Showing posts with label human action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human action. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Ludwig von Mises: The Impossiblity of Economic Calculation Under Socialism

Excerpted from the great Austrian Economist Ludwig von Mises' magnum opus Human Action (source: Econolib) [bold added]
The paradox of "planning" is that it cannot plan, because of the absence of economic calculation. What is called a planned economy is no economy at all. It is just a system of groping about in the dark. There is no question of a rational choice of means for the best possible attainment of the ultimate ends sought. What is called conscious planning is precisely the elimination of conscious purposive action.

For more than a hundred years the substitution of socialist planning for private enterprise has been the main political issue. Thousands and thousands of books have been published for and against the communist plans. No other subject has been more eagerly discussed in private circles, in the press, in public gatherings, in the meetings of learned societies, in election campaigns, and in parliaments. Wars have been fought and rivers of blood have been shed for the cause of socialism. Yet in all these years the essential question has not been raised...

It is the two fundamental errors of mathematical economics that must be indicted.

The mathematical economists are almost exclusively intent upon the study of what they call economic equilibrium and the static state. Recourse to the imaginary construction of an evenly rotating economy is, as has been pointed out, an indispensable mental tool of economic reasoning. But it is a grave mistake to consider this auxiliary tool as anything else than an imaginary construction, and to overlook the fact that it has not only no counterpart in reality, but cannot even be thought through consistently to its ultimate logical consequences. The mathematical economist, blinded by the prepossession that economics must be constructed according to the pattern of Newtonian mechanics and is open to treatment by mathematical methods, misconstrues entirely the subject matter of his investigations. He no longer deals with human action but with a soulless mechanism mysteriously actuated by forces not open to further analysis. In the imaginary construction of the evenly rotating economy there is, of course, no room for the entrepreneurial function. Thus the mathematical economist eliminates the entrepreneur from his thought. He has no need for this mover and shaker whose never ceasing intervention prevents the imaginary system from reaching the state of perfect equilibrium and static conditions. He hates the entrepreneur as a disturbing element. The prices of the factors of production, as the mathematical economist sees it, are determined by the intersection of two curves, not by human action.

Moreover, in drawing his cherished curves of cost and price, the mathematical economist fails to see that the reduction of costs and prices to homogeneous magnitudes implies the use of a common medium of exchange. Thus he creates the illusion that calculation of costs and prices could be resorted to even in the absence of a common denominator of the exchange ratios of the factors of production.

The result is that from the writings of the mathematical economists the imaginary construction of a socialist commonwealth emerges as a realizable system of cooperation under the division of labor, as a full-fledged alternative to the economic system based on private control of the means of production. The director of the socialist community will be in a position to allocate the various factors of production in a rational way, i.e., on the ground of calculation. Men can have both socialist cooperation under the division of labor and rational employment of the factors of production. They are free to adopt socialism without abandoning economy in the choice of means. Socialism does not enjoin the renunciation of rationality in the employment of the factors of production. It is a variety of rational social action.

An apparent verification of these errors was seen in the experience of the socialist governments of Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany. People do not realize that these were not isolated socialist systems. They were operating in an environment in which the price system still worked. They could resort to economic calculation on the ground of the prices established abroad. Without the aid of these prices their actions would have been aimless and planless. Only because they were able to refer to these foreign prices were they able to calculate, to keep books, and to prepare their much talked about plans.

Saturday, November 01, 2014

Quote of the Day: Differentiating Principle from Opinion

While it’s true that everyone perceives reality differently, reality could care less about our perceptions. Reality does not change to adapt to our viewpoints; reality is what is. Reality is fact. Reality is truth.

Reality, however, is not always a known, which is where perception of reality comes in. While reality is a fixed factor in the equation of life, perception of reality is a variable.

This is why it is so important to learn to differentiate between a principle and an opinion. The most significant aspect of a principle is that it can neither be created nor altered. Thus, a principle is the essence of reality. It is what it is, and it’s up to us to discover it.

The problem arises when people refuse to accept the reality that principles can only be discovered, and instead choose to believe they can create their own principles. Which means they believe they can create their own reality, a belief that can lead to disastrous consequences.
This excerpt is from self development author Robert Ringer at his website.

Tuesday, February 04, 2014

Bitcoin depends on human valuation and volition

At the Mises Blog Austrian economist Joseph Salerno brings about a very important insight on Bitcoin (bold mine)
Whether or not Bitcoin survives and whether gold returns to favor among investors and, eventually, to its traditional monetary role are, of course, purely empirical questions, which cannot be solved by theoretical arguments. At the moment both are valuable commodities and neither one can be considered as money.  Thus, tedious arguments on the blogosphere  which invoke Ludwig von Mises’s regression theorem, are completely irrelevant to the issue.  Both items are scarce commodities which are valued by consumers and command a price on the market.  As such, the regression theorem does not prevent bitcoin from being monetized or gold from being re-monetized in the event or anticipation of a fiat-money breakdown.  Rather, it is a matter of human valuations and volition which are not determined by economic law.  In this matter, our only guides are historical experience and what Mises called “thymological” insight into people’s likely choices  under varying circumstances.  Will the general public  trust and routinely accept a commodity embodied in lines of computer code or a tangible commodity that has served for millennia as the general medium of exchange?  Hmmm, I wonder.
Right. This is why I think debate on bitcoin is a waste of scarce time. What is needed is to simply observe Bitcoin’s progression via “matter of human valuations and volition”  in the face of the ‘resistance to change’ obstacles.

