upmicro.com - searching for 100 professionals who want to build economics for youth

latest news on the death of macroeconomics is coming but timing youth's escape is absolutely critical 1
 please tell us quotes that explkan how economcs became the centre of 2010s most exciting decadeKeynes: increasingly only economics rules the worldPresident Obama: 16 April 2010: We know that without enforceable, common sense rules to check abuse and protect families, markets are not truly free - FC ning   
We believe it is every hi-trust economist's and professional's duty to help network 2010s youth most exciting decade. 60 of us will be debating this for 2 hours in The Economist's Boardroom London on Nov16 as a tribute to Unacknowledged Giant, and dad Norman Macrae. If you think you need to be there, please contact chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk washington DC tel (usa=1) 301 881 1655 skype isabellawm family foundations

The unacknowledged giant

The unacknowledged giantAdd to Playlist

 

 Our mentor Norman Macrae 1 2 3  4 passed in summer 2010.

In his memory, Norman Macrae Foundation likes to offer small amounts eg up to $4000 so citizens in different palces can have a party to discuss UPMicro's search for hi-trust professionals  - cases- youth's global assembly party in Glasgow has resulted in the launch of 2 Up Micro journals .. .more examples DC ; your idea welcomed at info@worldcitizen.tv

About UPMicro.com- we believe that economics is designed to benefit specific groups of people; for 2010s to be the most exciting decade, we would like that group to be youth worldwide united by the greatest human race to end poverty and any other threats to sustainability (exponentials rising) of all communities. ideas on that emerge from bookclubs of 1000s of readers at eg http://worldcitizen.tv/
Our Microeconomics origin tracks Scottish schools of Adam Smith and James Wilson, French schools of entrepreneurs, Indian continent schools from Gandhi to today's sustainability system design (eg Nobel Laureate Social Business Systems) world heroines and heros in Bangladesh. We believe we are supported by system design clues of mathemticians like Einstein and Von Neumann.
British Century 1775-1875American-Atlantic Century 1875-1975

Asia-Pacific Century 1975-2075 -out of India 1 Bangladesh 1 2 China Japan 1

Norman Macrae, Pacific Century 1975-2075, The Economist 4 January 1975
NYRM: To understand where The Economist is coming from, it helps to look at its history, which began with a Scottish hatmaker’s exasperation with British Corn Laws. James Wilson felt government tariffs on imported grain and crops killed trade, and he wrote a pamphlet about it. But he still wasn’t satisfied and, in 1843, started The Economist. Its mission was to repeal the Corn Laws in particular and promote free trade in general through what it called “a severe contest between intelligence, which presses forward, and an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing our progress.” The Anti-Corn-Law League helped fund the struggling publication, a newspaper at its start. Three years later, the Corn Laws were repealed, but The Economist, a bastion of free trade, continued to publish...“Opinion is woven into the magazine,” says Clive Crook. This approach is, perhaps, best summed by Norman Macrae, a senior editor at The Economist a few decades back, who Crook says would tell his colleagues, “It’s not a ‘newspaper,’ it’s a ‘viewspaper.’” If paradox is where economics and innovation interface, Norman's most delicious view: a calling to economists began Xmas Day 1976 with a series on Entrepreneurial Revolution http://erworld.tv - this announced a search for a new capitalism- Norman had just spotted that the West's 3rd Quarter of the 20th C (drowning in mass media's trivia and big gov) had killed off all the hi-trust assumptions needed to value Adam Smith's free market constructs.  
 http://www.normanmacrae.com/netfuture.html At it is simplest all of our futures connected by a networked world will be spun by one of 2 opposite economics systems compounding opposite consequences. Take a look and see if you believe UpMicro is the one you would want communities around you and your future generations. chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk  skype isabellawm : family foundations, Washington DC region (1) 301 881 1655
  

UP Micro

DOWN Macro

 64trilliondollarquestions5.jpg

Upmicro maps how to design value multiplying exchanges which are 10-win, or when networks connect pairs of systems 100-win. It models expoentials - to hep leder know what future they are spinning up (tensely purposeful but not conflicted) or down (multiplying conflicts with true purspoe). Micro designs are always very simple to map but very contextually detailed. The accounting professionals we are looking to join us need to agree that global accounting has made stupendous 2 errors on goodwill; it adds things up insted of multiplying - eg andersen had billions of business value but destoyed its trusr with society to zero value; consequence it becme worth billions*0=0 not what andersen's managers assumed billions+0=billions; also global accountants still impose an industrial valuation mindset- machines can be booked in as investments whereas people are always costs to cut. When these 2 details are compounded quarter after quarter into one single spredseeted number- people forget wht the number represents. In this way Global accountnts have destroyed at least 100 multibillion corporations in 2000s by rewarding managers to chase numbers that were not the exponential truth. This was foreseen as  crisis in the year 2000 book Unseen Wealth.

