I see the present financial mess as a problem based on conditions.  As a 
problem, action needs to be taken to make corrections in monetary, banking and 
fiscal systems if the economy is to continue to meet peoples' expectations, 
which may also need to be reduced.  However, the problem arises out of age-old 
human behavioural conditions of entitlement beliefs, greed and exploitation.  
Because the conditions exist, the problem will recur again and again.

It has certainly done that historically.  I'm trying to read Reinhart's and 
Rogoff's "This Time is Different" which deals with the many many times the 
kinds of problems we are experiencing now have recurred in history.  While the 
settings in which the problems have occurred may have been very different, the 
behaviour that led to them and what actions needed (if not always taken) to 
resolve them were not all that different.

To absolve ourselves of the problems, we would have to make some pretty 
fundamental changes in the way we live.  In other words, we would have to 
change the conditions which govern the way we live -- at some point, we might 
all have to commit to living like poor monks in bleak monasteries.

The introduction of digital technology, while of tremendous benefit in many 
ways, has increased the rate at which problems will occur.  It has also made it 
far more difficult to ascertain responsibilities for them.

Ed

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Arthur Cordell 
  To: 'Keith Hudson' ; 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 
  Sent: Sunday, May 23, 2010 9:55 AM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] Restoring the old economic model


  A very long time ago I did some consulting work for a futurist. He used to 
say that when he encountered a new situation he tried to determine whether it 
was a problem (that could be fixed) or was a condition (that would have to be 
lived with).  He said that we waste too much time trying to fix conditions.

   

  So the issue is: Is the present financial mess a problem or a condition.  If 
the latter, then it is a condition made possible by the introduction of digital 
technology into an old established business, trading.

   

  I don't know the answer.  But if it is a condition then we have to wait until 
the situation has been made so difficult for people that great trade offs will 
be made and tolerated to allow us to somewhat modify the condition so that it 
comes to resemble a problem..

   

  Winter is a condition.  Aging is a condition.  What I have for supper is a 
problem, something I can do something about.  I can ameliorate the condition of 
winter by going to a sunny clime in the winter season.  I can do something 
about aging by working out, nutrion, etc.  I can ease many aspects of a 
condition but can't solve it as I could a problem.  Both involve trade offs to 
make the condition easier to live with.  What I have for supper is a problem 
which lends itself to an easy solution.

   

  The financial mess might just be a condition of humankind.  Something like 
war.  Why not control the outbreak of wars?  Easier to do than fix the 
financial markets.  But we don't, even though it seems that we can or maybe 
it's a condition.  Is war a problem or a condition?  Is the quest for financial 
stability and predictability a problem (with 50 year fixes that depend on 
technology and geo-politics) or is it a condition (same answer: with 50 year 
fixes that depend on technology and geo-politics.but for which there is no 
permanent solution available).

   

  Thoughts??

   

  Arthur

   

   

   

  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson
  Sent: Sunday, May 23, 2010 3:55 AM
  To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'
  Subject: [Futurework] Restoring the old economic model

   

  Last week, the well-respected Bloomberg website ran a story about the most 
successful investment bank in the world today -- Goldman Sachs (GS). In the 
first quarter of this year GS made a profit on every trading day. Yet, during 
the same period, 9 of its 11 published forecasts to its own investor-clients 
turned out to be wrong. (Those two figures might be slightly wrong here -- it 
could have been 7 out of 9. I'm relying on memory. I should have kept a copy 
but I didn't realize at the time that my subconscious mind would be working on 
this astonishing fact.) Needless to say GS clients are pretty upset by this 
revelation.

  Now, in the conventional way of the frequent buying and selling shares or 
currencies, any investment manager will tell you that the odds against being 
able to do this profitably over as long a period as a quarter year in non-boom 
times are very great. To do this on every working day of that period, the odds 
approach infinity. 

  The only possible way that this can be done is by being able to survey every 
potential price movement that is available at any instant of time during the 24 
hours and to pile-in on the slightest evidence of an upturn or a downturn. If 
the investment is large enough -- relative to the size of the object item (the 
shareholding of a business or a tranche of currency) -- then the effect can 
only be to enhance the initial movement.

  Once the price of the object item has moved up or down sufficiently to exceed 
the difference between the bid price and the offer price (commissions charged 
by intermediaries in the transaction) then the original transaction can be 
reversed and a profit made. If enough transactions are being made 
simultaneously, even if only a miniscule profit is made on each in-and-out, 
then a consistent, failure-proof cumulative profit can be made.