Many governments have thrown the kitchen sink on bitcoin, such as charging bitcoin operators with money laundering, many governments issuing warning on bitcoin usage, if we can’t beat them join them—by calling for more regulations and etc. But this should be an expected reaction since bitcoin poses a challenge to government’s monopoly control of money.

On the other hand, bitcoin’s function as a settlement medium appears to be rapidly growing. There are now more than 10,000 merchants spanning 164 countries accepting bitcoin for transactions. Some high profile examples: Online shopping Overstock.com now accepts bitcoin. Bitcoin have been accepted by some Las Vegas casinos

True while 10,000+ is a speck compared to millions of merchants in the global economy, again the question here is if “human valuation and volition” with regards to bitcoin usage will continue to spread. 

The ballooning merchant acceptance appears to be complimented by reports of flourishing bitcoin ATMs


New York will open its first ATM soon. Bitcoin ATMs are slated to open in Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia also this year. 

And bitcoin ATM manufacturers have reportedly been rushing to take advantage of this growth momentum

In addition, there are 88 crytocurrencies in existence, 84 of which has market capitalizations. This means that bitcoin’s success has been drawing in many competitors. Such competition should extrapolate to more improvements on the quality of cryptocurrencies offered.

What the above dynamics suggest? For as long as the internet exists, and most importantly, for as long as people preferences will be expressed by actions in favor of cryptocurrenncies, then this means that cryptocurrencies, which represent as the evolving innovations from the deepening of the information age, are here to stay. 

[Disclosure: I don’t have any exposure onbitcoin or other cyrptocurrencies yet, but I am contemplating to experiment with this sometime ahead]

Thursday, September 05, 2013

Economic Forecasting: The Mainstream’s Horrible Track Record

Aside from the agency problem, here is another reason why economic and market predictions or forecasts by mainstream "experts" should be taken with a grain of salt.

Last month, Singapore’s government announced the economy grew 3.8% on-year in the second quarter. But as late as June, economists polled by the city-state’s central bank were predicting growth of just 1.5%.

Economists got it wrong on exports too: They predicted a nearly flat print in the second quarter, when exports actually fell 5.0%.

The difference was even starker in the first quarter: Economists in March predicted exports would fall 0.5%, but in fact they shrank a whopping 12.5%.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore polls economists at banks and research firms every quarter on key local data such as gross domestic product, exports, currency, inflation and employment. The results are released at the start of every quarter, with the third-quarter survey landing Wednesday.

It turns out that the 20 or so economists who respond to the survey get it quite wrong, quite often.

Economic predictions are never easy. But they become even more complex in tiny Singapore, where trade is more than three times the size of GDP.
Why this is so? The great Austrian professor Ludwig von Mises explained (Human Action page 31): (bold mine)
The experience with which the sciences of human action have to deal is always an experience of complex phenomena. No laboratory experiments can be performed with regard to human action. We are never in a position to observe the change in one element only, all other conditions of the event remaining unchanged. Historical experience as an experience of complex phenomena does not provide us with facts in the sense in which the natural sciences employ this term to signify isolated events tested in experiments. The information conveyed by historical experience cannot be used as building material for the construction of theories and the prediction of future events. Every historical experience is open to various interpretations, and is in fact interpreted in different ways
Even non-Austrian analyst, statistician and author Nassim Nicolas Taleb calls such error Historical Determinism as I previously pointed out

Reading or interpreting past performance (statistics) into the future along with seeing the world in the lens of mathematical formalism (econometrics) are surefire ways to misinterpret reality. 

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Quote of the Day: On the Denial of Economics: Reality is not Optiional

Economics has the same ontological status as physics --- reality is not optional --- but the "laws" of economics are derived following different epistemological procedures. This is really nothing more, or less, than what Aristotle taught about methods of analysis being chosen based on appropriateness. Economics is about human action in the face of scarcity. Human purposes and plans permeate the analysis from start to finish. When economics gets derailed --- and folks it often does due to factors such as philosophical fads and fashions, or political expediency in public policy debates --- usually the culprit is one of 3 things: (1) a denial of agent rationality, (2) a denial of scarcity, and (3) a denial of how the price system works to help us cope with scracity by aiding us in the negotion of the trade-offs we all must face. This denial can come in sophisticated form --- e.g., Keynes --- or it can come in an unsophisticated form --- e.g., man on the street. But make no mistake about it, the denial has the same impact on the "laws" of economics as the denial of the "laws" of physics would by a man about to jump off the top of building would on the inevitable impact. All his denials will not mean much when he hits the pavement.
This is from Professor Peter Boettke at the Coordination Problem Blog defending what real economics is all about.

Tuesday, June 04, 2013

How Financial Experts Bamboozle the Public

Money pros had been taken to the woodshed according to the Global Association of Risk Professionals. (hat tip EPJ) [bold mine]
Americans would like an apology from Wall Street for the financial crisis.

They probably aren't going to get it.

But how about giving the number crunchers and investment managers a "time out" to reflect a little on the era of financial alchemy and greed that did so much damage?

That's what was happening in Chicago this week, where about 2,000 of the financial industry's quantitative minds and investment professionals gathered for their annual CFA Institute conference. They got some verbal punishment from some of the industry's stalwarts, who were admonishing their chartered financial analyst peers to think rather than allow mindless financial models and dreams of success to drive them to endorse the kinds of aggressive investment decisions that can create riches for themselves -- and destroy wealth for others.

"If you are attracted to a job in finance because the pay is so generous, don't do it," said Charles Ellis, one of the elder statesmen of the profession. "That's a form of prostitution."

