The Man Who Won a Nobel Prize for Helping Create a Global Financial Crisis
Eugene Fama just received a Nobel Prize for his
contributions to the theory of “efficient financial markets,” the
dominant theory in financial economics that asserts that markets work
ideally if not constrained by government regulation. The fact that
economic “science” teaches that unregulated financial markets work
effectively helped financial institutions and the rich accomplish their
goal of radical financial market deregulation in the 1980s and 1990s.
Deregulation, in turn, not only contributed to the rising inequality of
the era, it helped cause the global financial market crisis that began
in 2007 and the deep recession and austerity fiscal policies that
accompanied it.
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