British hisÂtoÂriÂan Niall FerÂguÂson has achieved the acaÂdÂeÂmÂic holy trinÂiÂty, holdÂing posiÂtions at HarÂvard, Oxford, and Stanford’s Hoover InstiÂtuÂtion. Only 44 years old, he has 9 books to his credÂit (includÂing a new one: The Ascent of MonÂey: A FinanÂcial HisÂtoÂry of the World), and you’ll often find him writÂing in the pubÂlic press. In the latÂest ediÂtion of VanÂiÂty Fair, FerÂguÂson takes a good look at the demise of the globÂal finanÂcial sysÂtem and locates the criÂsis “in the long run of finanÂcial hisÂtoÂry.” The stoÂry he tells is how the 20th cenÂtuÂry — and parÂticÂuÂlarÂly AmerÂiÂca’s urge to become a “propÂerÂty-ownÂing democÂraÂcy” — brought us into “The Age of LeverÂage,” which carÂried with it a “delÂuge of paper monÂey, asset-price inflaÂtion, [an] exploÂsion of conÂsumer and bank debt, and the hyperÂtrophic growth of derivÂaÂtives.” The LeverÂage Age is now over. But will its colÂlapse have ecoÂnomÂic and social effects as disÂasÂtrous as the Great DepresÂsion? Or will govÂernÂment action pull us back from the brink? DefÂiÂniteÂly give this piece a read, and thanks to “Hanoch” for makÂing us aware of it. As always, it’s great to get readÂer sugÂgesÂtions.
As a relatÂed aside, I should direct your attenÂtion to a new artiÂcle by Michael Lewis, who first wrote about Wall Street’s excessÂes in Liar’s PokÂer. It’s called “The End,” and it offers an inside account of how Wall Street sowed the seeds of its own destrucÂtion. It’s also apparÂentÂly the basis for a new book.
FinalÂly, you may want to check out a fasÂciÂnatÂing piece in the Wall Street JourÂnal called “MemÂoÂries of the 1930s Still Sear.” It feaÂtures interÂviews with the oldÂer genÂerÂaÂtion who endured the DepresÂsion, how they coped, and what lessons they learned.