How could any common sense person call what wall street macroeconomics did with subprime housing investments "economical". In fact, my dad's last article suggests that it was so costly that unless we learn the right microeconomic lessons we will have chained a generation of US youth to depression and debt. I find the following books extremely scary as they explain how mnay of orwell's big brothers re already chaining us all with macroeconomics (which as early as 1984 dad was writing up at his desk at The Economist as mostly disgraceful political chicanery)

It takes a pillage, Naomi Prins - the story of Goldmn Scahs

Too Big to  Save by Robert Pozen

Crisis by Design by JOhn Wolfe  

Economics for youth & future

Economics for old & past

Economics for the small and growing

Economics for the big and decaying

Economics for compounding zero conflicts : win-win-wins

Economics compounding conflicts so that one most powerful groups extracts from all others every cycle : lose-lose-lose

Economics for investing in life critical needs of babies, families, communities

Economics that cannot see such small systems as children or individuals’ productive learning curves

Economics for discovering the creativity born inside every person and education that empower all people to create jobs

Economics where most people never discover their greatest creative flows and are failed by over-standardised examinations

Economics where media heroises those who achieve the greatest improvements in the human lot

Media that images over reality and which heroises players of spectator sports

 Whole truth celebrting the most purposeful organisations and networks humans can design Inconvenient truth thst traps more and more people in organsations that are not measured in a grounded way to live unique purpose, other than that of rewarding a few speculators at everyone else's increasing cost 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 

Sunday, September 5, 2010

brainstorm: can the young and the micro plan escape routes as the old and the macro kill off their economies
Update 1 - our updates com[prise 2 sections - some of the ltst gossip around world's future capitals connectung 2000 bookclub of dr yunus' invittion to 2010s most exciting decade and an article on future conflicts to circumnavigate - eg below from The Atlantic 

To Colin, Glasgow Caledonian Yunus Centre & Yunus Friends
1 fantastic that your oct 19 event with Work Foundation's Will Hutton in London is happening; I don't know my diary yet (have been keeping october for a meeting in dhaka!)
2 can I introduce you again to jonathan- he connects 3000 entrepreneurs across the world in 50 office space that started out of london; www.the-hub.net   (CNN the oficeless generation); I think it would be good if someone well connected from the hub was at your event; there are cities like Glasgow & Paris where their future as a yunus city is unstoppable; there are next cities where the hub can help connect momentum  (in New York around Monica Yunus; in whichever Spanish city becomes the 2010s SB fusion of all the work of yunus and queen sofia, and likely the hub of post-euro spanish economics) ;
 I am working on how does one have  microeconomics celebration party of dad in brussels since dad was the only journalist to know the founders of the EU from the get-go in Messina and back in 1976 Romano Prodi was the Italian translator of Entrepreneurial Revolution (still the survey that did more than any other to brand the microeconomics word entrepreneur as economics most popular word) 
 http://erworld.tv We believe it is every hi-trust economist's and professional's duty to help network 2010s youth most exciting decade. 60 of us will be debating this for 2 hours in The Economist's Boardroom London on Nov16 as a tribute to Unacknowledged Giant, and dad Norman Macrae. If you think you need to be there,

The unacknowledged giant

The unacknowledged giantAdd to Playlist
I think I am correct in saying dr yunus and jonathan are in the middle of deep collaboration negotiations; jonathan is my main london contact point for people who want before or after discussions of how dads party at The Economist changes conventional mindsets of economics out of London's media- doubtless I will need to ramp up shareholder activism of The Economist before it helps 2010s youth s the social action newspaper of adam smith tht it was founded to be ;
back in 2005 we convened an open space at the  hub asking people to join in a 7 year collaboration plan to reform media until it covered economics sustainably; much of the economy of Europe depends on whether ultimately we free the way the  BBC covers economics and business news analysis from government; in anyone's list of Europen catalysts that could make 2010s most exiting tye BBC most be in the top 5; I hope that sooner than later paul rose bbc  microenergy correspondent (connecting the energy awards http://www.ashdenawards.org  of prince charles and lord sainsbury's oldest daughter) and sally magnusson can meet; and we can start to plot which other broadcster gets it; I have to find exactly the right time in the momentum of such things to ask for help from heavyweights like baroness sarah hogg, and andrew neil ); one of jonathan's fellows at the hub is jon snow who certainly was on the right side when he used to cover gordon brown's african commission- out of johannesburg lesley is the social busienss corepondent jontahan and I would stake our connections on around that continent; so these dots have an optimists way of connecting pursposeful economics if we have detailed enough maps being interpersonally shared to change economics from mcro down to http://upmicro.com  
chris
Hub fellows in London include
 

Tim Smit  founder Eden Project

John Bird founder Big Issue

Alain de Botton author

Jon Snow  Channel 4 ,

Peter Head director ARUP

Vandana Shiva physicist



Help youth celebrate the death of macroeconomics

 hub just-in-time maps of the escape routes for the young and the micro, while the old and the macro kill off each other's economies

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2010/09/is-the-us-economy-so-bad-it-cant-get-much-worse/62505/

 

It's been a brutal summer for the economy. The housing sector, like a balloon batted in the air one last time by the government credit, resumed its inevitable fall. Economic growth slowed to a lead-footed 1.6 percent, and job growth is even more anemic. Meanwhile, consumers are cranky, the trade gap is gaping.



More from TheAtlantic.com:



Mapping Troubled Housing Markets

Most signs point to a slow and steady recovery, but what if the pessimists are right, again? What if the United States isn't in the slow-lane to recovery, but rather on the precipice of another decline -- a double dip?

[

To see where this re-recession might begin, my colleague Dan Indiviglio and I imagined five financial earthquakes, each with a single epicenter: housing, consumers, toxic assets, Europe, and the debt. The following five scenarios are listed in order of likelihood.

1. Housing's Mini-Bubble Pops

Perhaps nothing poses as a big of a concern to the U.S. economy as its housing market. It's unclear how the government's efforts to stabilize the market through a buyer credit, ultra-low mortgage rates, and mortgage modification programs will pan out. Did it just create another mini-bubble that's beginning to pop now that the support has been withdrawn?

