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Boston Globe Topic in The Credit Debacle Catalog

Boston Globe looks (1).

Tue 2009-12-01 22:52 EST

Harvard ignored warnings about investments - The Boston Globe

It happened at least once a year, every year. In a roomful of a dozen Harvard University financial officials, Jack Meyer, the hugely successful head of Harvard's endowment, and Lawrence Summers, then the school's president, would face off in a heated debate. The topic: cash and how the university was managing - or mismanaging - its basic operating funds. Through the first half of this decade, Meyer repeatedly warned Summers and other Harvard officials that the school was being too aggressive with billions of dollars in cash, according to people present for the discussions, investing almost all of it with the endowment's risky mix of stocks, bonds, hedge funds, and private equity. Meyer's successor, Mohamed El-Erian, would later sound the same warnings to Summers, and to Harvard financial staff and board members. ... But the warnings fell on deaf ears, under Summers's regime and beyond. And when the market crashed in the fall of 2008, Harvard would pay dearly, as $1.8 billion in cash simply vanished. Indeed, it is still paying, in the form of tighter budgets, deferred expansion plans, and big interest payments on bonds issued to cover the losses.

Boston Globe; Harvard ignored warnings; investment.

Thu 2009-09-17 09:31 EDT

Why capitalism fails - The Boston Globe

Mainstream economics rediscovers Hyman Minsky; ``Instability,'' he wrote, ``is an inherent and inescapable flaw of capitalism.''...Minsky drew his own, far darker, lessons from Keynes's landmark writings, which dealt not only with the problem of unemployment, but with money and banking...Minsky argued that Keynes's collective work amounted to a powerful argument that capitalism was by its very nature unstable and prone to collapse. Far from trending toward some magical state of equilibrium, capitalism would inevitably do the opposite. It would lurch over a cliff...Minsky spent the last years of his life, in the early 1990s, warning of the dangers of securitization and other forms of financial innovation, but few economists listened. Nor did they pay attention to consumers' and companies' growing dependence on debt, and the growing use of leverage within the financial system... Minsky...argued for a ``bubble-up'' approach, sending money to the poor and unskilled first. The government - or what he liked to call ``Big Government'' - should become the ``employer of last resort,'' he said, offering a job to anyone who wanted one at a set minimum wage. It would be paid to workers who would supply child care, clean streets, and provide services that would give taxpayers a visible return on their dollars. In being available to everyone, it would be even more ambitious than the New Deal, sharply reducing the welfare rolls by guaranteeing a job for anyone who was able to work. Such a program would not only help the poor and unskilled, he believed, but would put a floor beneath everyone else's wages too, preventing salaries of more skilled workers from falling too precipitously, and sending benefits up the socioeconomic ladder.

Boston Globe; Capitalism Failed.

Calculated Risk Mon 2009-09-14 12:05 EDT

A Moment with Minsky

Stephen Mihm at the Boston Globe looks at Hyman Minsky...``Instability,'' Minsky wrote, ``is an inherent and inescapable flaw of capitalism.''

Calculated Risk; Minsky; Moment.

Thu 2009-01-08 00:00 EST

Inside the influential new world of econobloggers - The Boston Globe

Inside the influential new world of econobloggers, Stephen Mihm, The Boston Globe; Tanta; Naked Capitalism; Yves Smith: ``The real leverage of blogs is that journalists read them''; Calculated Risk

Boston Globe; Econobloggers; influential new world.

Thu 2009-01-08 00:00 EST

Calculated Risk: Boston Globe on "Econobloggers"

Stephen Mihm corrected: Calculated Risk NOT ``veteran of Wall Street''

Boston Globe; Calculated Risk; Econobloggers.

Tue 2007-10-30 00:00 EDT

Perceived as safe, some money-market funds take chances to boost yield - The Boston Globe

"breaking the buck"

boosting yields; Boston Globe; money-market funds take chances; perceived; safe.