households spend more on luxury goods and

services supplied to their more affluent neighbours domestic services, say, or

health clubs. Had the incomes of America s top 20% of earners grown at the

same, more leisurely pace as the median income, they reckon that the bottom 80%

might have saved more over the past three decades $500 per household per year

for the entire period between 1980 and 2008, or $800 per year just before the

crisis. In states where the highest earners were wealthiest, non-rich

households were more likely to report financial duress .

The paper also reveals how responsive government is to rising income

inequality. The authors analyse votes on the credit-expansion measures cited in

Mr Rajan s book. When support for a bill varies, the authors find that

legislators representing more unequal districts were significantly more likely

to back a loosening of mortgage rules.

Inequality may drive instability in other ways. Although sovereign borrowing

was not a direct contributor to the crisis of 2008, it has since become the

principal danger to the financial system. In another recent paper Marina

Azzimonti of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Eva de Francisco of

Towson University and Vincenzo Quadrini of the University of Southern

California argue that income inequality may have had a troubling effect in this

area of finance, too.

The authors models suggest that a less equitable distribution of wealth can

boost demand for government borrowing to provide for the lagging average

worker. In the recent past this demand would have coincided with a period of

financial globalisation that allowed many governments to rack up debt cheaply.

Across a sample of 22 OECD countries from 1973 to 2005, they find support for

the notion that inequality, financial globalisation and rising government debt

do indeed march together. The idea that inequality might create pressure for

more redistribution through public borrowing also occurred to Mr Rajan, who

acknowledges that stronger safety nets are a more common response to inequality

than credit subsidies. Liberalised global finance and rising inequality may

thus have led to surging public debts.

Reasonable doubt

Other economists wonder whether income inequality is not wrongly accused.

Michael Bordo of Rutgers University and Christopher Meissner of the University

of California at Davis recently studied 14 advanced countries from 1920 to 2008

to test the inequality-causes-busts hypothesis. They turn up a strong

relationship between credit booms and financial crises a result confirmed by

many other economic studies. There is no consistent link between income

concentration and credit booms, however.

Inequality occasionally rises with credit creation, as in America in the late

1920s and during the years before the 2008 crisis. This need not mean that the

one causes the other, they note. In other cases, such as in Australia and

Sweden in the 1980s, credit booms seem to drive inequality rather than the

other way around. Elsewhere, as in 1990s Japan, rapid growth in the share of

income going to the highest earners coincided with a slump in credit. Rising

real incomes and low interest rates reliably lead to credit booms, they reckon,

but inequality does not. Mr Rajan s story may work for America s 2008 crisis.

It is not an iron law.

Sources

Inequality, leverage and crises by Michael Kumhof and Romain Ranci re, IMF

Working Paper, November 2010

Trickle-down consumption by Marianne Bertrand and Adair Morse, Working paper,

February 2012

Does inequality lead to a financial crisis? by Michael Bordo and Christopher

Meissner, NBER Working Paper, March 2012

Financial globalization, inequality, and the raising of public debt by Marina

Azzimonti, Eva de Francisco and Vincenzo Quadrini, Federal Reserve Bank of

Philadelphia Working Paper, February 2012

http://Economist.com/blogs/freeexchange

from the print edition | Finance and economics