[See Why the Housing-Market Recession Isn't Over]

Here's the scenario. Weak home sales and continuing foreclosures result in climbing real estate inventory. This has two effects. First, it makes new homes even less attractive which further reduces construction jobs. Second, it puts downward pressure on home prices, which makes it harder for struggling homeowners to sell their home to avoid foreclosure and also keeps strategic default rates high, exacerbating the problem. Lower home values encourage Americans to save more and spend less, since their wealth is effectively reduced. The Dow drops and credit markets tighten even further, suffocating private investment just as homeowners bunker down and slash spending. Growth turns negative.

2. You Break the Economy

You, the American consumer, are reloading savings after a debt-fueled decade. But as any general will tell you, when an entire squad reloads at once, it leaves everybody vulnerable. It's the same with the economy.

Here's the scenario. Consumer sentiment continues to fall slowly, and spending turns negative again. Small businesses hold off to replenish their inventories or add new workers. Wages and hours freeze, and unemployment takes a leap toward 10 percent in October. Congress is paralyzed, because it's only weeks away from the mid-terms. The stock market sees business revenue trending flat, joblessness rising and Congress doing nothing, and it sparks a 300-point sell-off. Americans frightful for their savings cut back spending even more the next month, and overall growth turns negative.


3. Toxic Assets Return

If you closely followed the bank bailout, then you know it wasn't originally billed as simply throwing money at the banks. Instead, the Treasury intended to purchase the toxic assets from banks, which were the source of investors' uncertainty concerning bank stability. But the Treasury couldn't figure out a way to do this quickly enough to make it effective. As a result, the banks were largely stuck with these bad assets. We just don't know how bad, yet.

Here's the scenario. The residential real estate market's problems continue. Even once foreclosures begin to decline, we see waves of defaults, as modification program participants re-default at rates of 30% to 50%. Commercial mortgage-backed securities continue to deteriorate, as some businesses struggle with weak consumer demand. Home and commercial real estate values keep declining, and so do the value of the assets that back them. Banks with exposure to these toxic securities see another round of losses, and investors question their stability. The market plummets, credit freezes, and growth turns negative.

4. Europe Falls Apart

Europe seems to have avoided an all-out collapse of confidence in its ability to pay back its debt. But things can change, and fast fast. Indeed, the Greek debt crisis went from ignorable wire stories to front page news in a matter of days.

Here's the scenario. Slow growth in weak Eurozone states like Greece, Spain, and Italy turns negative and spooks investors, who demand higher returns on government debt. Europe's bond rates spike. Countries announce further austerity -- tax increases and spending cuts -- which strangles our biggest export market. The EU central bank responds by announcing a plan to write down troubled debt, which dings some Americans banks.

In a flight to quality debt, the dollar appreciates. This hurts our exports even more. As the trade deficit gapes open and manufacturing's good run dead ends, the stock market plummets, taking household wealth down with it. Families looking to restore balance sheets cut back on spending, and the American producer loses the American consumer and the European buyer. Growth turns negative.

5. Debt Finally Catches Up to Us

Interest rates on U.S. debt are low today for one big reason. Investors trust the United States, at least more than they trust other countries. If the people giving us money suddenly have as little faith in America as Americans, that could change, and quickly.

Here's the scenario. The IMF recently said the United States has a 25 percent chance of seeing dramatically higher interest rates in the near future. But the bond market can strike without warning, as it did in Europe earlier this year. If uncertainty with our political process gets reflected in our interest rate, we'll have a harder time affording debt, 55% of which has to be rolled over in the next three years. Pension and mutual funds with government debt would be written down, causing Americans to save even more of their paychecks. We'd be left with two bad choices: tax cuts to juice consumption or tax hikes to please our lenders. But at that point, it would be too late to avoid a double dip.

The Atlantic's external correspondents
Daniel AkstJournalist, novelistAndrew CohenLegal analystMickey EdwardsFormer congressmanGarrett EppsLaw professor and journalist
Richard FloridaCreativity expertAlex GibneyDocumentary filmmakerWilliam HaseltineScientist, entrepreneurBen W. Heineman Jr.Policy expert
Philip K. HowardLawyer, civic leaderHua HsuWriter on music and cultureWendy KaminerLawyer, civil libertarianZachary KarabellExpert on economic trends
Ed KochFormer mayor, film buffDamien MaChina analystLisa MargonelliEnergy & environment writerPeter OsnosJournalist, publisher
Patrick OttenhoffMapmakerRichard A. PosnerFederal appeals court judgeAlyssa RosenbergWriter, editor, pop culture geekCristine RussellScience and health writer
Harry ShearerActor, director, musicianEllen Ruppel ShellScience journalistDavid ShenkScience & culture writerErik TarloffNovelist, screenwriter
Edward TennerCulture-and-tech historianBrian TillWriter on foreign policyAbraham VergheseAuthor and physicianLane WallacePilot, entrepreneur, writer
James WarrenPolitical analystGraeme WoodWriter and traveler 

9:01 am edt 

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Zasheem -I need to know more pervasively what his goals and styles are both as they impact him and yunus- for example being italian would he find it easy to get in touch with romano prodi;  fellow entrepreneutrial revolutionary on dads journey since 1976; someone who could be able to work out which italian university would most love to connect with glasgow as the standard sustainability-exponentials economics course evolves from the history of adam smith and the first 100 years of The Economist of scot James Wilson (in those days the most perfect statisticians log a leading country has ever had) 