Rather, Ellis said, his profession needs to return to the days he knew in the 1960s, when the emphasis was on counseling investment clients and not on churning out esoteric products and pushing people to buy them blindly.

Today the emphasis too often is on "complexity rather than common sense," said James Montier, asset allocation strategist for investment manager GMO. "In finance, we love to complicate. We rely on complexity to bamboozle and confuse."
In the local arena, such conflict of interests has hardly been about “churning out esoteric products” but about the pervasive cheerleading of politically colored quack statistics into “pushing people to buy them blindly”. "Them" here is applied to conventional financial assets.

More on the use of aggregate model based analysis:
Too many in his profession, Montier said, are trying inappropriately to apply physics to investing, where it doesn't belong, and they are ignoring inconvenient truths. Complex mathematics is valued but not necessarily used honestly, he said.

"A physicist won't believe that a feather and brick will hit the ground at the same time, and they won't use models to game the system. But that's what finance does with models," Montier said. "They take them as though they are reality."

Montier, speaking to financial professionals who design, evaluate and sell investment products to individuals and institutions, warned that all professionals in finance need to be thinking more, rather than following the herd.

"Who could have argued that CDOs were less risky than Treasurys with a straight face?" he said. But that's what happened. "Part of the brain was switched off, and people took expert advice at face value.
True. Mathematical and statistical formalism serves as the major instrument used by “experts” to hoodwink the vulnerable public on so-called economic analysis. The public is usually awed or overwhelmed by facade of numerical equations and economic or accounting terminologies.

These experts forget that economics hasn’t been about physics but about the science of incentives, purposeful behavior or human action.

As the great dean of Austrian school of economics wrote, (italics original, bold mine)
Indeed, the very concept of "variable" used so frequently in econometrics is illegitimate, for physics is able to arrive at laws only by discovering constants. The concept of "variable," only makes sense if there are some things that are not variable, but constant. Yet in human action, free will precludes any quantitative constants (including constant units of measurement). All attempts to discover such constants (such as the strict quantity theory of money or the Keynesian "consumption function") were inherently doomed to failure.
Governments love Wall Street models too
Government regulators and the Federal Reserve are guilty, too, of blindly putting their confidence in flawed models, he said. And if his profession and the regulators continue to ignore the dangers of financial concoctions involving massive leverage and illiquid assets, financial companies again will create an explosive brew that will result in calls for another government bailout.
This means because authorities has embraced economic bubble policies as a global standard, which engenders boom bust cycles, we should expect more crisis ahead. Thus the prospective “calls for another government bailout.”

To add, in reality, the government’s love affair with models has been undergirded by an unseen motivation: the expansion of political power.

Every crisis bequeaths upon the governments far broader and extensive social control over the people via bailouts, inflation, more regulations higher taxes and etc...

This legacy quote from a politician, during the last crisis, adeptly captures its essence
You never want a serious crisis to go to waste..This crisis provides the opportunity for us to do things that you could not do before.
Bottom line: many financial experts seem to in bed with politicians to promote political agendas either deliberately or heedlessly. Thus, financial expert-client relations usually embodies the principal-agent problem.

Nassim Taleb would call such mainstream experts as having "no skin in the game", thus would continue to blather about nonsense while promoting fragility.

Finally one doesn't need to be a CFA to know this. As James Montier in the above article said it only takes "common sense" which experts try to suppresss with "complexity". 

I would add to common sense; critical thinking.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Booming Phisix-ASEAN Equities Amidst More Signs of Global Distribution

I talked about swelling signs of distribution before my dsl connection cut me off.

In spite of this week’s majestic breakaway run by the Phisix and a robust performance by ASEAN peers, there seems to be more evidence of global distribution in motion. Some would call this divergence or disconnect.

clip_image001

So far, ASEAN has been on the positive end and converging.

As of Friday’s close, the Philippine Phisix (Orange line) continues to provide leadership in the region up by .95% over the week or 19.69% nominal currency gains year-to-date.

Such remarkable advance accounts for an average monthly return of about 5.6%. At the current rate of gains, the Phisix 10,000 in 2013 is still very much in play. Of course that’s unless some exogenous event, such as the growing risks of a crisis in Japan, may prove to be an obstacle to the current manic phase.

Our regional counterparts have also been showing signs of buoyancy. Indonesia’s JCI (yellow) has been a distant second to the Phisix after this week’s 1.24% advance which accrues to a 15.79% return year-to-date. Thailand’s SET (red orange) has recaptured double digit gains up 1.19 for the week or 11.3% returns for 2013. Thailand’s SET, which earlier had been neck to neck with the Phisix, has been derailed by interventions from regulators who recently raised collateral requirements for margin trades. Malaysia’s KLCI (green) has officially popped to the positive side (charts from Bloomberg)

The Philippine Mania in Motion

In the Philippines, the manic phase seems in full motion.

The manic phase as aptly described by Harvard’s Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff in chronicle of their 8 centuries of financial, banking and economic crises in This Time is Different[1]:
The essence of this-time-is-different syndrome is simple. It is rooted in the firmly held belief that financial crises are things that happen to other people in other countries at other times; crises do not happen to us here and now. We are doing things better, we are smarter, we have learned from our past mistakes. The old rules of valuation no longer apply. The current boom, unlike the many booms that preceded catastrophic collapses in the past (even in our country), is built on fundamentals, structural reforms, technological innovation, and good policy. Or so the story goes
A good example is the embarrassing gaffe by one of the leading broadsheets for publishing in the headlines a bogus or spoof pictorial of Time magazine featuring the Philippine President[2]. While the Philippine president did land in the Time’s list of 100 most influential people, he failed to grace the magazine’s cover. 

