Robert Skidelsky
LONDON – It is generally agreed that the crisis of 2008-2009 was caused
by excessive bank lending, and that the failure to recover adequately
from it stems from banks’ refusal to lend, owing to their “broken”
balance sheets.
A typical story, much favored by followers of Friedrich von Hayek and
the Austrian School of economics, goes like this: In the run up to the
crisis, banks lent more money to borrowers than savers would have been
prepared to lend otherwise, thanks to excessively cheap money provided
by central banks, particularly the United States Federal Reserve.
Commercial banks, flush with central banks’ money, advanced credit for
many unsound investment projects, with the explosion of financial
innovation (particularly of derivative instruments) fueling the lending
frenzy.
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