Prodi is also someone who might still help us dialogue SB into the EU whose macroeconomic crises now need the best of microeconomic solving; after all next year queen sofia is inviting europe and the world to the microecreditsummit and last microeconomics conference in time to prevent the worst of collapsing euro fall outs; we could be making issue 2 or 3 of Journal of Social Business a special call for papers on that crisis right now - but it depends how much Anton wants to put glasgow university up on yunus  partnership maps ( scotland as europe's centre of aisan goodwill multiplying business models) of such a process; eqully does he want to help georgetown and paris lead in designing social bsuess friendly stockmarkets


chris http://upmicro.com http://asiapacific.cc

Journal of Social Business at Linkedin; at Ning 


Bilderberg Conference 1999 - 3-6 June - Sintra, Portugal

Chair of the Commission Romano Prodi was a Steering Committee Member of the ...... Anton Muscatelli, economics professor at the University of Glasgow said: ...
www.bilderberg.org/1999.htm - Cached - Similar
Should I ask  Andrew Neil if he will let us repring this lecture 2005
Europe & China - The Fatal Conceit extracts:

Of all the great insights that Friedrich August

von Hayek bequeathed to us in his work, one

in particular shines out today.

For its truth has never been more evident, its

application never more universal.

It is that running through the ideological and

political divisions of human history are two

distinct and different ways of looking at the

world.

Between them is a deep and irreconcilable

divide.

One Hayek called constructivist rationalism.

The other he called evolutionary rationalism.

Not phrases to trip off the tongue, to be sure.

However, Hayek spent a lifetime arguing that

constructivist rationalism is economically and

philosophically flawed because it assumes that

“all social institutions are, or ought to be, the

product of deliberate design”.

Hayek later famously called this the Fatal

Conceit.

Those who follow this route believe they have

it within their power to build, organise and

mould society so that it conforms to their

concept of what is just and efficient.

But it leads, he argued, to economic decline,

poverty, social regression and, in extremis,

famine, starvation and the collapse of

civilization.

Historic examples of this mindset, said Hayek,

included Sparta, the French Revolution,

Communism in general and the Soviet Union in

particular, Fascism, Nazi Germany – indeed all

the tyrannies that blighted the 20th century.

As Hayek famously put it, it is the Road to

Serfdom.

Hayek favoured “evolutionary rationalism”.

It understands that there “exists orderly

structures which are the product of the actions

of many men [and women] but are not the

result of human design”.

Hayek believed this the right approach because

it is compatible with the teachings of economic

science and goes with the grain of human

nature; for these reasons, he thought, it leads

to prosperity, progress and the flourishing of

humanity.

Evolutionary rationalists such as Hayek argued

that the liberal market economy, for all its

apparent duplication, unfairness, inequalities

and instability leads to wealthier, freer and

fairer societies than all the great plans of

constructivist rationalism.

Indeed, he argued, it was the only way to run

and sustain a successful advanced economy, a

matter of some relevance, we shall see, as

Europe struggles to cope with the rise of Asia.

Though Hayek clearly preferred evolution and

the market to revolution and central planning,

he was not a small-c conservative, as he made

clear in the postscript to The Constitution of

Liberty.
Rather, Hayek was a liberal in the

classical, British sense of that word. He took to

calling himself an “Old Whig”, a term which

understandably his followers are not overly

keen to use today.

But Hayek had no truck with those who sought

to preserve the status quo, existing hierarchies

or to block change.

He supported the market for the very reason

that it is disruptive; he relished Schumpeter’s

“creative destruction”. Progress occurred when

an unpredictable market was allowed to

proceed unimpeded; progress was halted when

politicians and planners pretended to know the

future and to mould society and the economy

accordingly.

Hayek’s work is part of a long and illustrious

tradition which includes the great philosophers

of the 18
th century Scottish Enlightenment –

David Hume, Adam Smith and Adam Ferguson.

His great achievement was to adapt this

tradition to the circumstances of the late 20th

century and beyond.


The problem with the Cartesian view when

applied to political organization and economics,

said to Hayek, is that it gives the green light to

unlimited, hubristic social engineering.

Hayek thought that Cartesians ignored the

great insight of the Austrian school of

economics, whose leading lights included Carl

Menger and Ludwig von Mises, as well as

Hayek: that much information is simply not

knowable in advance and can only emerge

through an evolutionary and competitive

market process.

It was the great Norman Macrae, deputy editor

of
The Economist during the decade I spent

there, who once explained to me that if, 20 or

30 years ago, politicians, pundits, academics,

experts and bureacrats had been asked what

sort of jobs would fill
today’s newspaper

recruitment pages, they would all have been

hopelessly wrong.

Why? Because we have no accurate idea of

what technological innovations will emerge

over the next two to three decades or their

implications for society and economy – and

therefore for employment.

 

Nobody accurately predicted, for example, the

rise of the internet 20 years ago, which only

underlines the futility of trying to pick winners.

It is a lesson many politicians seem

determined not to learn. But the market is too

unpredictable to be double-guessed, as the

French learnt at great cost with their ill-fated

Minitel, which merely delayed the adoption of

the internet in France.

The market, Hayek taught us, is a “process of

discovery”; it does not exist simply to allocate

existing resources, though it is the most

efficient mechanism for doing so.

The “right” price for a product doesn’t exist in

any objective way, argued Hayek. Prices

emerge from supply and demand, reflecting a

myriad of ever-changing variables that can

never be known to a central planner.

Only a decentralised society with property

rights, the rule of law and a competitive

market economy can compute this information.

The market, said Hayek, is the only institution

capable of co-ordinating the actions of millions

of human beings in a way which leads to

progress and prosperity, rather than chaos or

stagnation.

