I find the writer's explanation of the main cause of the financial crisis too simplistic and dangerously naive: "interest rates were historically low which made lending cheap, [so] banks had more money to lend than there were responsible borrowers. This created a credit bubble that once over, resulted in banks suffering large monetary losses and an atmosphere of being scared to lend to each other."<p>IMHO, the structure and behavior of financial firms was a major destabilizing force leading to the crisis.<p>In the years preceding the crisis, financial firms created a vast network of complex financial claims and obligations <i>of their own</i> that greatly exceeded the real economy’s needs. These financial claims and obligations were at the center of the financial crisis.<p>A recent working paper at the Bank of International Settlements shows that financial flows exceeded the real economy's needs by a factor of at least 60 (!): <a href="http://www.bis.org/publ/work346.pdf" rel="nofollow">http://www.bis.org/publ/work346.pdf</a> -- an irreverent translation of the paper in easy-to-understand lay language is available here: <a href="http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2011/09/the-very-important-and-of-course-blacklisted-bis-paper-about-the-crisis.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2011/09/the-very-important-an...</a> .<p>Instead of just providing a mundane but critical service to the real economy (interconnecting the real economy's savers with its borrowers), the financial system was <i>driving</i> the real economy – for instance, by pushing up the prices of many assets, particularly residential properties, simultaneously feeding on and magnifying a housing bubble of historic proportions.<p>IMHO, these nonlinear feedback loops and network-amplification effects -- typical of complex, tightly interconnected, dynamic systems -- were important root causes.