PERSON
Hyman Minsky
The American economist who proved that financial crises are endogenous—generated not by external shocks but by the system’s own success—and whose paradox that stability breeds instability became the sharpest available lens for understanding what the AI boom is doing to the structures it transforms.
Minsky died in 1996, a full quarter-century before the AI boom, and spent most of his career being politely ignored by a profession committed to the proposition that markets tend toward equilibrium. He insisted on the opposite: the crisis is not an accident that befalls a healthy system but what a healthy system produces, endogenously, through the rational behavior of its participants, precisely because the system is healthy.
Stability breeds instability. Success generates the conditions for its own reversal. The longer the calm, the more violent the storm—not despite the calm, but because of it. His three-position taxonomy of financial fragility—
hedge, speculative, and Ponzi—classifies actors by their dependency on continued favorable conditions, and predicts that rational behavior during booms systematically shifts the distribution from hedge toward Ponzi. The 2008 financial crisis vindicated his framework so completely that the previously obscure phrase
Minsky Moment—the sudden collapse that follows prolonged speculative