Wednesday 25 March 2009

World leaders: Watch out!

George Soros, the famous hedge fund manager, has expressed concern that the world's policy-makers have not responded correctly to the lessons of the current economic turmoil which in turn will lead to more trouble in the future.

etfexpress published the following story on 25 March 2009:

Yesterday the chairman of Soros Fund Management said that the financial crisis had proven that the idea of self-correcting markets was false and that it was dangerous to leave asset bubbles to deflate spontaneously.'Markets, far from reflecting the underlying reality accurately at all times, are always distorting it,' he told participants at the Wall Street Journal's Future of Finance Initiative. 'We have to recognise that, because of that, you can go very far in initially self-reinforcing, eventually self-defeating, boom-bust cycles, or bubbles. Therefore, you can't leave the markets to correct themselves.'
Soros argues that the downturn has driven the final nail into the coffin of the efficient markets hypothesis, which contends that the state of markets fully reflects all the information available to participants.'What has happened is that the efficient market hypothesis has been discredited, the evidence is just too overwhelming,' Soros told The Australian recently.
'But instead of accepting reflexivity, the [economics] profession is veering towards behavioural economics and what is called the adaptive systems or adaptive markets hypothesis. And I am worried about that, because I think that this will perpetuate the mistake.'
Soros also insists that policymakers need to distinguish between the two issues of stopping the collapse of the financial system and fixing its fundamental problems, arguing that the solutions are 'diametrically opposed' to each other.

1 comment:

Brian Barker said...

Did you know that George Soros would not be a multi-billionaire if it were not for the international language Esperanto?

Born in Hungary in 1930 as Gyorgy Schwartz, the family changed its name in 1936 to Soros, which in Esperanto means "to soar."

The Soros name-change was an effort to protect the Jewish family from the rise of fascist rulers and the whole family spoke Esperanto at home.

As a native Esperanto speaker, (someone who has spoken Esperanto from birth), George Soros defected to the West in 1946, while attending an Esperanto youth meeting in Switzerland.

Esperanto enabled Soros both to defect, and to become the 28th most wealthy man in the World, according to the Forbes rich list.