| BOOK REVIEW: Good press for finance, for a change |
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Author argues finance can be force for good in tough times
Reviewed by Matthew
Boutte, assistant treasurer and vice-president, Iberiabank, Lafayette, La.
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Dr. Robert J. Shiller, he of the S&P/CaseShiller Home Price Index, has written a new book that he describes as originally being for his students. Intended as a survey of the landscape of modern finance and an argument for finance's fundamental benefits to society, it is in fact, an apologetic for the financial industry itself. That's both a good thing and a bad thing.
Nevertheless, bankers will appreciate the book for not taking the familiar stance that we're all crooks. Finance and the Good Society consists of two parts. Each chapter in Part One focuses on a different occupation found in modern finance. For example, this section opens with a chapter on CEOs, defending the role as a challenging one that is subject to many pitfalls as varied as short-term versus long-term focuses and, of course, the difficulties of CEO compensation. Other occupations included in subsequent chapters include investment managers, bankers, investment bankers, mortgage lenders and securitizers, traders and market makers, and lawyers and financial advisors, to name but a few. Given Dr. Shiller's background I found it fascinating that he directs some of his harshest criticism to educators. Dr. Shiller states: "Errors by educators in recent decades seem to have played an important role in the severe financial crisis that began in 2007. In particular, the efficient markets theory was oversold to students, and this helped contribute to the formation of speculative bubbles. Many teachers seem to inculcate the extreme view that markets are perfectly efficient. From this view many of their students drew the conclusion that it hardly matters ethically what one does in business, since nothing one could do would ever disturb this magnificent equilibrium."
Part Two of the book is entitled "Finance and Its Discontents" and this is where most of the meat is. If Part One was intended to enrich undergraduate business students, Part Two is a graduate-level discourse on such wide ranging topics as "Categorizing People: Financiers versus Artists and Other Idealists" to "Debt and Leverage" to "Speculative Bubbles and Their Costs to Society." In these chapters Dr. Shiller engages in something of a one-man version of the Socratic Method, wrestling with a topic and viewing it from all sides. Many times I found myself disagreeing with Dr. Shiller's conclusions, seeing them as too academically focused or too removed from the practitioners. Still, what he accomplished, like any good professor, was to make me think about the issues. Where this section fell short for me is that too many times Dr. Shiller concludes a chapter by essentially saying, "problem X needs to be changed"--but never provides a potential solution to the problem. In the final assessment, Finance and the Good Society will appeal to those people who are looking for a broad-based survey of modern finance, without the effort of digging too deeply under the surface. Likewise, the book will also appeal to those of us looking for a recent business book that doesn't suggest that our choice of occupations puts us into the same category as crooks, cheats, and swindlers. Matthew Boutte earlier reviewed Portfolio Representations: A Step-by-step Guide to Representing Value, Exposure, and Risk for Fixed Income, Equity, FX, and Derivatives. [This article was posted on August 10, 2012, on the website of ABA Banking Journal, www.ababj.com.] Set as favorite Bookmark
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