CNBC regular Robert J. Barbera offers a crystal clear
explanation of the financial market crisis of 2008
While mainstream financial analysts are stringing together
ad hoc explanations for the financial crisis of 2008, a
relatively small group of economists saw this coming. In The
Cost of Capitalism, Robert J. Barbera explains why.
Barbera makes the case that investors and policy-makers can
reduce the risk of truly gruesome outcomes if they better plan for
the violent economic storms, which history confirms are always over
the horizon.
Investors will learn how to gird themselves for the
roller-coaster ride that is free market capitalism; policy makers
will find out how to plan for crises they know will occur at some
point; and academic economists will rethink their pursuit of ever
more elaborate mathematical models that bear no resemblance to the
real world.
The message is simple: Stop pretending that people are always
rational and that markets are always efficient-and be prepared for
market mayhem.