But the booboo shows exactly how media has functioned as mouthpieces for the government. 

More than that, mainstream media has been quick to hype on the supposed economic boom from alleged “good policies”.

Yet local media hardly covered World Bank’s latest implicit admission of emerging Asia’s bubble in progress, where the World Bank supposedly warned of “demand-boosting measures may now be counterproductive” (euphemism for asset bubbles) and that capital flows “may amplify credit and asset price risks”. Thus the World Bank prescribes that emerging Asia should put a break on easing policies[3].

In addition, local central bank chief also got accolades for taking the Philippine economy to the “stars”. 

The Wall Street Journal Blog reports[4]
Philippine’s central bank chief Amando Tetangco has taken to star gazing, of a kind, to guide the nation’s economy and so far he likes what he sees.

“The star of strong GDP growth and the star of low inflation,” Mr. Tetangco says in an upbeat interview during the Spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund. “This alignment of the stars is further strengthened by a healthy balance of payments surplus,” he said.

But it’s not all about the cosmic. The central bank boss also likes to draw on physics to explain how the quick growing South East Asian economy is faring between surging inward capital flows and risks posed by a sluggish global economy.

“I am not an astrologer but sometimes it is better to describe things like this,’ he says. Physics tell it best.
Amazing hubris.

Mr. Tetangco didn’t say it explicitly but his implication is that “healthy balance of payments surplus” serves as shield against a crisis. 

Mr. Tetangco does not distinguish between the various types of crises. While it is true that most crises has had the character of balance of payments deficits functioning as triggers to imbalances earlier accumulated that led to balance of payment or currency or exchange rate crises[5], there are other forms of crises.

They fall under the categories of debt crises, banking crises and serial defaults[6] (Reinhart, Rogoff 2011).

clip_image002

The above are examples of non-balance of payment crises. Particularly they are examples of two banking crises and a sovereign debt crisis.

Japan’s domestic asset bubbles[7] in the 1980s had been forged amidst current account surpluses. The 1990 bust led to a banking and economic crisis that still lingers 3 decades after…today.

UK’s secondary banking crisis of 1974-1975 also emanated from a prior property boom or the “last hurrah of the post war property boom” as noted by Wikipedia[8], which likewise has had a current account surplus going into the crisis.

Russia’s 1998 debt crisis[9] from unwieldy fiscal deficits that led to a massive government debt build-up was exacerbated by crashing commodity prices that led to a sovereign debt default. Going into the crisis, Russia posted current account surpluses from oil and commodity export receipts.

False assumptions and illusions brought about by a credit boom will eventually be unmasked. 

clip_image003
Such basking in narcissistic self-attribution glory reminds me of the Bank of Cyprus[10], one of the largest financial institutions of the recently stricken Cyprus.

In the mistaken perception that Cyprus successfully eluded the Euro crisis, and that they had become “immune” or has “decoupled” from the Eurozone, the Bank of Cyprus became a recipient of as many as 9 prestigious awards from February 2011 until September 2012[11]. As the Cyprus crisis emerged in March of 2013 or 5 months after the last award, depositors of the Bank of Cyprus may lose up to 60% of their savings[12] to bail-in the banks. Yes this is an example of a bizarre twist of fate.

I may add that for the mainstream, bubbles are after the fact knowledge.

As author Philip Coggan, and Economist contributor under the pen name of Buttonwood notes[13],
Ireland and Spain looked OK on government debt-to-GDP before the crisis but then they didn't.
And one of the haughtiest allusions has been to attribute policy success as “physics”. Such are patent symptoms of bubble mentality.

Positivist policies shaped by mathematical models will hardly extrapolate to “good policy”.

The presumption that natural science as equivalent to social science is a mistake. This has been based on faith or dogma and ego rather than reality. One cannot build on policies based on simplistic assumptions and mathematical aggregates when the fact is that the world is highly complex and where knowledge is distinct, diffused and fragmented. And because of such complexity, econometrics and statistical equations cannot model individual preferences, knowledge, emotions and value scales, since there is nothing constant in human action, especially with people’s interaction with each other or with the environment. 

Statistics are historical artifacts, relying on them means to wrongly assume the same circumstances will take hold in the future. Statistics and math alone cannot precisely foretell of the future. And policies based on statistics and math will be met with unintended consequences.

As the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises explained[14]
The natural sciences too deal with past events. Every experience is an experience of something passed away; there is no experience of future happenings. But the experience to which the natural sciences owe all their success is the experience of the experiment in which the individual elements of change can be observed in isolation. The facts amassed in this way can be used for induction, a peculiar procedure of inference which has given pragmatic evidence of its expediency, although its satisfactory epistemological characterization is still an unsolved problem.

The experience with which the sciences of human action have to deal is always an experience of complex phenomena. No laboratory experiments can be performed with regard to human action. We are never in a position to observe the change in one element only, all other conditions of the event remaining unchanged. Historical experience as an experience of complex phenomena does not provide us with facts in the sense in which the natural sciences employ this term to signify isolated events tested in experiments. The information conveyed by historical experience cannot be used as building material for the construction of theories and the prediction of future events. Every historical experience is open to various interpretations, and is in fact interpreted in different ways.

