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The Financial Crisis: What Happened and Why?

21 July 2009

Professor Dale Henderson

Visiting Professor of Economics, Georgetown University

The lecture comprised a description and an analysis of (some aspects of) the current financial crisis.  The crisis is viewed as a "financial perfect storm" resulting from a combination of developments in global markets for goods and financial assets.  Special attention is devoted to the incentives created by developments in financial markets in the United States and the United Kingdom.   A comparison of the experiences of these two countries is used in assessing the relative importance of the various changes in incentives.  At some points, comparisons with what happened in other countries help in isolating the key changes.

This lecture was presented by the Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis,  ANU College of Business and Economics, as part of the ANU Public Lecture Series 2009.

Broad Topics: Business and Economics

Sub-topics: Economics

Areas: ANU College of Business and Economics

Downloads

Audio

lecture Recording (MP3, 54.2MB) HH:MM:SS=00:59:12

Other Materials

Presentation (PDF, 2.22MB)

Professor Dale Henderson

Dale Henderson is a visiting professor of economics at Georgetown University. He served in the International Finance Division at the Federal Reserve Board from 1971-84 and from1989 to the 2009, ending his career there as a senior adviser. In between he was a professor at Georgetown University.  He has taught at Yale University and the Universities of Pennsylvania and Virginia. He has published articles in leading scholarly journals on topics including the gold market, stabilization policy, and foreign exchange intervention, and is the author of books on pollution control and monetary policy in open economies.