I found a copy on Amazon that's still available.   $125

 

REH

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of de Bivort
Lawrence
Sent: Tuesday, September 11, 2012 11:24 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Central bank money machines fail to spur global
economy

 

That would be great.  It came out at a time when a dozen first-rate books
appeared linking design to societal change. Many of the them were based on
cybernetics, systems analysis, and the still-faltering but ever fascinating
fields of chaos and complexity.  Names (sp?) like: Abrahamson, von
Forrester, Miller, Aikens, Kaufmann, Bateson, Beer, Fuller, etc. etc.
Several of these have fallen out of print, unfortunately.

 

I was fortunate to get to skim a friend's copy of Warfield's excellent book.

 

Cheers,

Lawry

 

 

 

 

On Sep 11, 2012, at 11:05 AM, D & N wrote:





If it still has merit, maybe it should be REprinted.

D.

On 11/09/2012 7:58 AM, de Bivort Lawrence wrote:

Agreed. It is unfortunate that John's book is no longer available. 

 

Cheers,

Lawry

 

 

On Sep 11, 2012, at 10:41 AM, Ray Harrell wrote:





Things are not automatic.    You have to want things to get better.  When
there is a political agenda that reacts in opposition, nothing works.
Markets aren't natural institutions.   They are formed by arbitrary
decisions based on many things.   They are mega systems.   One problem is
incompetence but another is recalcitrance and class war.   John Warfield's
"A Science of Generic Design" is a masterful exploration of mega systems and
how they work.   They only people who seriously study him is the Department
of Defense and the Chinese Government.    He's like Deming with the
Japanese. 

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Arthur Cordell
Sent: Tuesday, September 11, 2012 10:13 AM
To: [email protected]; 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME
DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'
Subject: [Futurework] Central bank money machines fail to spur global
economy

 


Central bank money machines fail to spur global economy


*       by John W. Schoen, NBC News 
*       Sept. 11, 2012 
*       Read Later
<http://www.readability.com/articles/2dzlncoq?legacy_bookmarklet=1>  

 

Stelios Varias / Reuters rile

By John W. Schoen, NBC News

Economics 101 says a massive dose of easy money is supposed to be a reliable
cure for a sluggish economy. For the first time in decades, the prescription
isn't working, to the rising frustration of central bankers in the U.S. and
Europe.

Four years and more than $2 trillion after the Federal Reserve opened the
money spigots following the financial collapse of 2008, the U.S. economy
remains stuck in the mud
<http://economywatch.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/08/01/13054652-economy-may-be-pe
rmanently-stuck-in-slow-growth-mode> .

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, in a widely-watched speech last month in Jackson
Hole, Wyo
<http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20120831a.htm> .,
defended the central bank's past decisions to churn out record-breaking
volumes of cash -- a process known as "quantitative easing" -- saying the
policy had prevented a much more painful recession. Bernanke also left
little doubt that more money may be coming, as early as this week's regular
Fed policy meeting.  

"It is important to achieve further progress, particularly in the labor
market," Bernanke said. "The Federal Reserve will provide additional policy
accommodation as needed."

Maintaining steady job growth is half of the Fed's so-called "dual mandate,"
the other being inflation control. Based on Friday's monthly jobs report
<http://economywatch.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/07/13728411-weak-jobs-growth-
beyond-governments-control> , showing fewer than 100,000 new hires in
August, the Fed has a lot more work to do.

All of which has Wall Street convinced it's a pretty sure bet that the Fed
is about to fire up its money machine once more, forcing cash into the
system by buying hundreds of trillions of dollars' worth of bonds.

"That employment report kind of nailed it," said Michelle Girard, RBS senior
economist. "The Fed laid out the criteria: we need to see a sustained and
substantial improvement. And that labor report didn't show it. So the Fed is
going to have to make good on their intentions."

But roads paved with good intentions don't always lead to good places.
Though investors have bid up stocks on the theory that another massive wave
of cash has to go somewhere, there's widening doubt that another money flood
will boost growth or create more jobs.

"What central banks everywhere are doing is trying to make sure people are
not focused on the world breaking apart," said Dinakar Singh, CEO of
TPG-Axon Capital. "Ultimately I don't think lower rates make that much
difference anymore. There aren't that many people left that haven't borrowed
money -- companies or people -- but would if rates were lower. "

On top of another massive money drop, the Fed may extend its stated promise
to keep interest rates ultra-low further into the future. Some market
watchers, and a few Fed policy makers, have expressed concerns those moves
could do more harm than good.

Even as low rates have failed to spur growth, they're penalizing savers.
Insurance and pension funds have been hit hard by record low returns needed
to fund long-term obligations. And, at some point, the Fed will have to
start selling its massive holdings in bonds, forcing rates higher and
producing a drag on growth. Discussions about that "exit strategy," frequent
following the Fed's first round of bond-buying, have all but disappeared
from recent Fed deliberations.

Europe's central bank, meanwhile, is also embarking on its second round of
bond buying to try to head off a deepening recession. But the ECB's easy
money efforts appear to have had even less impact on the eurozone crisis
than its American counterpart.

Central bankers there face a different, and thornier, set of problems. So
far, they've been badly hampered by restrictions on their mandate preventing
them from intervening to help bail out specific countries in trouble.

They've also been hamstrung by politics, as wealthier northern nations led
by Germany have opposed the kind of big-money stimulus pioneered by the Fed.

Further action could be hampered by a German high court ruling expected this
week on the constitutionality of a key bailout fund. No matter which way the
court rules, central bankers in Germany's Bundesbank -- along with millions
of that country's voters -- will likely oppose further ECB proposals to
flood the continent with money, much of it coming from Germany.

"The Bundesbank is now becoming the voice increasingly of conservative
Germany," said Jim O'Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management.
"It's the early stages of heading toward what ultimately will be some
referendum in Germany on a closer euro in which Germany, as part of its DNA
has to support the others."

ECB intervention to drive down interest rates could worsen the crisis by
protecting free-spending governments from the financial market punishment
needed to enforce tighter budget controls.

"Its massive support may well discourage profligate governments from meeting
their fiscal objectives," said David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin
Shiff. "Italy is already backsliding on this front."

Central bankers in China, trying to revive a slumping economy by pumping
more money into the system, face yet another set of problems this time
around. Following a series of monthly data showing China's once-hot growth
winding down, Beijing last week announced a series of new infrastructure
projects to try to reverse the downturn.

But the measures are much more limited than the massive stimulus undertaken
following the 2008 collapse. That spending spree left China with more roads,
bridges, airports and rail lines than it needs. Now, as growth has slowed
again, inventories of raw materials and finished goods are piling up.

Additional government lending and spending risks igniting another round of
the kind of consumer inflation that swept through China in 2010, forcing up
food prices and inflating a rapidly expanding real estate bubble.

Chinese consumer price inflation appears to be moving higher again, bumping
up to annual rate of 2.0 percent last month from 1.8 percent in July, and is
likely to rise above 3 percent early next year, according to Mark Williams,
chief Asia economist at Capital Insight.

"This won't prevent further stimulus if the economy remains very weak, but
it does make large policy moves less likely," he said.

Faced with an ongoing global slowdown, though, central bankers around the
world are loathe to do nothing.  Despite the limited impact of dumping more
money into the economy, even easy-money skeptics at the Fed will likely go
along with another round, according to Neal Soss CSFB chief economist.

"Even those who doubt the efficacy of monetary policy under current
circumstances may well feel obliged not to disappoint financial markets," he
said. "First, do no harm."

Jim McCaughan, Principal Global Investors CEO, explains why further Fed
easing is not the best policy decision.

More money and business news:

 

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