 

Supporters of Hayek are indebted to him

because he made it plain that planning and

economic controls cannot hope to outsmart the

combined wisdom of the market - whether

grocery market or stock market - and the

myriad of free, voluntary decisions that it daily

represents – the democratic vote of millions of

wallets.

It has become fashionable to argue that the

past 20 years have seen something of a

political consensus congeal around the

Hayekian worldview. But Hayek would not

recognize his apparent triumph.

The intellectual battle between collectivist

central direction and the decentralized market

economy has not ended with the collapse of

the Soviet Union.

Today, of course, everybody -- apart from the

new Marxists of the radical environmental and

anti-globalization movements -- broadly

accepts that societies should be largely market

economies.

But if Hayek were alive today, he would be

deeply concerned at the way the major

European economies, including Great Britain,

have succumbed to the allure of constructivist

rationalism, with its concomitant inexorable

rise in the size and power of the state.

Hayek took much comfort from the manner in

which Europe emerged from the ruins of the

Second World War as an economic

powerhouse, thanks partly to the radical

liberalisation of post-Nazi Germany by Ludwig

Erhard, a disciple of Hayek.

But he would be dismayed how Europe, over

the last few decades, has turned its back on

many of his principles – and paid the inevitable

price in terms of lower growth, fewer jobs and

less wealth creation.

Hayek would consider today’s levels of

European public spending, tax, red tape and

state intervention to be in the red zone that is

dangerous to your economic health.

The rise in the size and scope of government,

Hayek would argue, is a major reason why

Europe finds it so hard to compete – and even

inhibits attempts at reform.

The much-vaunted and British-inspired Lisbon

Agenda of 2000 – with its goal to make Europe

“the most dynamic and competitive

knowledge-based economy in the world” by

2010 – is already an irrelevant joke.

The rise of the European Union, on which so

many of us pinned our hopes for so long, was

rumbled as a grandiose project by Hayek long

before Euroscepticism became fashionable.

To a Hayekian, there are few starker instances

of his Fatal Conceit than the EU’s hubristic

launch of a single currency.

The Euro’s supporters, of course, were

hardcore Cartesians. They devised what they

thought was a purely rational currency,

abstracted from history, experience, culture or

even economics.

Their aim was to get rid of the messy,

seemingly irrational patchwork of different

currencies across Europe, all irritatingly lacking

uniformity and harmony.

To them, it was self-evident that Europe ought

to be a single country; and that countries

should have their own currencies. Any

economic objections to the single currency,

and there were many, were dismissed as

irrelevant.

The argument always was that if there were

enough political will and clever administrators

to push it through, the project would triumph.

Today Hayek would be telling us that the

Cartesian result was wholly predictable: the

creation of an inappropriate, one-size-fits-all

monetary policy in an area which is far

removed from what economists call an optimal

currency area.

It is now widely accepted among economists

that the single currency has helped keep

Germany and Italy in recession or nearrecession

while fuelling an inflationary boom at

the periphery of the Euro zone, in Spain and

Greece.

 

Hayek would not have been surprised: it is the

stiff price you pay for abandoning evolutionary

rationalism.

Yet, as Europe finds itself in a Cartesian bind

which is dragging it down, things are stirring

on the other side of the world, where Hayek’s

principles have found new and powerful

disciples.

China has been gradually moving in a more

Hayekian direction over the past two decades,

after learning at incalculable cost in human

lives and resources, that communism does not

work.

By unleashing its people and adopting at least

some market-based institutions, the Chinese

government – for all its continued attachment

to totalitarianism, a truly horrible human rights

record and worrying military ambitions – has

bowed to reality in one crucial respect.

It has ditched its rigid adherence to

constructivist rationalism.

It has accepted the main insight of Hayek’s

evolutionary rationalism.

That the only way to unleash the potential of

human beings is for the government to focus

on defending and enforcing the key institutions

of the market economy, allowing what Hayek

called a spontaneous order to flourish.

Beijing, of course, still controls its people,

prevent them from reading or watching or

thinking what they like, all of which Hayek

would have abhorred.

But it no longer tries to direct or organize all

economic activity, as it did during the terrible

days of Mao, when tens of millions died. Hayek

would have seen this trend as a necessary if

still far from sufficient step on the road back

from serfdom.

The result of China’s slow and incomplete

embrace of the market has nevertheless been

the greatest and fastest explosion in economic

growth, creativity and human ingenuity in the

history of the world.

China has a long way to go to meet Hayek’s

demanding criteria for a free and prosperous

society.

As we have seen in recent days, this is still a

country whose leaders cannot even bring

themselves to tell their own people about a

massive environmental disaster.

 

Huge economic distortions remain, including a

deeply defective banking system plagued with

bad debts. Inflation is too high, corruption

endemic.

There can be no proper market economy or

individual freedom in the absence of the rule of

law and entrenched property rights, two

democratic necessities that dictatorships

always deny, China’s included.

But at least China is moving in the right

direction, which cannot yet be said of Europe.

And with each step away from Communist

Constructivism to Hayekian capitalism, China

has been richly rewarded. It is now the world’s

number one producer of LCD screens and TVs
6;

it makes 90% of the world’s toys, 70% of its

photocopiers, 50% of its cameras, 40% of its

microwaves, 30% of its handbags and

suitcases and 16% of its clothing.

The pace of growth has defied all predictions:

in 2004, the World Energy Council forecast that

China would consume 1.3bn tonnes of oil

equivalent by 2010; it managed that before

2004 was out and now stands as the world’s

No 2 consumer of energy after the United

States
, hence the current upward pressure on

world energy prices.

