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Book Review - Lords Of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke The World

V Anantha Nageswaran

Jul 22, 2016, 05:37 PM | Updated 05:37 PM IST


Image Credit: Amazon
Image Credit: Amazon
  • The book details the personal histories of four central bankers who faced the twentieth century’s toughest economic crisis
  • Published in 2009, Lords of Finance won the FT Best Business Book of the Year award. Seven years later, it remains relevant for understanding the challenges of managing debt, de-leveraging and avoiding a global economic depression. The book, of course, is not fiction. But, it is as fascinating and gripping as a thriller.

    Lords chronicles the turbulent economics of the world between the end of World War I and the commencement of World War II. It lets us peep into the lives of four men who governed the most powerful central banks of that time—Benjamin Strong at the Federal Reserve, Montagu Norman at the Bank of England, Hjalmar Schacht at the Reichsbank in Germany, and Emile Moreau at the Bank of France.

    Schacht, who was sent to jail for his association with the Nazi party in its early years, dissociated himself well before the Nazi atrocities began. Nor did he agree with their economic policies. He laid the foundation for German hyper-aversion to inflation. To a large extent, he deserves to be credited for extinguishing German hyper-inflation.

    Reminding readers of the relevance of the past to the present and the future, the book underscores the cyclical nature of history as most Indic philosophies would tell us. Life and history are not linear. The US was permanently scarred by the Great Depression. The scars hurt even today. Who would want to relive a 50 percent plunge in the index of industrial production, a 25 percent unemployment rate and 4,000 banks failing in one year?

    For Ben Bernanke, the scholar who had studied the Depression in depth, the global crisis of 2008 was the ideal stage to test out his theories. As Chairman of the Fed, he unleashed liquidity abundantly. Though a menu of alphabet soups, it worked. The worst effects of the Great Depression were avoided. Neither production nor employment plunged as much as they did in the 1930s. Nor were there so many bank failures. After two to three quarters of funk, economic activity resumed from the summer of 2009.

    Image Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
    Image Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

    Bernanke shares his first name with Benjamin Strong, one of the four central characters of Liaquat Ahamed’s classic. Strong died in 1928. Ahamed notes that he would have handled the unfolding economic crisis in the 1930s far differently and effectively than his successors did. But that is a good situation to be in. It is good to be missed on stage than to be present and disappoint one’s fans and observers.

    The measures that Bernanke put in place in 2008-09 have continued long after the crisis has abated. Indeed, they have been expanded further. Perhaps, that is where the modern central bankers have departed from the four “lords of finance”. Ahamed’s heroes might have been uncomfortable about entrenching the unconventional and unorthodox policy measures their modern counterparts have taken.

    Lords abounds with anecdotes. President Herbert Hoover doctored the monthly labour market reports:

    “He frequently claimed in press conferences that employment was on the rise when clearly it was not. The Census Bureau and the Labor Department… responsible for data on unemployment, found themselves under constant pressure to fudge their numbers.”

    The book’s central message is that the debt burden imposed on Germany at the end of World War I proved to be too much for the country to bear and, eventually, for the world. Now, as then, too much debt might turn out to be the Achilles heel of the world economy with as much, if not greater, disastrous consequences.

    The final word has to be Norman’s. In 1948, he wrote:

    “It now seems that, with all the...good intentions,…we collected money for a lot of poor devils and gave it over to the four winds.”

    Maybe, he spoke for Bernanke, Yellen and Draghi, for they may not be as honest as Norman was in admitting to their policy impotence.

    The author is an independent financial markets consultant based in Singapore.

    This article was published in the July 2016 issue of our magazine. Do try our print edition - only Rs 349 for 3 print issues delivered to your home + 3 months digital access. Subscribe now!

    V. Anantha Nageswaran has jointly authored, ‘Can India grow?’ and ‘The Rise of Finance:Causes, Consequences and Cures’


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