The postulates of positivism and kindred schools of metaphysics are therefore illusory. It is impossible to reform the sciences of human action according to the pattern of physics and the other natural sciences. There is no means to establish an a posteriori theory of human conduct and social events. History can neither prove nor disprove any general statement in the manner in which the natural sciences accept or reject a hypothesis on the ground of laboratory experiments. Neither experimental verification nor experimental falsification of a general proposition is possible in its field.
Growing Distribution or Divergences

clip_image005
Finally signs are pointing to a growing dynamic of divergence dynamic among global asset markets.

Among major equities, US and Japan continues to post gains even as much of the world appears to turning over. Of course this is with the exception of ASEAN. 

clip_image007
Despite the material year to date 9.1% gains by the S&P 500, internally the sectoral performance has diverged. Health Care, Consumer staples, utilities cyclicals and financials have boosted the S&P while materials, technology energy and industrials have weighed on the index. Perfchart from stockcharts.com

While I believe that much of the world will likely endure more pangs from growing signs of financial market weakness, it is unclear whether this will also impact the ASEAN markets whose mania phase has been running in full throttle.

This is of course unless there would be a major external financial smash up that could trigger a domino effect.

Nonetheless as market weaknesses becomes more pronounced, we should expect global authorities to jettison their “exit” meme that was really never meant to be and shift their tones to “dovish” or advocate on more inflationism. 

The recent quasi crash of gold-commodities which has been used by the mainstream as pretext to clamor for more central bank inflationism partly validates my earlier views[15].


clip_image008

And in contrast to the common reaction where crashes would lead to a loss of confidence and a ripple effect or a panic contagion, the quasi crash in paper gold at Wall Street, prompted for a near simultaneous frenzied or panic buying of gold in the physical markets[16] across the globe which also attained a milestone. For instance one day sales of US gold mint reached a landmark high[17]

In short, gold-commodity markets have also been diverging.

Yet this is hardly about “deflation” under the context of “aggregate demand”, and “liquidity traps” but about the dynamics of bubble cycles.

Navigating today’s treacherous market requires prudence, as incessant interventions has rendered markets highly susceptible to magnified volatility and whose state of fragility raises the risks of bubble busts, whose trigger may emanate from anywhere.




[1] Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff This Time is Different p.15 Princeton Press 2009




[5] Wikipedia.org Currency crisis

[6] Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff From Financial Crash to Debt Crisis, Harvard University August 2011




[10] Wikipedia.org Bank of Cyprus



[13] Philip Coggan Buttonwood Rotation schmotation April 18, 2013 Economist.com




[17] Frank Holmes Gold Buyers Get Physical As Coin and Jewelry Sales Surge US Global Investors April 19, 2013

Saturday, April 06, 2013

Video: Some People's Amazing Feat

A short video on incredible acts that some people can do. (hat tip AEI's Mark Perry)

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Video: Gary North on the World's Transition to the Modern Economy

Via BBC's Hans Rosling, I have previously posted a video showing the modern economy's dramatic growth transformation which begun during the 18th century, from the agricultural age to the industrial era to today's post industrial information/digital epoch.

In the following video, Austrian economist Gary North expounds on Deidre McCloskey's theme that "ideas" or "rhetoric" or the "Bourgeois Dignity or Virtue" as the major force behind such monumental progress. 

As per Mr. North, Ms. McCloskey's theme signifies as
a change of attitude regarding entrepreneurship, and a change in attitude regarding innovation and personal wealth derived from innovation and entrepreneurship...

The argument is people’s attitude for the first time radically changed on the question of the legitimacy of personal wealth through entrepreneurial activities 
Mr. North adds two additional factors to the ideas or virtues of the pursuit of self-interests: one is ethics (view of right and wrong), which may have played a significant shift in the public's opinion, where acquisition of personal wealth became legitimate. Second is a shift of the view of the future (based on religious influences or what Mr. North calls as the "post millennialist eschatology"). 

In short, people's values and beliefs evolved overtime to reflect on the marginal changes on the course of actions undertaken which compounded to manifest on such progress.

Saturday, March 09, 2013

Quote of the Day: Differentiating Reality from Perception of Reality: Principle versus Opinion

While it’s true that everyone perceives reality differently, reality could care less about our perceptions.  Reality does not change to adapt to our viewpoints; reality is what is.  Reality is fact.  Reality is truth.

Reality, however, is not always a known, which is where perception of reality comes in.  While reality is a fixed factor in the equation of life, perception of reality is a variable.

This is why it is so important to learn to differentiate between a principle and an opinion.  The most significant aspect of a principle is that it can neither be created nor altered.  Thus, a principle is the essence of reality.  It is what it is, and it’s up to us to discover it.

The problem arises when people refuse to accept the reality that principles can only be discovered, and instead choose to believe they can create their own principles.  Which means they believe they can create their own reality, and that’s a belief that can lead to disastrous consequences.
This is from author, entrepreneur and motivational speaker Robert Ringer at the EarlytoRise.com, discussing the apriorism of human action

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Quote of the Day: The Ethics of Minimum Wage

The biggest problem I have with the standard analysis of the minimum wage–on either side of the ideological divide–is that it shows a certain lack of imagination. It presumes that market forces work only on quantity and price. So that when legislation artificially raises price, the debate is over the impact on quantity–how many jobs will be lost (or gained if you’re on the other side.)

But price and quantity are not the only way market forces work. And they are certainly not the only attributes of a job. There is how hard you have to work, how many breaks you get, how much training or mentoring or kindness. What amenities are in the workplace–snack bar, vending machine, nicely decorated walls and so on. When the government requires that wages be higher than what they would otherwise be, that creates an increase in the number of people who would like to work and reduces the number of opportunities available.