China’s rise has been astonishing. But it has

only just begun. China has yet to become a proper market

economy and what capitalist institutions it

enjoys are still largely confined to the booming

South.

China should really be viewed as an amalgam

of five zones
, only three of which are

booming: the Pearl River Delta which borders

Hong Kong, the Yangtze River Delta near

Shanghai and the Bohai Rim.

Think what will happen to the global economy

and the geopolitical balance of power if all of

China continues to move closer to a Hayekian

view of the world, with a growing middle class

and all the trappings of wealth, science and

technology.

Then think back to Old Europe, with its endless

navel-gazing of the irrelevant, tedious

obsessions with farm subsidies and 35-hour

weeks, bloated welfare states which sap the

incentive work and a bureaucratic desire to

regulate all that moves -- and much that

doesn’t.

Even just the partial embrace of Hayek has

allowed China to enjoy the fastest pace of

poverty reduction in its long history – perhaps

in the history of the world – without any help

from well-meaning Western politicians and

their talk of Marshall Plans for the poor,

another contemporary Fatal Conceit.

Numbers in absolute poverty, defined by those

living on less than $1 a day, have collapsed

from 64% to 17% of the Chinese population
10.

With annual growth averaging 8% for the next

20 years
11 -- far from an impossible rate –

China will be ranked among the world’s richer

middle-income countries within the next

decade.

 

Economists tell us that, in dollar terms, the

Chinese economy will overtake Germany by

2009, Japan by 2015 and the US by 2039.

(updte in fact, China becme teh second lrehst economy in 2010)

India's economy, in the grip of its own

Hayekian reforms, could be larger than all but

the US and China within 30 years.

Now I have no idea if these long-term

predictions will come true in that timescale:

trees do not grow to the sky, political turmoil

could easily delay or even derail the Chinese

economic miracle.

Most economists cannot yet agree on what last

year’s growth rate was, never mind the one in

2039. As a colleague once said, economists

only use decimal points in their forecasts to

show they have a sense of humour.

But whatever the scale and pace of growth in

China, India and other economies embracing

market-led reform and growth, one thing is

pretty clear: of the current G6 (America,

Japan, Germany, France, Italy, Great Britain)

only the US and Japan are likely to be among

the six largest economies in US dollar terms by

the middle of this century.

 

So: not a single European economy will be in

the top six. This is a seismic change in the

global economic balance of power and however

you look at it, Europe is the loser.

It is not just a matter of economics. Europe’s

demographics also point to its continuing

demise as a global economic player. From

2010, Europe’s indigenous population will start

to decline as deaths outnumber births; it is

only through immigration
13 that its population

will continue to grow.

But the headline figures conceal a collapse in

the working-age population, which will fall from

67% today to 57% in 2020. By then, one in 10

Europeans will be an octogenarian – today,

only 4%. Our continent is becoming the

retirement home of the world.

With fewer workers, and a soaring number of

pensioners to sustain, and hence a looming

pensions crisis, Europe is on an inexorable

slide which its recent enlargement cannot

reverse; indeed the 10 new member states
suffer from even worse demographics than

the original 15.

The contrast between Europe and China is

most dramatic in cross border capital flows –

especially foreign direct investment flows

(FDI).

We are in the midst of a massive gravitational

pull of plant and capital away from Europe’s

high-cost economies. It is starkly evident in

the latest figures on FDI posted by the OECD

this year.15

These flows are re-writing the economic map

of the world, changing the balance of

economic, political, military and cultural power.

They are a Hayekian revelation in action: the

huge collective vote of thousands of companies

round the world, the one collective vote that

really counts in economics, the voting of

corporate wallets, stampeding to Asia.

 

No European university is in the top 20 world

universities. Europeans still collect Nobel Prizes

for research; but largely at American

universities.

Over the next few years universities that

nobody at Balliol or Christ Church has ever

heard of will surge to the fore.

Be in no doubt this is the future: all of these

cultural shifts away from Europe are most

pronounced among younger people, especially

those in their 20s and 30s.

It is now clear that the 19th century was

Europe’s century of dominance, the 20th

century when Europe lost its dominance,

forced to rely on America’s help to save it from

itself.

The 21st century will the Asian-American

century, with only the US rivalling China and

India in economic, military, educational and

cultural power.

We are at an historic and global inflection point

with enormous implications for the European

Union – which our governing elites seem

determined to ignore.

Like many politicians before them they are

slaves to an out-dated and discredited

economics.

The belief that the more ‘integrated’ the

economies of the EU become, the more it will

prosper as a global bloc has been the leitmotif

of my generation and the one before it. It is

becoming increasingly hard to sustain as a

serious argument.

High social wage costs, which make it costly to

hire and impossible to fire when circumstances

change, have created a huge pool of

unemployment.

This, in turn, has raised the cost of the welfare

state and produced an ever-increasing

underclass, especially – but not solely – among

the offspring of immigrants.

Add to that a general cultural decadence

among the influential chattering classes that

denigrates hard work, self-betterment,

independence, success and the traditional

bourgeois virtues – and you hardly have a

formula for meeting the Chinese challenge.

As France’s Nicholas Sarkozy recently

commented, the European social model, which

the Euro-elite still thinks the envy of the world,

is neither a “model” – nobody is copying it –

nor very “social”, given the level of

unemployment.

10% in France, Germany and Spain,

concentrated among the young in all three

countries, the unskilled and ethnic minorities

and helping to trigger riots and Islamic

extremism
. In those parts of Paris that

rioted, youth unemployment is over 40%.

