Quote from Martinghoul:
Of course they didn't... 'Cause guess what was going through their heads? It wasn't the gaussian copula and its flaws.
What I'd like to understand is at which point in the whole toxic CDO chain you absolve the actual decision-makers of the responsibility for their decisions and start suggesting that they're just innocent victims of the evil quants with their models.
EDIT: That Wired article about David Li is not a very good one...
Once again, putting words into my mouth.
When I say Quants are misguided, I am not by definition absolving anyone else.
Of course people were complicit BUT the issue runs deep into the heart of the Business Schools and the fact that they have been hijacked into teaching finance as a mathematical science when it isnt.
Imagine a doctor being taught by someone with no practical experience but who's theories on surgery are well published to the point he's considered a leader in his field. Would you have one of his students operate on you ? Of course not.
Yet business schools are full of theorists not practitioners. What matters most to the business schools is that their professors get theories published in influential journals. In 2008, Olin Business School terminated one of their best professors of accounting - Tzachi Zach because he wasn't a 'serious theoretical researcher'. So what matters most in the business schools is the creation and publishing of new theories. Not the teaching of students (Zach had many awards for that) and not the user of real-world practical knowledge.
So - the implication here is that the important ideas come from mathematical theoretical research and not the developments in the real world.
If this is the way the business schools are - what kind of future is there for the businesses that their graduates run ?
