The 2008-2009 crisis changed many behaviours: Is it possible that these behaviour changes have eliminated the risk of a crisis?
The 2008-2009 crisis seems to have profoundly changed the behaviours of: Wage formation; Central banks; Investors in equities and real estate; Private-sector borrowing. OECD countries are therefore now characterised by: The absence of wage-related inflation; Monetary policies that ensure borrower solvency; The absence of a major bubble in equities and real estate; Household and corporate deleveraging. If these behaviour changes persist, the risk of a crisis in OECD countries is therefore low, which increases the probability of the scenario where growth returns to the level of potential growth, but does not become lower than potential growth.