In The Crisis of Global Capitalism, George Soros claims that the international financial economy is inherently unstable, and that while economists have failed to recognize this because of their commitment to static equilibrium theory, politicians have failed to stabilize the global economy because of their commitment to an unquestioned faith in the complete efficiency of laissez faire. While Soros is right to argue that market participants' expectations about the future can cause instability, he is wrong to maintain that this has gone unrecognized by economists, and his notion that ive live in a world of economic laissez faire is equally mistaken. Indeed, his own analysis of the Asian financial crisis points to the "moral hazard" created by expectations of government intervention, rather than to laissez faire, as the culprit.