There is little hope in sight. Since the launch of

the euro
, economic growth has slowed to

under 2% in the euro zone – against over

2.5% for both the UK and OECD average
.

Things are not expected to get much better

next year.

You don’t need to be a Hayekian to see that

Europe is crying out for a programme of farreaching

reform. But none is forthcoming.

Indeed
rigor mortis seems to be setting in.

Instead of a new, reforming government,

Germany is being ruled by a grand coalition

whose first act has been to raise taxes, which

could condemn the country to recession.

France’s political establishment is likely to be

even more cautious in the wake of the riots.
Italy looks like it is about to exchange Silvio

Berlusconi for Romani Prodi, which might be a

step up for honesty but is certainly a step back

for reform.

Hayek would conclude, grimly, that the EU is in

a
cul-de-sac of stagnation, decline and global

eclipse. Run by a political elite that eschews

reform. Determined, it sometimes seems, to

turn Europe into a mixture of a museum for

Asian and American tourists and a retirement

home for its own aging population.

So where does this leave Britain? Hayek would

say that we have a Fatal Conceit of our own.

That we can continue muddling along, mentally

half in, half out of Europe. With an economy

that is gradually becoming more Europeanised,

at a time when the world is turning away from

Europe and the European way of doing things.

It has been one of the great mysteries of the

Blair-Brown Duumvirate these past eight years

that the more they talk about the virtues of

American-style enterprise, the more they have

pushed Britain into the European social model.

11 Downing Street in particular has been

occupied by Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. Dr Jekyll

talks the Hayekian talk of markets, dynamism,

enterprise; but Mr Hyde walks the walk of

European-style tax-and-spend and regulation.

I assume Mr Brown, an intelligent man, knows

what he’s doing, even if he won’t admit it. I

suggest Mr Blair, whose grip on economics is

tenuous, might not be aware of what has

happened on his watch.

That Britain is becoming more like Europe, for

all the rhetoric to the contrary, cannot be in

doubt, though few in an increasingly

economically illiterate media seem to realise it.

The most recent figures from the OECD show

that British public spending has surged from

almost 38% of GDP in 2000 to a predicted

44% this year; and a European-style 45% in

2006.

The public spending gap between formerly

lowish-spending Britain and the high-spending

Euro zone has narrowed from 10 points of GDP

five years ago to under four points by next

year.

In terms of tax-and-spend and regulation,

which research published this week shows has

added over £30bn to the cost of doing business

in this country since 1998, Britain can now be

regarded as close to the mainstream European

social model.

Now you can regard this process as good or

bad, depending on your politics and your

attitude to Europe. If it wasn’t happening by

such sleight of hand, we might even have a

national debate about it.

But those who believe this trend to be a “good

thing” need to explain why it is in Britain’s

national interest to adopt the trappings of a

social model that the wisest in Paris, Berlin and

Rome wish they could drop – and which

nobody else in the world is copying.

It is not easy to have a sensible debate about

this. Those who raise tough questions about

Europe are still dismissed as Little Englanders.

In an age of globalisation, Hayek would have

said that the greater evil is the predominance

of the Little European mindset at the heart of

our political.

The British Establishment view is still parroted

repeatedly by politicians on the left and right

and unquestioned by a broadcasting

establishment which shares their worldview.

It is that the UK has no credible alternative to

the EU. That the European Project, blessed by

historical inevitability, will produce economic

growth and political tranquillity.

A slightly more sophisticated addendum to this

view is that it is just a matter of time before

the EU finally embraces a version of Hayekian

liberalism. If ever there was a Fatal Conceit, it

is this.

For over 30 years, politicians as diverse as Ted

Heath, Robin Cook, Douglas Hurd, Tony Blair

and Michael Hesletine have assured me we

were “winning the arguments” in Europe.

There were times when I even believed them,

just as a wee lad I believed Scotland could win

the World Cup.

Through bitter experience I now suspect there

is more chance of Scotland winning the World

Cup than Britain winning the arguments in

Brussels!

Belatedly and inadequtely, China is now on the

British radar screen; even Mr Brown pays ritual

obesiance to it in his speeches. But Hayek

would have regarded the response as pathetic.

Talk of taskforces, targets and a “national

response” to China would have had him

chuckle.

Setting an
official goal to double exports to

China within 10 years would have had him

rolling in the aisles, a classic case of the Fatal

Conceit.

The idea that the proper response to China is a

set of McKinsey-style nostrums would have

been proof positive for him that our

government classes had no idea what was at

stake. In Beijing they no doubt regard it as a

manifestation of our peculiar sense of British

humour.

But, again, Britain’s response is very much in

the European mainstream.

Hayek would have been astounded and

dismayed that Europe's leaders still spend so

much of their time – and so much of our

money – arguing about the Common

Agricultural Policy, a subsidy programme

designed to placate French farmers after the

Second World War.

Devoting millions of man-hours to a

Constitution that enshrined the very social

model that is condemning Europe to continued

decline.

Speaking endlessly about greater defence

cooperation, while cutting military budgets at

every opportunity.

I suspect the radical in Hayek would force him

to an unfashionable conclusion: that the entire

EU project has become a giant and

unaffordable distraction.

In the grand scheme of things, he would have

regarded most European discussions as trivial

and parochial, with no relevance to any of the

great challenges facing Europe in the 21st

century.

Consider, he would have said, the inordinate

amount of Britain's political and intellectual

capital diverted and squandered into dealing

with European matters, including the 100,000

or so pages of the
acquis communautaire --

when the rise of China, India and East Asia is

what requires our attention.