  This strategy could even be enhanced if, for example, a client of GS asks 
them to make a purchase or a sale. On balance, this decision is likely to be 
slightly more informed by expert knowledge (perhaps by an insider?) than 
otherwise. Once again, if such a transaction is judged sufficiently large to 
potentially nudge the market, even if ever so slightly, then GS can pile in 
with additional money of its own. However, unlike its client, GS would 
immediately follow with a reverse transaction of its own money as soon as a 
profit was realized.

  I also remember reading somewhere that such is the intensity of transactions 
on the shares or money markets these days that object items can be bought and 
sold in 11 seconds!

  Overall, how large this consistent (daily) profit can be made by an 
investment bank (or hedge fund) depends on how many opportunities can be 
surveyed and acted on simultaneously and how much capital it has at its 
disposal or can reliably borrow at short notice. Unlike, say, 10 or 20 years 
years ago, when sufficiently powerful supercomputers were still few and far 
between, this strategy would have been impossible.

  Today, however, an investment bank or hedge fund the size of GS can afford 
such a supercomputer. All that remains then is to devise algorithms that will 
survey hundreds (or thousands) of object items with the slightest sign of life 
and then buy or sell them automatically -- and reverse them almost immediately 
afterwards once a profit has been made.

  This, however, has two problems -- both of a catastrophic nature. The first 
is that although the strategy appears to be fool-proof, the algorithms may not 
be. It was the simpler and cruder sort of automatic stop-loss algorithms 
(program trading) that initiated the stock market crash on Black Monday, 19 
October 1987. Starting in Hong Kong, where shares crashed 45%, it continued all 
round the world. The crash was only prevented from going further downwards when 
program trading was stopped and normal movements of share prices resumed. Even 
so, many economists were afraid that a recession of 1930 proportions would 
follow. In the event, normal trading resumed but it took two years before all 
the paperwork was sorted out and the previous level of share prices was 
regained.

  This time, however, with larger money markets involved (including sizeable 
tranches of government bonds which had previously been the province of 
individual investors or investment managers), and highly competitive strategies 
between large financial bodies, there is no guarantee that weaknesses in 
program algorithms might not recur and something even more catastrophic than 
the 1987 event might happen. These days, how many years would it take to sort 
out the paperwork? (The paperwork of the 2008/9 credit crunch is still not 
sorted.)

  The second problem is that by this fail-safe method of aggrandizement, GS, or 
perhaps two or three of such sizeable financial bodies, could theoretically end 
up owning the whole world! Or, more accurately, the whole of the Western world. 
Of course, in practice, bankrupted governments, businesses and electorates 
everywhere would have revolted long before this situation could be reached. 

  Indeed, it's already the case that there is a powerful general mood at all 
levels outside the financial sector of the Western world that many of the 
financial operations carried out by GS and large hedge funds must be stopped. 
During this very week-end, the future of the Med country members of the 
European Monetary Fund might be at stake. (The Sunday Times tells me this 
morning that Spain is now as jittery as Greece.)

  But what can be done?  Apart from tinkering about with regulations concerning 
 investment banks and hedge funds -- which both the Senate and the House of the 
US Congress are now considering -- which can only lead to more evasion by 
cleverer people in due course, almost nothing really constructive can be done. 
It still remains that our present financial system has already resulted in all 
Western governments being deeply in debt -- some irremediably bankrupt already 
-- with the prospect of deep deflationary recession or hyperinflation in the 
years to come. Orthodox economists can't decide.

  The phrase of the moment is "a new model is required". Could it be that the 
new model ought to be the old model -- the one that obtained before 1931 and 
1971? In 1931 the UK pound (then the predominant trading currency in the world) 
was disestablished from real underlying value (which happened to be gold -- 
although that particular commodity is not an absolute requirement); and in 1971 
the US dollar was similarly disestablished.

  Since then, the paper documents of currency have been printed at will by 
governments (subject to what their electorates allowed them to get away with by 
way of inflation), usually by playing around with central bank interest rates. 
Without solid foundations, currency prices have wobbled about -- sometimes 
wildly -- against one another. It's no wonder that, since then, following the 
fashion set by governments, a whole raft of other financial documents quite 
beyond useful insurance policies against risk should have been invented. These 
can now ricochet around the world with the speed of an electron so that nobody 
can possibly know what the true overall situation really is. We now have CDOs, 
CDSs, CDXs, CDO1s, etc and no doubt other derivatives are already forming in 
the minds of inventive people in the investment banks and hedge funds.

  I won't end with another repetition of the solution that I've make all too 
frequently in the last year or two, save to say that it has long been advanced 
by what is called the Austrian School of economists. What they write is usually 
so convoluted that it's almost unreadable, but they certainly have the only 
solution that's possible -- the restoration of the old economic model which 
served the world very well for most of the time since the first coin was minted 
at around 900BC in order to improve on bartering.

  Keith



  Keith Hudson, Saltford, England 



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