Gazeta Buenos Aires - Finance’s Role in Economic Ruin

NYSE - LSE
RBGPF 1.27% 63.81 $
BCC -3.27% 90.74 $
CMSC -0.43% 21.965 $
NGG -0.15% 67.43 $
RYCEF -1.61% 10.53 $
AZN -2.25% 66.23 $
RIO -0.39% 62.03 $
GSK -0.36% 36.22 $
BTI -0.35% 40.55 $
SCS -1.61% 10.54 $
JRI -0.86% 12.77 $
BCE -3.39% 21.26 $
CMSD -0.58% 22.26 $
RELX 1.24% 53.06 $
VOD -0.22% 9.04 $
BP -0.66% 30.36 $

Finance’s Role in Economic Ruin




The finance industry, often hailed as the backbone of modern economies, has a darker side that increasingly threatens global stability. Since the 2008 financial crisis, triggered by reckless speculation in mortgage-backed securities, the sector’s unchecked growth has sown seeds of destruction. In the United States alone, the financial sector’s share of GDP rose from 2.8% in 1950 to 8.4% by 2020, yet it produced no tangible goods, instead profiting from debt and risk. Critics argue this shift diverts capital from productive industries like manufacturing—down from 27% to 11% of US GDP over the same period to speculative bubbles.

The 2023 collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, fuelled by over-leveraged bets on tech stocks, cost $20 billion in bailouts and sparked a domino effect across European markets. In the UK, the 2022 mini-budget crisis, exacerbated by hedge fund short-selling of gilts, pushed borrowing costs to record highs. Economist Ann Pettifor warns, “Finance thrives on instability it creates”. With global debt at $305 trillion—three times world GDP—experts fear the industry’s pursuit of profit through complex derivatives and high-frequency trading could precipitate another crash. Is finance an engine of growth or a wrecking ball?