Ironically, the minimum wage creates a reserve army of the unemployed. That in turn allows employers to be less thoughtful, helpful, and kind. It destroys the civilizing effect of competition by muting it. That encourages exploitation. It reduces the cost to employers of racism or cruelty. Before the increase, being obnoxious or racist made it much harder to find employees. A minimum wage makes it easier to indulge in bad behavior. The costs are lower. Before the minimum wage, a cruel, selfish employer might have had to mentor his employees or train them or be nice to them despite his nature. Now he won’t have to. He can still get workers to work for him. Even more cruelly, the minimum wage encourages workers to exploit themselves.
This is from Standard University research fellow, author and blogger Russ Roberts at the Café Hayek.

Mr. Roberts captures the largely unseen human dimension in the impact, not just of minimum wages, but of the stereotyped debate on myriad regulations: the excessive focus on price and quantity via mathematical formalism or "scientism" which plagues mainstream analysis.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Global Financial Market Boom: Will This Time Be Different?

Global stock markets continue to sizzle.

The US stock markets, which accounts for as the largest in the world based on market capitalization[1], and the de facto leader of global equity markets have broken into 5-years highs and is less than 3% in nominal terms and about 14% away in inflation adjusted terms from the ALL time highs reached in October of 1997[2].
clip_image002

The chart above reveals of the blistering run by the US S&P (SPX).

More than that, the above shows how tightly correlated stock markets have been. Figures may differ on statistical correlation, but the trend undulations of the above benchmarks of the European Stox 50 (STOX 50) Asia-ex-Japan (P2DOW) and the Philippine Phisix (PSE), exhibits of essentially similar trends. Specifically, since the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve unveiled back-to-back the Long Term Refinancing Operation[3] (December 2011) and Operation Twist[4] (September 2011), these benchmarks traversed on a generally similar route with nearly the same movements.

The point is although there may be significant variances in the degree of returns, any interpretation of the local market as operating in an independent path (decoupling) would be patently misguided. The global inflationary boom, incited by policies of central banks of major economies has been entwined or tightly linked with domestic forces.

In other words, the speculative orgy on asset prices abroad, not limited to equities as discussed last week[5], has equally been influencing regional, as well as, the domestic version of a brewing mania. In the case of the Philippines, booming stocks, bonds and Peso and in the real economy, the inflating property-shopping mall bubble.

This is why I am inclined to think that in the current episode of the frenetic global yield chasing, the Phisix may be prone to a blow-off melt-up phase. This is strictly in the condition that the Risk ON-low interest environment prevails throughout the year.

A melt up phase means that the 10k Phisix may be reached sooner than later. The negative aspect is that such melt up phase would be accompanied by an acceleration of the systemic bubble in the real economy.

Furthermore, given the tight correlation of world markets, this implies that the Phisix is sensitive to contagion risks that may be transmitted via downside volatilities from anywhere around the world.

And given that bubbles are being nurtured almost everywhere we can’t discount that the source of the next crisis may arise from the region or from the country itself.

And like individuals every economy is distinct. Thus the elasticity or the tolerance level for economic imbalances will be dissimilar. No one can really say where the proverbial pin will be and when it will strike. Nonetheless for now we should simply take advantage of the boom while it lasts, but at the same time keeping vigil over the risks of a reversal.

And another thing, even the big guys appear to be jumping into the “great rotation” theme such as DoubleLine Capital LP, Loomis Sayles & Co and PIMCO[6] where investors now are seeing equities as providing returns than bonds thus the shift.

Will This Time Be Different?

Many, if not, the consensus here and abroad, have been seduced by the “outcome bias”. They see rising prices, popular media touting economic “upswing” supposedly based on sound economic growth and peer pressure as having reinforced their beliefs that “THIS TIME IS DIFFERENT”. They forget that these four words are loaded, and signify as the four dangerous words of investing[7] according to the late legendary investor Sir John Templeton

Yet how much of the domestic growth have emanated from natural market forces? How much have been influenced by monetary factors? No one can say. Everyone seems to assume that a debt-driven present oriented consumption economy can last forever.

I would add that on my radar screen list of 83 international bourses, only 10 are in the red. This suggests that a vast majority of equity benchmarks have been buoyed by a collective and collaborative policy of credit easing. 

Yet the gains of 2013 have not been inconsequential. I would estimate that the average returns in 2013 for those in the upside, in the range 4-5% year-to-date.

If stock markets have been a depiction of economic growth, then why the need for collective and collaborative easing from central banks?

What is the relevance of economic performance with stock market growth?

clip_image003

I have used Venezuela’s 2012 mind boggling 300% stock market returns[8] as an example, now I refer to Greece

Since the advent of 2013, Greece has been one of the outstanding performers, where the Athens Index has been up 12.56% as of Friday’s close. Such fantastic returns add to the extraordinary gains at the close of 2012, where the Greece benchmark returned at almost the same level of the Phisix, up 32.47% and 32.95% respectively.

But look at the economy of Greece. Based on mainstream statistics, the stock market and the economy has been starkly moving in the opposite direction; a parallel universe.

And we are not talking here of a one-off event but 4-year intensifying slump versus a 7 month rally in the Greek Athens index.

If stock markets theoretically should represent future earnings stream, then the rally of the 7 month rally should highlight a meaningful of recovery. Yet even from a statistical viewpoint, there seems hardly any sign of this. Why? 

clip_image004

So what also explains the need for the escalating central bank interventions, whom have cumulatively and synchronically been intensifying expansion of their balance sheet expansions, if indeed economies have been vigorously growing?

