yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Even Adam Smith Didn’t Trust the Invisible Hand, with Thomas Piketty | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

A very optimistic view of how the market works, which sometimes is associated to Adam Smith, is the view that you have self-regulation of the market and that the natural forces, natural market forces can take care of everything, and in particular can ensure that inequality will never increase to such an extent that it becomes socially and economically and politically useless or even dangerous for that matter.

Now I think, in fact if you reread Adam Smith or if you try to look at the economic developments throughout history you see that you cannot expect everything from the market. You cannot just rely on natural forces to solve all problems. And I think one of the conclusions from the history of political economy and the history of economic growth and inequality is that you need strong public institutions in order to put this powerful market forces in the right direction.

Market forces can produce a lot of innovation, a lot of incentives for inventions and entrepreneurship and this is very positive. But it would be a mistake to rely and count on these natural forces to sort of self-regulate themselves. And if you look in particular at the period going up to the financial crisis of 2007/2008, you have a very large concentration of economic gains into a relatively small group of the population.

And I think everybody agrees today that this has contributed not only to the stagnation of median household income but also to the rise of household debt, which in turn put pressure on the financial system and probably did contribute to fragilize the financial system with the consequences that we know in terms of financial crisis, recession, unemployment, which we are now starting to get out of this, but there has been many years of lost growth and a lot of social suffering because of this.

So we need strong public institutions in order to regulate these market forces. And sometimes there's really excessive phase in these forces. There are cycles over history. Probably after the Great Depression, after World War II people realized that market forces need to be strongly regulated.

And then starting in the '70s and the '80s with Reagan and cultural revolution and even more so after the fall of the Soviet Union, we entered in the 1990s and 2000 in a new cycle of sometimes unlimited phase in the self-regulation of markets. And to a large extent we are still in this phase.

And I think there's a reaction, a policy reaction to the financial crisis of 2007/2008 has been too limited so far. And this could happen again. We've asked a lot to our central banks in the U.S. and in Europe.

And of course it's easy to print billions of dollars or billions of euros to avoid complete bankruptcy of a financial system, which is what happened in the 1930s and which ended up in a complete catastrophe. So it's better to avoid that. But at the same time printing money is not enough to solve the central problem that we need to solve.

So the good news is that we avoided a complete bankruptcy and complete depression, but the bad news is that we did not really solve the structural problems which might in the future create new crisis.

More Articles

View All
Tenant Trashed My Property | What It Looks Like Now
What’s up you guys? It’s Graham here! So today is gonna be a really special video because what you’re about to see has taken six months to put together. This has really been quite the journey that’s about to come to an end. So for those who have not been…
The Perfect Storm | Rebuilding Paradise
The reality is that it was November 8th, and we hadn’t had any kind of significant rain. It had always rained before trick-or-treating, right? I mean, right? And now, and now we’re in these patterns here where we don’t see rain until, you know, into Novem…
Supervenience
One of the questions was, “Um, how is it that logic supervenes on our brains?” And I think it’s a good question. Um, I think it’s a question that we’re not currently in a position to give a full answer to. Um, for that, our understanding of how the bra…
Taxes intro | Taxes and tax forms | Financial Literacy | Khan Academy
So, a lot of folks are familiar with government doing things like building roads and bridges, or providing schooling, or parks, or at the federal level, National programs, or say the military. The natural question is: how does the government pay for all o…
The Future of Satellites | StarTalk
So, Mr. Secretary. It’s great to have you on. Good to be with you. I always thought the military should—once airplanes became important, the Air Force was invented. But now we have space. Why isn’t there a space force? Oh, there is a space force. They’re…
Don’t Buy The Dip | The Stock Market Is Broken
What’s up guys, it’s Graham here. So today, let’s try to answer one of the most puzzling questions of the market that some people spend their entire lives trying to decipher, and that would be: why did the market just go up? Is this the feared dead cat bo…