Synopsis
Moyenne
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the standard terminology things tend to move towards an equilibrium as consumers and producers adjust to present market conditions with a closer approximation to equilibrium being the efficient "good thing". Soros's insight (rediscovery) is that a real approach to the ideal of equilibrium implies a stagnation and freezing of change in society. His healthy norm therefore becomes a world of permanent disequilibrium as prices and production never stabilise, being constantly overtaken by changing tastes and technology."Reflexivity" is more a case of instability taking on a life of its own that may or may not be positive. The essential element is that a feedback process is set in motion that is the exact opposite of an equilibrium seeking system. A boom in stock prices will tend to get more extreme as it progresses making new capital abnormally cheap, encouraging excess investment and giving a false picture of real demand.In a sense, the first stages square with the traditional equilibrium seeking concepts of entry and exit but the latter stages are shown by Soros to be the destabilising aspects - as he says, "My point is that there are occasions when the bias affects not only market prices but also the so-called fundamentals. This is when reflexivity becomes important."In the preface to the later 1994 edition he draws back from the wider application of economic reflexivity that he was initially proposing, accepting that conventional equilibrium analysis holds true much of the time and he also generalises the idea to non-economic events.This is surely a landmark book, not only in economics.
Titre original : The Alchemy of Finance: Reading the Mind of the Market
1 édition pour ce livre
1994 Editions John Wiley & Sons
Langue anglaise | 389 pages | ISBN : 9780471042068
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