Hayek would have had the guts to say the

emperor has no clothes.

 

Hugely expensive farm subsidies are here to

stay.

Protectionist sentiment will remain strong, if

anything get stronger.

Supply-side reforms will remain elusive.

Second-rate military capabilities – armies that

can’t fight, weapons that don’t work – seem

inevitable.

These, Hayek would say, are the givens of the

European firmament for the foreseeable future.

Even Europe’s 10 newest members,

supposedly more market-minded, have failed

to shift the balance of power in any real way.

So, I ask again in my imaginary conversation

with Hayek, what of this septre’d isle? I fear

his answer would be unpalatable to our

political classes and media opinion.

He would be in no doubt that, if Britain was to

meet the challenge of Asia in the 21
st century,

its future could not lie in ever greater

integration with a European continent in

economic, social, cultural and geopolitical

decline. Nor in becoming the 51st state of

America, as some like to sneer is the only

alternative to Europe, because they know it is

so unpalatable.

Hayek would have been blunt: Britain should

regain its right to set global trade and military

alliances, building on its position as an

international trading nation and a financial and

business crossroads to the world.

Government policy should not respond to

China as such, he would say, but strive to

become a low-tax, high-skill, well-educated,

high-productivity vibrant nation-state just

offshore the highest-taxed, increasingly lowskilled,

sclerotic set of rich nations in the

world. The ability to compete with China would

follow naturally.

All this, of course, would require a Hayekian

cultural revolution that our political system is

not yet capable of contemplating.

A reorientation of British foreign policy away

from Europe towards Asia and Latin America.

Unilateral free trade, regardless of the policy in

Brussels.

A radical programme to liberalise the British

economy.

 

A radical reduction in tax and public spending

as a share of the economy.

A flat tax to remove the poorest from tax

altogether and encourage entrepreneurial flair.

The injection of choice and competition into the

public sector on a scale yet not contemplated.

A radical programme of Welfare reform,

Wisconsin-style, accompanied by a

transformation in policing to re-establish the

rule of law in our inner cities.

Excellence in schools with vouchers for all, so

that merit rather than money determines the

quality of your education, producing a genuine

meritocracy that ends the current scandalous

waste of talent that blights our education

system.

The rescue of British universities from the dead

hand of a miserly state which cannot fund

them properly and the creation of a UK Ivy

League.

Such a Hayekian programme for the 21st

century is a tall order; I am not sure we have

the stomach for it.

 

But Hayek would have seen it as a stark choice

(he was good at that).

Either continue with the Fatal Conceit and

totter towards inevitable decline and eventual

oblivion.

Or make the radical embrace of change and

dynamism to ensure a prosperous future in the

21
st century.

If the spirit of Hayek is to remain strong in the

21
st century, I suspect its work is only just

beginning.

12:49 pm edt 

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

helping DC help economics for youth


 

 

Charles J. Skuba

Professor of the Practice

International Business and International Marketing

The McDonough School of Business

Georgetown University

Washington, DC 20057-1221200 Yunus Books –while charles and I are new to each other I have done some global branding work with 3 of georgetown faculty including one who futures work connected with dad in london


Melissa Carrier
Executive Director
Center for Social Value Creation
Robert H. Smith School of Business
4332Q Van Munching Hall
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742-1815

http://www.rhsmith.umd.edu/svc

RHS has run an amazing series of social value creation and finance debates at ronald reagan world trade centre culminating in Dr Yunus launch of his new book


Alex Simon, Senior GWU

There is probably no more connected student microcreditclub leader than alex; he began connecting schools curricula age about 15 in Boston with some help from his father’s friends at young presidents network. He is one of co-founders of the student microcreditclub leaders communitywww.mficonnect.com; he has helped organise specific student briefings with microcredit leaders at both of the last 2 summits in kenya and columbia; I helped sponsor nerly 50 of alex’s friends to yunus gwu talk in feb 2009- the day yunus also briefed the IMF and Bernanke 

Monica Yunus

http://www.singforhope.org artists peace corps
in DC for Autimn 2010 rehearsing for 2 perfornances at DC nationl opera

 

548 Broadway, 3rd Floor
New York, NY 10012

for ways to help see http://singforhope.org/get-involved/ 

for board and people see http://singforhope.org/our-people/our-board/ 


Sam Daley Harris www.results.org 100 Yunus books for congress http://microcreditsummit.org –urgent action needed by 17 september; about 8 more congressmen need to sign up to succeed in petition that dr yunus addresses congresshttp://www.results.org/issues/yunus_bill/

750 First St., NE | Suite 1040 | Washington, DC 20002 

Ph : 202-390-0012 | Skype : samdharris2015


Jonathan Robinson http://the-hub.net while Jonathan is London-based he was recently asked to a 2 day white house meeting (some of which alex also attended) aimed at understanding how entrepreneur networks can connect across cities; Jonathan probably has the leading paradigm with 6000 entrepreneurs for sustainability connecting 50 inter city shared work spaces

the hub +44 (0)20 7841 8900

direct line +44 (0)20 7841 8989

mobile +44 (0)77 4058 7520


Eric Meade , www.altfutures.org alumni network of Alvin Toffler; research of pro-poor conferences for rockefeller foundation; USA representative of 10 country global assembly for Dt Yunus Glasgow July 2010

Institute for Alternative Futures
100 N. Pitt Street, Suite 235
Alexandria VA 22314

Telephone
703.684.5880

2:29 pm edt 

2010.09.01 | 2010.08.01

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