Economic Thermodynamics

by: Daniel De Groot

Tue Sep 23, 2008 at 19:32


After reading Deviltower's cogent summary of the last several boom-bust conservative economic collapses, I began to ponder the pattern at work here.  What is a "bubble" anyway?  How does this keep happening?  I've realized it is because conservative economics is really a repeating effort to thwart economic thermodynamics and create some kind of free lunch of magical wealth beyond what the economy can create with any rational mechanism.  This is what we must work to prevent, and what should be the goal of any regulations that are imposed going forward.

The unregulated and poorly reported credit default swaps may have actually passed $70 trillion last year, or about $5 trillion more than the GDP of the entire world.

So, are you starting to get an idea of just how big a genie Phil Gramm and his pals unleashed?

Daniel De Groot :: Economic Thermodynamics
"Bubble" = Ponzi Scheme

I'm pretty convinced now that this is what all "bubbles" boil down to.  Legalized economic fleecing.  Bubbles entail rapid growth in some sector of the economy that is not actually backed in any meaningful sense by genuine wealth creation.  I remembered a documentary-news item I saw many years ago, about a wanna-be Donald Trump like figure.  He started out by getting a loan for $500, which he paid back.  Then for $1000.  Pretty soon he had a good credit rating.  So he started obtaining loans to pay back the other loans and escalating himself up this way.  After he had hit the seven figure range, he just started living it up on the borrowed cash, using his ever better credit to keep up with the various loans.  The story ends fairly predictably in bankruptcy because he never did anything to make enough money to pay off whatever loan amount he would finally be stuck with when no one would loan to him anymore.  From my vague recollection of the story, I don't think he much cared, he was just enjoying the ride.  A one-man bubble.  

This is what the various bubbles have essentially been about all along.  They are at heart, wilful efforts to create artificial wealth using means that have certain eventual doom, and yet are backed vocally each time by a set of so-called financial gurus who claim they are bottomless.  I don't really know if the gurus believe it and are self-deluded magic-market morons, or are con-artists who figure they can get out before their scams collapse.  It doesn't really matter which they are.  But they hurt a lot of people in process.  Some of those are just as gullible or greedy, but the problem with these sorts of things is that they gain an inevitable patina of respectability because of the snowballing size and institutional muscle that gets behind them once they get going.  The initial sceptics often find themselves overwhelmed psychologically because they see so many people making so much money, and start to doubt their own position.  It's very human.  We tend to think of people as either "gullible" or not, but in truth gullibility is a continuum.  Most everyone is smart enough to avoid a street huckster's 3-card Monte scam, but few have the self-possession to refute their highly trained financial consultant's jargon laden advice on investments if delivered with the right forcefulness and certitude.  

We've seen this now over and over.  Enron was nothing but a giant confidence game played by Ken Lay and his top lieutenants.  Each outrageous promise was eclipsed by the next fantastical profit projection.  All based on internet bandwidth trading technology that was less than imaginary, and a bunch of trading sharks keeping the lights on by fleecing California with manufactured shortages.  Arthur Anderson, rather than blowing the whistle on Enron had been sucked in.  They'd dabbled their toes where it seemed safe and shallow to make a few extra bucks overlooking some minor auditing discrepancies, but soon found themselves over their own heads, far too deep to draw breath for that whistle without drowning themselves.  Almost no business press wrote anything the least bit sceptical of Enron's success for far too long, until it was far too late to save the retirements of so many workers and investors.  Who would dare?  They were churning out double digit profit growth year after year, you would look like a fool gainsaying that.

The housing bubble has been much the same, but just not focused on one company.  A set of magical investment vehicles like credit default swaps are ginned up, and essentially through their complexity and opacity allow the market wizards to sell things to people who would never buy them if they had any idea what they were really buying.  But, for awhile, they "work" and the early adopters make money, riding the top of the expanding bubble.  This attracts the rest of the market, which initially speeds the growth but also spells doom.  Much like Enron's energy traders taking ever more daring steps to screw up California's electricity market, the lenders must ever escalate their willingness to push out loans to people ever less likely to pay them back.  Worse, they must cheat these borrowers by ever more ridiculous terms in the bait-and-switch of low to high interest rates.  After all, who wants to buy another bundle of debt unless you know it will pay off even bigger than the last one when the initial low-interest period on the mortgages ends?  This only increases the certainty that the debt is bad, because the basic laws of economic thermodynamics have been broken:  those poor people simply can't pay 9% interest on their mortgages when the 3.5% period dries up.  Any idiot should have known that, but not when Lehman Brothers with its 100+ years on Wall Street is still buying, who doesn't at least think "they must know something I don't."

