Hi Keith,

Good to see your emails, even today--when I feel compelled to disagree with much of what you are suggesting.
There's rather a lot, so bear with me in italics below.

Natalia Kuzmyn

Keith Hudson wrote:
So far, concerning the subject of economics, the female of the species might as well not exist.

When basic food and minimum shelter are available for all in any post-agrarian society, then status, sex and security are the three main driving forces of economic development. The male tends to be driven mainly by status and sex, being much less concerned with security than the female. The female tends to be driven by security and sex, being much less concerned with status than the male.
/You are leaving out what many would consider to be the strongest element of economic engine: that of the arts! It's remarkable that the first funding cuts in tough economic times are those allocated to the arts, yet stimulus will still be provided to the very industries who reaped in corporate welfare benefits, but who grossly mismanaged public funds.

Despite the widely publicized notion that food and shelter are available for all in need, there is a great disconnect between availability and services actually delivered. Usually, there are never enough shelter beds for the homeless. Women's shelters are harder to find, and typically have wait lists. Understandably, many previously abused women cannot emotionally afford to mix with men who are potentially offending or intimidating. The number of shelters that allow pets are very few, and those which allow alcohol to be at least checked at the door are also at a premium. Such NGO judgments account for numerous homeless choosing inclement weather over parting with their sole comforts. Then, the working poor must not be overlooked when listing social and economic disadvantages.

Your last sentence denies that women, on the whole, are driven by status. Are you basing this upon the low numbers of women in so-called power positions? Are you suggesting that women take no pride in status? That accomplishment in this realm somehow evades the female ego?Have you taken into account the higher number of female college/university graduates? Are you perhaps equating status with job/career satisfaction? I believe you have been misjudging both men and women in this respect.

Recent Canadian surveys of university students show that job satisfaction plays a greater role today than status itself. Is it possible you are using an antiquated paradigm to express your views of what drives people to do what they do today? /

The male can't get sex willingly from a female unless he has some minimal status -- a role in society or possession of money. The female won't give sex willingly unless she is given some form of security -- safety of a partnership or money.
/Would this account for the high number of teen pregnancies amongst the economically disadvantaged? I don't think that most are getting knocked up by those in elevated social or economic spheres. Girls give it up because they're just as curious as boys, and are equally driven by developing hormones. It's a feeling they wish to satisfy, and romance is the main stage, rather than security. Young kids don't think in terms of security. Fun, adventure, and social acceptance within their peer group is of far greater concern. Many unfortunately succumb to peer pressure, many are rape victims. Security comes into play once a woman is ready for a life partner, and today this is more typically once career is in place. Those who don't arrive at that step are usually seeking escape from domestic abuse or poverty, are victims of their parents' cultural beliefs, or have been victims of an impoverished educational system which only offers training in obedience of authority, math and basic English.
/

These three are not only the three drivers and shapers of economic development but also (with the addition of food and shelter) of evolution as a whole. The exploitation of all of them is deep within our genes. It is sad, therefore, that the study of economics (as defined in all text books) is still largely trapped at a primitive level -- that of the distribution of basic resources (together, in the last 350 years only, with the distribution of the mass manufactured products of those resources).
/Again, you and those whom you favour quoting, tend to leave out the arts as the strongest driver and shaper of economic development. This accounts for the prevalence of primitive theories. The never ceasing quest for the next great product to stimulate the economy!

As long as economists fail to recognize that creative minds (that do not exploit natural resources) are our most valuable resources, and that they need to be nurtured and fully explored, the economic state of the world will quite simply be perpetually on the decline. Minds shape worlds, not otherwise. Fear of scarcity in sex, security and status have been exploited by church, industry and state in order to develop a society that will suppress mind, along with all its possibilities for a vibrant future.
/

Even the classic economists got little further than this. Even the three greatest economists of the last century -- Keynes, Friedman and Hayek -- were preoccupied with money and trade and little else. The only great economists who concerned themselves with status (but not sex!) were Thorstein Veblen and Joseph Schumpeter. Veblen wrote a lot about the great need of (mainly) males to display their status by means of the things they bought (particularly their houses), and Schumpeter wrote a great deal about the need of (mainly) males to display status by inventing something new and disruptive in the scheme of things.

