5 sec

25 - Learning from and Responding to Financial Crisis, Part I (Guest Lecture by Lawrence Summers‪)‬ Financial Markets - Video

    • Business

Professor Summers, former U. S. Treasury Secretary and former President of Harvard University, in this the first of two lectures in honor of former Yale Professor and Council of Economic Advisors chairman Arthur Okun, offers thoughts on the role of monetary policy in economic fluctuations, past and present. In the "Okun period," ending about when Okun died in 1980, the monetary authorities were very much involved in actually creating economic contractions. Inflation would repeatedly get out of control, the Fed would hit the brakes, and the economy would slow. But, that is not the story of the economic cycles of the last two decades. Recent economic cycles appear to be connected with factors endogenous to the financial system, such as bubbles or cycles of complacency among lending institutions. Summers argues that to understand the financial markets and the economy, we must consider models of multiple equilibria, such as bank run models, where a change in confidence may shift the economy drastically without any change in fundamentals.

Professor Summers, former U. S. Treasury Secretary and former President of Harvard University, in this the first of two lectures in honor of former Yale Professor and Council of Economic Advisors chairman Arthur Okun, offers thoughts on the role of monetary policy in economic fluctuations, past and present. In the "Okun period," ending about when Okun died in 1980, the monetary authorities were very much involved in actually creating economic contractions. Inflation would repeatedly get out of control, the Fed would hit the brakes, and the economy would slow. But, that is not the story of the economic cycles of the last two decades. Recent economic cycles appear to be connected with factors endogenous to the financial system, such as bubbles or cycles of complacency among lending institutions. Summers argues that to understand the financial markets and the economy, we must consider models of multiple equilibria, such as bank run models, where a change in confidence may shift the economy drastically without any change in fundamentals.

5 sec

Top Podcasts In Business

The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett
DOAC
The Tim Ferriss Show
Tim Ferriss: Bestselling Author, Human Guinea Pig
Vast and Curious, cu Andreea Roșca
Andreea Roșca
Think Fast, Talk Smart: Communication Techniques
Stanford GSB
REWORK
37signals
How I Built This with Guy Raz
Guy Raz | Wondery

More by Yale University

Political Philosophy - Video
Steven B. Smith
Architecture
Yale Architecture
Psychology
Yale School of Medicine
Yale Health & Medicine
Yale School of Medicine
Ancient Greek History - Audio
Donald Kagan
International Law
Yale Law School