In this story, Alan Greenspan plays Arthur Anderson.  Having lived his life on Ayn Rand's bible of stupidity, he has initially refused to stem the tide and even when all signs point to apocalypse, he is now too emotionally committed to the course to give up.  He's Captain Smith Galt, and no iceberg is going to stop him from getting to New York in record time.  All the while, most of those who would be sceptics bite their tongues for fear of gainsaying Greenspan the Grey.  

The Role of Republican Economics:  Financial Alchemy

The common thread of Phil Gramm, Alan Greenspan and for that matter the guys who told Herber Hoover the roaring 20s would not end either is that on some level they are enamoured in this "magic of the market" bullshit they sell.  They really do think that some set of sufficiently complex monetary transactions can move $100 from Toronto to New York to Boston to London and have $110 or $150 come out the other end.  No value-adding work required.

You may be thinking that they are cynical movement aristocrats who actually want to increase inequity, and cause middle class strife and that's true.  It doesn't preclude the previous sentiment here either.  Authoritarians can happily believe in condradictory things, or they can simply figure they will win however it turns out.  If they can't turn lead into gold, they can still paint the lead and find a sucker willing to buy.  

So it is no surprise that the deregulations they propose are always designed to facilitate bubble economics.  Actual economic stimulus is unglamourous.  It requires building infrastructure, and promoting an educated population, and ensuring they have decent health care to actually show up and work.  It's much more fun to make the Statue of Liberty disappear or walk through the Great Wall of China, in a regulatory sort of way.   It's always been easier to make money selling snake oil as a cure for disease than actually discovering cures for disease.  After all, in an unregulated environment, even if you do cure a disease, the snake oil guy will just steal your idea and sell it too.  

Grounding Market Realism - Lancing Boils Sooner

So the challenge is to keep these scams on the ground, at the 3-card Monte level of absurdity before they've sucked in all the semi-willing victims of Wall Street.  Economic thermodynamics.  The market can only grow, in the long term, as fast as the total economy.  If GDP is only growing 3%, we must be suspicious of a sector growing 10% year after year unless we can adequately explain it by showing what other sectors are also shrinking.  

This is economic thermodynamics.  Rapid growth is possible, but only where we can see the actual source of the wealth being generated.  So if someone invents cold-fusion, artificial intelligence, a pill that adds 50 IQ points or the next generation's equivalent of the assembly line, yeah, I'll believe in double-digit protracted growth.  When some finance people coin a new technical sounding term for their latest imaginary product that they will sell back and forth to each other with no discernible real economic foundation, I'm calling for my lance and bracing for a lot of oozing pus.


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Thank You (4.00 / 1)
Daniel for this post.  

I'm a nobody with limited intellectual capacity, so I couldn't put in words what your post did.

I worked for a small-ish tech company for a few months back in the waning days of the dotcom era(I joined on as they were about to implode).

The company was top-heavy (surprise); more VP's than you could shake a stick.  My experience there was only time I worked in a environment of unbridled greed that was endemic.

I can't imagine the greed on Wall Street (I'm not saying they're bad people, just 'different').

We had the CEO and management lying to your face....things will be fine after this round of layoffs!  Here's a motivational book (seriously, they passed out book) after we let go 20 percent of the company.  

"Back at it.  Our fundamentals will see us through!"

As far as I can tell, this company had a good idea and some really bright people to start the company.  They got the venture capitalists money and probably (I wasn't there back in the beginning) were doing well for a startup.

But they grew way too fast on borrowed money.  Probably because every one else was doing it and the VC money was flowing like wine.

Okay, enough of my random thoughts.


"the economy" is itself a bubble (0.00 / 0)

Since thermodynamics has been mentioned we could state that in the long term, the total economy can grow no faster than its surrounding material ecosystems. In simple terms the economy must gravitate to a fixed scale of activity relative to the material world (soil, water cycling, et cetera) and grow no further. Very likely we have already passed that scale in certain metrics, of which atmospheric carbon storage is an easy example.

Rapid growth is possible and desirable only when economic scale is small. Protracted growth, in any bricks-and-mortar sense, has to end in a sigmoid curve or end in a spike.