So far, therefore, economics is an almost totally male-dominated subject -- not only as the predominant sex of its exponents but also in the way the subject is conceived. Yet the female is half of the species! And -- something which is usually forgotten -- the female actually possess more money (and thus economic choice) than the males by virtue of living longer.
/Women who enter this male-dominated realm do not necessarily augment credibility of women's worth, but rather are typically getting ahead playing within rules and values men and the women who believe in them have mistakenly established as sound. This fails to activate change, and merely perpetuates the status quo. Women manipulating the system gives them the illusion of being in control, but does nothing for positive change, and less still to challenge the low value placed on women's worth.

Women, on the whole, regard security rather differently than do most men, and the fact that more women do not bother to enter the existing flawed economic system is not at all surprising. Society cannot create and prosper within delusional systems doomed for failure. Exploitation is a weakness, not a strength.

That women control more money than men based on a longer lifeline is a pretty feeble attempt to placate those who, over the years previous, never really had control over how said money was spent or invested. At the ripe age of eighty, if they haven't succumbed to Dementia, cancer, or some other debilitating disease of the elderly, most have the sense to stay clear of systems which drove their spouses to an early grave.
/

How can we restore the female to her rightful place both in economic discussion but also as an equally important actor in economic development?
/Let's change the focus of education, and thereby help to initiate change. Change that recognizes that real power is within, and depends on a balance of energies that sustain interconnected life. Once we learn this for ourselves, then we can export it to developing countries./
It can be solved immediately by giving much more cognizance to the fact that teenager girls, mainly obsessed with the looming possibility of becoming mothers, endeavour to select the most able male that is available within her culture. This culture can be her immediate culture or, if she is more than usually able herself, in a better culture that might lie elsewhere. This is instinctive and applies everywhere and in every society.

Today, with equality of educational opportunity in developed countries, more girls than boys get to university. More girls than boys in the economically benighted parts of a country (e.g. the north in the case of England) will travel to more prosperous parts to find work and thus to find males who can give them more security than their former male peers. Measured by IQ tests, girls nearly always marry upwards. In a highly stratified society (in developed countries until recently or in Indian and other agrarian societies today) girls never marry males from a lower class or caste. Indeed, girls have been, and still are sometimes, ostracized or even killed if they marry beneath them.
/You are describing matrimonial decisions primarily based upon fear generated by cultural doctrine, not choice. People tend to find marriage partners where work is plentiful. Their more mature age usually coincides with such interests. /

The same evolutionary phenomenon also explains why almost all the bums and vagabonds in a city are almost exclusively males and also, at the other end of the ability range, why exceptionally gifted females find it very hard to find a suitable male whom they can respect as a partner and provider.
/Actually, you're hypothesizing. Males tend to be more prone to mental disorders afflicting homeless people. Up to 70% of any given city's homeless will be suffering from same./ /Those in prison suffer from these disorders, and you can throw in high numbers of illiteracy and Dyslexia to add to the injustices of the socially and economically disadvantaged.

