90 likes | 232 Views
“ Read all about it… ” the financial crisis as a story. Karel Williams + Ewald Engelen University of Manchester + University of Amstedam. How capitalism works (and why journalism matters).
E N D
“Read all about it…”the financial crisis as a story Karel Williams + Ewald Engelen University of Manchester + University of Amstedam
How capitalism works(and why journalism matters) Capitalism runs on stories which motivate political action and inaction; good vs. bad stories: whether justified by evidence and get the result politically Crisis is a story/as a story so far = financial elites have a story, everybody else is struggling to find a story • The distributive coalition around finance has a bad old story about finance + national interest • Journalists struggled to find a good new story, not helped by the academics and technocrats • Politicians default onto populism eg Darling bonus tax • Political message: the only way to fight a bad story is with a good story; journos need to tell a better story
Finance’s good/ bad storyabout national interest After Reagan and Thatcher dismantle corporatism + with EU Scheherezade phase: DIY representation by giant firms in loose distributive coalitions, PR and lobbyists tell stories to influence regulation (R&D in pharma, green diesels in cars) Finance’s story pre + post crisis is about finance in the national interest : • Varies by country eg City of London success which pays taxes + creates jobs etc; other centres about getting a bit of the action from London • One political corollary = light touch regulation before the crisis, don’t damage competiveness by re-regn A good/bad story: intelligible and actionable so it does the job politically; but selects and distorts evidence and is no basis for economic policy ( employ base is limited, bail outs cost more than taxes paid)
technocrats and academics: embarrassed by knowledge failure • Knowledge failure overwhelmed technocrats and academics: regulators + economists pre-2007 believed financial innovation was a good thing; post-2008 denial or remorse about how they hadn’t seen crisis coming….. • Knowledge recovery for technocrats = like utility companies renewing mains i.e. lots of disruption at many different points without any clear immediate benefit • Confusing causal disagreements e.g. macro imbalances vs. etbics; or differences about paradigm shift e.g. Akerlof/Shiller for behavioural vs. Haldane for ecological/epidemiological understanding • Panaceas meet scepticism e.g. narrow banking and boundary problem; macro prudential regulation is the big new idea not a working control practice
Journos searching for a new story (find bad bankers) • Honest struggle with a complex crisis: multiple causes from macro imbalance to financial innovation; no one best way solution of bank design or financial regulation • Broadsheet response = make a virtue of complexity: analysis in instalments exGillian Tett in FT or Robert Peston on the BBC = soap opera for fans • Tabloids and TV got a mass story by scapegoatingbonuses and bankers; high spot of UK + US media coverage = televised grilling of bad bankers • Scapegoating was a bad, bad story: delivered red top catharsis but (a) economically reductionist with crisis caused by greed and incompetence (b) politically diversionary with solution of bonus reform
Politicians default to populism(with media as commentators) • Politicians can’t wait for a good story: extreme intervention after Lehman bankruptcy in autumn 09; Greece + euro crisis in real time. • Politicians default onto populism eg Obama bank levy and Darling bonus tax; ex mixed motives ie fix the banking system + get re-elected • Media then become Wimbledon tennis commentators as politicians serve, return and volley for the electorate • How can journalists and academics do better? • add research depth and analysis • turn analysis into intelligible and actionable stories The good news is that this isn’t insluble; we can find causes + basis for intervention