TY - JOUR
T1 - Remaking macroeconomic policy after the global financial crisis
T2 - A balance-sheet approach
AU - Adam, Christopher
AU - Vines, David
PY - 2009/12
Y1 - 2009/12
N2 - This paper describes the origins of the global financial crisis and how the prevailing New Keynesian macroeconomic orthodoxy failed to anticipate its severity. This failure, we argue, stemmed from an incomplete understanding of the pivotal role of financial institutions in the amplification of the crisis and its transmission to the wider economy. Low global interest rates and a consequent 'search for yield' in the pre-crisis period encouraged financial institutions to build highly leveraged balance sheets which, in turn, generated extremely large asset-price movements when a 'small event'-the downturn in the US sub-prime mortgage market-triggered the worldwide crisis. The paper then briefly describes the element of the broadly successful and coordinated macroeconomic policy response to the crisis before turning to the medium-term challenges facing policy-makers in sustaining global recovery. At the national level, we focus on the resolution of fiscal imbalances which contributed, in part, to the crisis, and which then worsened because of the policy actions which have been taken to deal with it. At the international level, we emphasize the need to rectify the imbalances between savings and investment in many significant countries. This will require greater coordination of macroeconomic policy across the world's major economies. It will also involve strengthening the role, and the governance, of the International Monetary Fund.
AB - This paper describes the origins of the global financial crisis and how the prevailing New Keynesian macroeconomic orthodoxy failed to anticipate its severity. This failure, we argue, stemmed from an incomplete understanding of the pivotal role of financial institutions in the amplification of the crisis and its transmission to the wider economy. Low global interest rates and a consequent 'search for yield' in the pre-crisis period encouraged financial institutions to build highly leveraged balance sheets which, in turn, generated extremely large asset-price movements when a 'small event'-the downturn in the US sub-prime mortgage market-triggered the worldwide crisis. The paper then briefly describes the element of the broadly successful and coordinated macroeconomic policy response to the crisis before turning to the medium-term challenges facing policy-makers in sustaining global recovery. At the national level, we focus on the resolution of fiscal imbalances which contributed, in part, to the crisis, and which then worsened because of the policy actions which have been taken to deal with it. At the international level, we emphasize the need to rectify the imbalances between savings and investment in many significant countries. This will require greater coordination of macroeconomic policy across the world's major economies. It will also involve strengthening the role, and the governance, of the International Monetary Fund.
KW - Finance
KW - Fiscal policy
KW - Global financial crisis
KW - International policy coordination
KW - Macroeconomic interdependence
KW - Monetary policy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77953672171&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/oxrep/grq014
DO - 10.1093/oxrep/grq014
M3 - Article
SN - 0266-903X
VL - 25
SP - 507
EP - 552
JO - Oxford Review of Economic Policy
JF - Oxford Review of Economic Policy
IS - 4
M1 - grq014
ER -