Yet how much real economic growth have such policies accomplished? The Zero Hedge[9] estimates that over the past 5 years where central bank assets grew by 17% annualized, an equivalent of only 1% of GDP growth had been attained over the same period.

Are we thus seeing diminishing returns which could be why central banks have become more aggressive?

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has likewise been engaged in the same actions but at a much reduced scale[10] than her developed economy peers. In developed and emerging Asia, the BSP had been the most aggressive in cutting interest rates in 2012.

The general idea promoted by the consensus has been that all these actions would have immaterial impact or backlash to the economy. But what of the future?

Yet ironically, central banks have begun to signal a pushback from what seems as growing overdependence on them and from potentially becoming the scapegoat of politicians.

Proof?

From Bloomberg[11], (bold mine)
The central bankers who saved the world economy are now being told they risk hurting it.

Even as the International Monetary Fund cuts its global growth outlook, a flood of stimulus is running into criticism at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos. Among the concerns: so-called quantitative easing is fanning complacency among governments and households, fueling the risk of a race to devalue currencies and leading to asset bubbles.

Central banks can buy time, but they cannot fix issues long-term,” former Bundesbank President Axel Weber, now chairman of UBS AG, said in the Swiss ski resort yesterday. “There’s a perception that they are the only game in town.”
Also, central bankers have been signaling anxiety from any potential repercussions from their current actions.

The central bank of central bankers, the Bank for International Settlements headed by Jaime Caruana recently said in a TV interview that “world was reaching the point where the damage from central banks' printing money could outweigh the benefits”[12] 

He further beckoned that politicians should deal with the real economic reforms "There is always a risk of overburdening central banks. There is perhaps excessive pressure when we discuss about growth; probably the attention should be focusing on productivity, competitiveness, labour market participation. There is a bit too much focus on central banks”.

And echoing former Bundesbank Axel Weber in the above, the role of central banks has supposedly been to provide window for addressing real issues, "Central bank measures such as cutting interest rates could only buy time for governments to take action on structural economic reform”.

Instead, the current policies have been incentivizing moral hazard “sometimes low rates provide incentives that time is not used so wisely", which essentially means that politicians have used central bankers to kick the can down the road.

Does all of the above serve as evidence of sound economic growth? What happens if central bankers decide to put meat on their words?

Or have people become deeply addicted to the inflationism as predicted by the Austrian school of economics?

As the great Professor Ludwig von Mises warned[13],
Credit expansion cannot increase the supply of real goods. It merely brings about a rearrangement. It diverts capital investment away from the course prescribed by the state of economic wealth and market conditions. It causes production to pursue paths which it would not follow unless the economy were to acquire an increase in material goods. As a result, the upswing lacks a solid base. It is not real prosperity. It is illusory prosperity. It did not develop from an increase in economic wealth. Rather, it arose because the credit expansion created the illusion of such an increase. Sooner or later it must become apparent that this economic situation is built on sand.
While I have little doubts that central banks will continue to pursue current policies despite subtle agitations against politicians, which should push the markets higher in 2013, it may not be central banks at all who will take the proverbial punchbowl away, but economic imbalances brought about by today’s deepening speculative mania.

The Risks from Thailand’s Credit Bubble

I have posted yesterday on my blog[14] what I sense as a vulnerable spot in Thailand’s economy: credit growth has been expanding far beyond the economy’s capacity to pay. 

Thai’s average credit growth from the private sector has been at 7.94% and from the government at 15% (based on external debt) compared to Thai’s statistical economic growth average at 3.6%. Loan growth from both sectors has recently been accelerating.

Importantly, while Thai’s external debt to GDP ratio remains far below the 1997 levels, their increasing reliance on short term debt now accounts for about 54% of total external debt which has virtually surpassed the 1997 levels at 45%!

And one of the symptoms from ‘economic overheating’ has been a surge in minimum wages—89% in 2012!

Now my question is with all the credit boom, where has the money been flowing into? One could be in the stock market, the Stock Exchange of Thailand beat the Phisix by a narrow margin 35.76% and 32.96% respectively. Next is could be a property bubble.

Thai’s financial assets and the economy has not only been bolstered by domestic credit but by portfolio flows into bonds and equities, as well as, burgeoning Foreign Direct Investments all of which has, so far, managed to offset their deficits in international trade balance data.

This only reveals that Thai’s economy seems highly susceptible to a sharp upside pendulum swing on interest rates that can be triggered by a “sudden stop”[15] in capital flows (most likely from regional or global contagion) or from an intrinsic implosion.

And it is important to note that measuring debt levels relative to statistical GDP can misinform analysts.

Most of the systemic debt accrued from both the private ‘formal’ sector and the government can be accurately measured from the outstanding issuance on the bond markets and from loans by the banking system.

On the other hand, GDP, which are accounting constructs based on estimates, can be bolstered by pumping up the system with money which raises relative price levels (thus economic growth), and from government expenditures.

In short a credit boom can mask a debt problem.

So when a bust arrives, the numerator which is fixed— as debts are based on contracts unless restructured or defaulted upon—will rapidly outweigh the shrinking denominator (GDP), which will initially adjust to reflect on the drop in the economic activities.

The result will be a higher level of debt to GDP ratio as the economy retrenches. This is likely to be further exacerbated by bailouts and other interventions to “save” the economy or when private debt will be transferred to the government.

