Beschreibung:
"Once-in-a-lifetime" financial crises have been a recurrent part of life in the last three decades. It is no longer possible to dismiss or ignore them as aberrations in an otherwise well-functioning system. Nor are they peculiar to recent times. Going back in history, asset price bubbles and bank-runs have been an endemic feature of the capitalist system over the last four centuries. The historical record offers a treasure trove of experience that may shed light on how and why financial crises happen and what can be done to avoid them - provided we are willing to learn from history.
1. Introduction 2. Tulip Mania 3. The Mississippi Bubble 4. The South Sea Bubble 5. Rationality, Fundamentals, and Prices: First Principles 6. Explaining Asset Price Bubbles and Banking Crises 7. Technological Revolutions and Speculation: 19th-century British Railways and Banks 8. The American Experience I: The Antebellum Era 9. The American Experience II: The Gilded Age 10. The Crash of 1929 11. Mighty Magic of the Market 12. The Conjuration of the Financial Markets 13. The 1980s: Financial Capitalism Unchained 14. The 1990s: The Triumph of Financial Capitalism 15. The Latest Act: Sub-prime Mortgages and Derivatives 16. The Latest Act: The Crash of the 2000s 17. Two Legacies of the Subprime Sinkhole