Are We Heading Towards Another Financial Crisis?

Our founder, Mac Van Wielingen, often refers to the 2008 financial crisis as a critical point, as it “exposed significant corporate governance failings and led many to question the role of business in society.” There was a failure in strategic risk management and oversight due to a loss of focus on client interests, obsessive short-termism, and excessive financial leverage. In 2010, Viewpoint Research Partners was founded to explore the challenges through conducting and curating research. A decade has passed since Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, launching the world into a global financial meltdown. In a single day, more than $600 billion USD in assets were wiped out, and 25,000 employees lost their jobs.

So what has changed since then?

The road to recovery has been a tough one. It has taken years for unemployment to return to pre-recession numbers, which has increased disparity in wealth. Middle-class income in the U.S. has only recently reached $61,000 USD, the level before the recession. Policy changes and new regulations have been implemented in response to the instability and the abundance of financial fraud that occurred, resulting in more global bank stability.

Are we at risk of stepping down the same path again?

It seems that there are similar conditions brewing, with increasing public polarization, and the increasing trade tensions and corporate debt. “Ten years on from the 2008 meltdown, the global banking systems seems more resilient to shocks, corporate profits are generally strong, and the bull market trudges along. But that in itself is a dangerous situation.” While there is no punchy one-line answer, organizations can protect themselves from repeating history by focusing on long-term performance and sustainability, and being open to new ways of governing business.


Author

Viewpoint Research Team