It seems that Minsky has gained in stature among economists recently because he predicted almost exactly what happened last year and why.
Quote
As people forget that failure is a possibility, a “euphoric economy” eventually develops, fueled by the rise of far riskier borrowers - what he called speculative borrowers, those whose income would cover interest payments but not the principal; and those he called “Ponzi borrowers,” those whose income could cover neither, and could only pay their bills by borrowing still further. As these latter categories grew, the overall economy would shift from a conservative but profitable environment to a much more freewheeling system dominated by players whose survival depended not on sound business plans, but on borrowed money and freely available credit.
Once that kind of economy had developed, any panic could wreck the market. The failure of a single firm, for example, or the revelation of a staggering fraud could trigger fear and a sudden, economy-wide attempt to shed debt. This watershed moment - what was later dubbed the “Minsky moment” - would create an environment deeply inhospitable to all borrowers. The speculators and Ponzi borrowers would collapse first, as they lost access to the credit they needed to survive. Even the more stable players might find themselves unable to pay their debt without selling off assets; their forced sales would send asset prices spiraling downward, and inevitably, the entire rickety financial edifice would start to collapse. Businesses would falter, and the crisis would spill over to the “real” economy that depended on the now-collapsing financial system.
But that was last year. I don't see financial institutions becoming conservative this year in the wake of the crash, having learned that the government will (must) provide huge welfare payments as a safety net for large financial institutions when the chickens come home to roost. It does seem, though, that the Fed, together with the Bush and Obama administrations, averted catastrophe by following Minsky's prescriptions.
What intrigued me the most, however, was Minsky's prescription for making capitalism more stable: bubble-up economics -- with a guaranteed job at a good wage available to everyone. I know that this flies in the face of current politics, which holds that welfare payments should be limited to the wealthy and corporations (and especially to large campaign donors), but Minsky argued that bubble-up economics would benefit everyone. He might be as right about that as he was about the recent crash.