Deceptive Economic Growth Statistics

Speaking of statistical duplicity, there are three ways to arrive at the GDP[16]: expenditure, income and production. The popularly used is the expenditure approach[17] popularly seen via the equation: 
GDP (Y) = Consumption (C) + Investment (I) + Government Spending (G) and Net Exports (X-M)
As shown above, the equation has a bias for Government Spending which it sees as positive for the economy, regardless of how government spends the money, hence the plus operation (+) and the bias of exports over imports (X-M) which has been used by mercantilists as an excuse to support the “balance of trade” fallacy (the latter I won’t be dealing here)

So in dealing with the first premise, we find it common for mainstream experts to proffer that government helps the economy even if they just build pyramids or dig up holes and fill them.

Such has been embodied by the work of John Maynard Keynes, who prescribed[18],
If the Treasury were to fill old bottles with banknotes, bury them at suitable depths in disused coalmines which are then filled up to the surface with town rubbish, and leave it to private enterprise on well-tried principles of laissez-faire to dig the notes up again (the right to do so being obtained, of course, by tendering for leases of the note-bearing territory), there need be no more unemployment and, with the help of the repercussions, the real income of the community, and its capital wealth also, would probably become a good deal greater than it actually is. It would, indeed, be more sensible to build houses and the like; but if there are political and practical difficulties in the way of this, the above would be better than nothing.
So if the government puts $1,000 for people to just dig and fill, from a macro accounting identity, the economy would be equally boosted by $1,000, or $1,000 (Y)= 0 (C) + 0 (I) + $1,000 (G) + 0 (X-M)

This is exactly why the GDP accounting tautology or as a statistical measure for economic growth misleads; statistical abstractions substitutes for economic reasoning, when the real economy is about purposeful human action as represented by the ever dynamic activities in pursuit of survival and progress, through production or provision of services channeled through voluntary exchange with the consumers.

Professor of economics and blogger at the Library of Economics and Liberty Garett Jones recently dealt with the inconsistencies of Government spending as a feature of economic growth[19],
Because GDP counts government salaries as "government expenditures" as soon as the government hires a person.  But the "consumption" and "investment" parts of GDP only count genuine purchases by the private sector
So if a private sector product spends years in the incubator, burning through thousands of person-hours of work and millions of dollars of salary--but never sees the light of day--then the product never shows up in GDP.  But if the government had hired those same workers who worked just as long on a similarly fruitless project, their labor would give a big boost to GDP.

Government hiring creates GDP by definition.  Private hiring only creates GDP if the worker actually creates a product. 

I’d further add that government spending, which represents coercive transfers from productive sectors of society, hardly accounts for value added or productivity growth to the real economy.
For instance, imposing regulations on commerce will stymie business activities, but such opportunity losses will not be accounted for in the said growth statistics. Instead, what will be added will be the spending done by the government in the hiring of people and other costs attendant to or associated with the implementation of such business restrictive regulations.

In short, the opportunity costs, as well as the negative feedback mechanism from interventions (e.g. future higher unemployment or taxes) will hardly be reflected on growth statistics.

Obsessing over growth statistics is a folly, even the principal architect of the GDP, Simon Kuznets, warned against its use to measure welfare[20], in 1934 he wrote[21]
The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measurement of national income.
In 1962 Mr, Kuznets reiterated the same point but emphasized on the quality rather than the quantity of growth[22].
Distinctions must be kept in mind between quantity and quality of growth, between its costs and return, and between the short and the long term. Goals for more growth should specify more growth of what and for what.
In addition, official economic statistics are not only inaccurate they can be manipulated with to suit political ends[23]. They do in in both directions where statistics can be boosted for electoral purposes or undermined as means to supplicate for foreign aid.

In short, statistics can be made to lie. The case of Argentina in 2011 has been notorious. Officials persecuted private sector economists for not kowtowing to official numbers in measuring consumer price inflation. Some speculated that the design for such actions has been to finagle Argentina’s bondholders[24]. In other words, Argentina’s government not only manipulated economics, but censored and harassed the economics profession, aside from shaking down both the bond holders and their citizens.

The bottom line is that while statistics may assist in providing empirical evidence, they must be used with caution. Statistics should not be used to derive for causation and theory, instead economics which is an a priori science, should serve as groundwork for sound analysis.

Importantly we should realize what economics is truly about, as the late Professor Austrian economics Percy L. Greaves, Jr eloquently wrote[25],
Economics is not a dry subject. It is not a dismal subject. It is not about statistics. It is about human life. It is about the ideas that motivate human beings. It is about how men act from birth until death. It is about the most important and interesting drama of all — human action.




[2] Bespoke Invest DJIA Highs Actual and Inflation Adjusted, January 25, 2013

[3] Wikipedia.org Long term refinancing operation, European Central Bank

[4] Wikipedia.org Operation Twist History of Federal Open Market Committee actions



[7] Bob Parkman Consider these 'words of wisdom' about investing Sirjohntempleton.org September 20, 2006






[13] Ludwig von Mises, Cyclical Changes in Business Conditions, February 13, 2012 Mises.org

[14] See Thailand’s Credit Bubble, January 26, 2013




[18] Wikipedia.org Book III, The Propensity to Consume The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

[19] Garett Jones, Government Hiring: Raising GDP by Definition Econolog January 25, 2013


[21] Key quotes Beyond GDP

[22] Ibid

[23] Morten Jerven Interview with Russ Roberts Jerven on Measuring African Poverty and Progress Econtalk.org, January 7, 2013


[25] Percy L. Greaves, Jr. What Is Economics? August 3, 2011 Mises.org