--- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>The desire for self importance ("I'm a
> member of the group that caused X to happen.") never
> ceases to amaze me. Whether it's the Biblethumpers
> claiming that God destroyed New Orleans to punish the
> city for its wicked ways or that the stock market's 
> going up because a few people are silly enough to bounce 
> around on their butts for several hours a day, it's
> always the same bottom line -- "*We* are important,
> because *we* are the cause of all this." Yeah right,
> dudes...now let's get back to talking about stuff you
> actually know something about."

What is missing in ME theory, aside from clear tests/results :) ), is
an explanation of the mechanics of how ME might "cause" the stock
market to rise. Its simplistic to think there is a direct effect (if
any effect is actually there.)

In the following blurb, I have tried to map out potential mechanics
for both short- and longer term effects -- if the ME actually yields
an influence on financial markets. Short-run, increased national
cohernece could increase optimism -- which could yield market rises.
Longer-run, increased national cohernece could increase creativity,
reduce friction in research "networks"/ collaboration, etc. New
breakthroughs in a variety of fields will tend to increase
productivity, which in turn will positivly effect earnings. Ultimately
its risk adjsuted earnings that drive stock prices. 

IF the TMO were serious about ME, in an academic and research sense --
and not just a PR blitz of nice images -- it would investigate such
linkages, and attempt to discern effects and their lags, at each of
the many links in this "value-chain" -- from "bubbling bliss" to
market upturns. 

IMO, its less silly for YF to claim  increased coherence which leads
to a vast chain of linked effects -- which can manifest in things such
a long-run stock market upturns.


------Blurb from the ME/Financial Markets blog ------
Recent coherence project announcements stress the immediate impact of
the project on financial markets. Presumably the theory is that
coherence improves collective optimism, and optimism moves markets
upwards. Thats true in the short-run, but optimism is not a change in
the fundamental core of the economy, in the nuts and bolts, bits and
photons if you will, of the economy. Its a perception, a change in
interpretation about the fundamental core of the economy. Perception,
and the core itself, are two quite distinct things.

As pointed out in a prior post, the substantive effects* of the three
prior large ME projects took some time to mature and manifest. The
immediate short-run effects indeed were negative.

This lagged longer term effect is consistent with the mechanisms that
drive the market: earnings (and their expectations). And earnings
expectations -- and the fundamental core of the economy -- are driven
by "productivity" gains aka efficiency. Technological innovations and
the amount of capital investment being prime drivers of
productivityy-- along with related reductions in social, cultural,
educational and political barriers, and constraints in the economy.
Essentially when more is produced with less via long long structural
changes in the economy and society -- the financial markets respond
positively.

For example, "Companies can increase productivity in a variety of
ways. The most obvious methods involve automation and computerization
which minimize the tasks that must be performed by employees.
Recently, less obvious techniques are being employed that involve
ergonomic design and worker comfort. A comfortable employee, the
theory maintains, can produce more than a counterpart who struggles
through the day. ...

Increases in productivity also can influence society more broadly, by
improving living standards, and creating income. They are central to
the process generating economic growth and capital accumulation.
Many economists see the economic expansion of the later 1990s in the
United States as being allowed by the massive increase in worker
productivity that occurred during that period. The growth in aggregate
supply allowed increases in aggregate demand and decreases in
unemployment at the same time that inflation remained stable. Others
emphasize drastic changes in patterns of social behaviour resulting
from new communication technologies and changed male-female
relationships."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Productivity_%28economics%29

"Much of the difference in countries' living standards reflects
differences in their productivity...
... they conceded that during the previous five years [1995-2000] the
United States enjoyed the fastest productivity growth in any such
period since the second world war. Over the whole period from 1995,
labour productivity growth averaged almost 3% a year, twice the
average rate over the previous two decades."
http://www.economist.com/research/Economics/alphabetic.cfm?TERM=POPULATION

This fastest pace of productivity gains was during the same period of
the most rapid rise in the stiock market in history, the internet
boom/bubble. (And correlates with the phase III pattern of the DC
Coherence project. )

The structural changes in the economy -- and related social (work
ethics), cultural (gender equality in the workplace), political
(regulation, tax policy) changes that yield higher productivity - and
ultimately are what drive financial markets higher -- do no happen
over night. A two week coherence project is not going to produce
immediate long-range economic, social, cultural, political, or
technolgocal changes.

However, consistent with the inital patterns found in the correlation
between past coherence projects and financial markets, it is plausible
that there is a incubatory or healing lag between a cohernece project
and a long-run sharp rise in financial markets.

For example, many factors contributed to the sharp increase in
productivity, and the corresponding market explosive rise 1995-2000.
Many many independnet factors had to develop to a critical point, and
then come together and interact in new ways: fiber optic capacity,
miles of fiber optics layed, development of web browsers and related
languages -- HTML, Java -- fast, highly scalable servers, faster,
cheaper more accessible PCs and GUI operating systems, innovations in
and huge inflows of funds to capital to venture capital financing
sources, wide-spread use of stock options and other performance
compensation, wide accessability of the internet to the public,
increasing broadband availability, telephone and cable companies
laying fiber-optic backbones to enable broadband services, the
fluorishing of innovative business models (Amazon, E-bay, etc) .

The above changes did not happen over night -- or during a 2-6 week
coherence project. The DC project, if it had an effect on financial
markets, did not immediately transform the economy via such changes.
To expect immediate substantial rises in the market resulting from a
cohernece course is naive and "magical" thinking.

It is however at least conceptually plausible, that the DC course
created a short perieod of intense coherence, and that this coherence
-- via yet to be understood "black-box" mechanisms active over the
next 18 months, created a strong healing, renovation , rejuvination
and/or integrative forces in all the various diverse factors that
drove the productivity gains of 1995-2000 --- and subsequently
(over)drove the stock market to substantially higher levels.

* if the market changes are actually caused by ME -- yet to be
conclusively demonstrated."

http://2006-course-effects.blogspot.com/






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