Financial Crisis and the Ethics of Moral Hazard
Publication date
2015
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Abstract
The 2008 global financial crisis raises ethical as much as financial questions. Moral outrage centered on the imbalance between banks (too big to fail) profiting from excessive risk-taking in good times and taxpayers suffering the costs in bad times. The paper analyzes this imbalance in terms of ethical theory. It first develops a rights-based framework to answer questions about the moral obligations of states and banks towards each other. It then criticizes standard economic thinking, which de-moralizes the phenomenon of moral hazard. Moral hazard between states and banks arises in a context that cannot be interpreted as normal economic contracting, but should rather be characterized as governed by an implicit social contract giving rise to moral obligations.
Keywords
financial crisis, banks, moral hazard, ethics of risk, social contract, Taverne, SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities
Citation
Claassen, R J G 2015, 'Financial Crisis and the Ethics of Moral Hazard', Social Theory and Practice, vol. 41, no. 3, pp. 527-551. https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract201541327