Exceptionally gifted women do not seek out a provider; a partner maybe.
/

But perhaps the most serious consequence of female sexual (and thus economic) choice is that it accounts for the growing underclass in modern society and also for the vast majority of crime. The females who are not able enough to leave the more economically distressed parts of a country will tend not to get married because the males around them are not able to provide for them or who are even less able. But because such girls can also receive adequate welfare benefits from a developed country government and have priority in local council housing lists they will still have children. However, in recent years since the availability of cheap abortion, these girls no longer have multiple children but nevertheless they produce children in families without fathers. Such children tend to be lonelier and less socially able than children born into normal families. In their very earliest and most formative years of life such children tend to be left in front of the TV while their mothers, themselves much lonelier than they would be if marfried, seek social (and/or sexual) comfort outside the home.
/Too much to disagree with here. First, you concurred further down with Levitt's study showing the direct correlation between right to abortion and the staggering decrease in crime, then decide above it's actually not such a great thing that women have choice today. The crime is as a direct result of poverty and impoverished minds manifested by a flawed male-dominated economic/educational system. It may surprise you to learn that the single parent family is what is considered to be average today. You are presuming that poor single moms are letting the TV babysit because the moms are lonely. Most moms are actually working moms, and many cannot afford babysitters or daycare. Kids who have two parents are typically babysat by a TV as well because both parents are working. In fact, the variables are too numerous to review, but economic class has always been a factor in child development. Cultural background is another huge factor. If a child is raised to speak an entirely different language, and misses out on societal norms of the prevailing culture, they too are at a great disadvantage. It will be the economic well-being of the family unit that will pull a kid through the initial disadvantages./
One result of this is that teachers of primary school children can immediately detect the children of single parents because, on the whole, these children are not only culturally, socially and manually deficient compared with other children but cannot even converse above a fairly primitive level. Increasingly, teachers have got to give conversational lessons before they have a chance of tackling the normal syllabus.

Another important result of this is that the male single children make up the bulk of crime 15 to 20 years after their birth. This was first proved by Steven Levitt in a brilliant analysis some 20 years ago and now widely accepted. He was able to prove this scientifically by analysing overall crime figures in all American cities before and after abortion became a basic female right by a ruling from the Supreme Court.

And Steven Levitt is an economist! For the first time in the whole history of economic thought, the female of the species is now being brought fully into the picture. (For those who would like to pursue this in more detail -- or, indeed, want to try and refute it -- then I would recommend his book, "Freakonomics". I might also mention the reverse phenomenon which Levitt doesn't deal with. This is the phenomenon of the highly talented female who is no longer willing to remain a childless spinster for lack of a suitable male and decides to have a child without marrying because she can support a child economically all by herself these days.)

The lower class single mother is not to be condemned. She is a product of both our deep evolutionary instincts of sexual selection and of the hyper-meritocratic, hyper-specialized society in which we are now increasingly finding ourselves. The big problem is that this is now likely to be a permanent feature of any developed society -- and it will grow, the more specialized and credentialized our society becomes.

There have always been the poor in any society. This is a natural result of the variability of talent in every generation. But, in advanced society these days, the poor are becoming an underclass, and a criminal underclass at that. And, furthermore, a permanent, criminalized underclass. This will mean that a steadily increasingly number of children will be blighted in their earliest years before they even have a chance of exercising the talent they may potentially possess by virtue of their genes.

In a society which is becoming even more meritocratic and specialized it will mean that either (a) the human species will inevitably divide into two separate species over a period of time or,
/The human species would hardly be human if this impossibility were ever to take place. This would be as a direct result of genetic interference rather than fatality, and short-lived at best. I don't think that as a collective mind we could possibly allow that to undermine our destiny. This seems too much to be a judgment on the minds of socially and economically disadvantaged, and a speculation against the collective mind of humankind. Please, focus on *b), *wherein you fortunately arrive at a sane proposal.

Regards, Natalia
/
(b) that the most radical attempts must be taken to give every child the maximum opportunity for self development from the moment he or she is born. To the extent that we are already losing a great deal of potential talent, even genius, then this is by far the most important economic and political problem in any developed country -- far beyond the economic depressions that we are wont to experience from time to time.

And, as a byproduct, economics must become a much more rounded subject. We need far more Veblens, Schumpeters and Levitts than so far.

Keith Hudson, Bath, England, <www.evolutionary-economics.org <http://www.evolutionary-economics.org/>>, <http://www.amazon.com/dp/1906557020 <http://www.amazon.com/dp/1906557020/>/ <http://www.amazon.com/dp/1906557020/>>

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