The financial crisis was the culmination of the latest in a long line of financial bubbles caused by a failure to organize markets in a way that controls human behaviour. Whilst opinions are divided on the predictability of asset bubbles, Tuckett believes it is possible to see these bubbles forming and suggests steps that could limit the damage caused by similar events in future.
Tuckett, like Keynes in 1936, identifies ‘animal spirits’, as central to the problem, as they disconnect the anxiety of consequences from the excitement of gain (experiments show that we are normally pre-disposed to fear loss more than seek gain and so this in itself is a departure from the norm), and encourage investors to overlook signs that a market may be starting to overheat. Read the full paper here.