Various exploiters and fiddlers create what I would call financial bubbles within a globally-scaled ecological/economic bubble, but support for the latter still seems widespread and ideologically diverse. Larger bubbles, perhaps, have deeper patinas.

How to detach the liberal/progressive left from its commitments to growth has always kind of stumped me, maybe the study of the present crisis will lead there.

"Anyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist." -- Kenneth Boulding

nb - I use the term 'crisis' generically in its political sense, not uncritically in its financial sense.

Hearing his views, I could not help exclaiming: "Why, Mr. Debs, you're an anarchist!"

rjt12@.....


I hate to sound like Lyndon LaRouche (0.00 / 0)
But, once the world decided to dispense with any kind of physical bases (like precious metals) to value our money and simply made its "value" depend on the "good faith" of the central governments that print the currency, isn't it a logical conclusion that there are no limits to how much wealth can be generated on this planet?

I mean, if money is worth what we all believe it to be worth, how is the limit determined?


"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
No, not really (0.00 / 0)
Base metals are a terrible basis for the currency because their value is not fixed either.  Gold is ultimately worth what people are willing to pay for it too.  It isn't even particuarly useful in industrial applications.  Any metal or other physical basis for a currency has the same problem.

The value of the economy and the currency derives ultimately from the productivity of the people.  So if you print off an extra trillion dollars in currency, but don't have an accompanying increase in actual labour productivity, you will just get inflation or devaluation of the currency.


[ Parent ]
Yes, but when push becomes shove (0.00 / 0)
you could secure your wealth by converting it to the limited, tangible, precious metal, which by its rarity would be a somewhat assured of having some value in the future.

"productivity" seems far less tangible and rare, not to mention somewhat hard to quantify, especially in service-based economonies.  How does one compare the "productivity" of the low-wage grill-jockey at McDonalds with that of the sous chef at a Wall Street restaurant where a burger goes for $50, for example?

How does one take the value of land into account when calculating "productivity"?  

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
more than one possible answer (0.00 / 0)

How does one take the value of land into account when calculating "productivity"?

We could try to account the value of land by its value on the market, but also by the value of the services it provides (soil fertility, water purification, climate moderation).

  Ecosystem Valuation

Crudely, the value of such services is the cost of the next-best alternative for obtaining them. In many land-related cases, there is no next-best alternative (climate moderation) or alternatives are prohibitively expensive (water desalinization for an entire continent). It's possible to pull a fast one with soil fertility (ie fertilizer) but that fix is showing its strains also.

Hearing his views, I could not help exclaiming: "Why, Mr. Debs, you're an anarchist!"

rjt12@.....


[ Parent ]
money is not a form of wealth, it's a form of debt. (0.00 / 0)

In a society that measures wealth by ownership of cattle (or pigs, shall we say...), there are limits to wealth in that there are limits to how many pigs you can keep.

Now imagine a society in which the unit of exchange is a NEGATIVE pig. You can accumulate negative pigs without limit, since there is no cost to keeping them. It's even possible to just let the negative pigs reproduce(compound interest). That's how money works.

The dollar in your pocket does not represent value, it represents that economic society at large "owes you" a certain amount of value (goods and services). That's debt.

Hearing his views, I could not help exclaiming: "Why, Mr. Debs, you're an anarchist!"

rjt12@.....


[ Parent ]
sure (0.00 / 0)
But if the treasury prints off too many negative pigs, the ones you are holding begin to be worth less.  What was 1 pig owed to you now only gets you half a pig.  The "dollar" is always an arbitrary measure, detached of any inherent meaning.  But so is gold.

[ Parent ]
I said it was 'possible' for the negative pigs to reproduce, not desirable (4.00 / 1)
I wasn't arguing for a commodity currency over a fiat currency, just pointing out that debt can increase without limit whereas wealth cannot.

What makes debt valuable to hold is the possibility of its being exchanged for wealth at some future time. But if existing debt is out of proportion to the wealth that can be produced, that's a problem. This I consider the generic definition of a bubble.

In strictly material terms, we have "financed" a lot of current production through borrowing against future productivity of planetary systems' services. These services (groundwater recharge, to give another example) renew themselves at a finite rate, which implies some limitation, voluntary or involuntary, to economic scale.

So I'm not making a case against fiat money, just against the belief that money transcends real limits and leads to a 'fiat reality'. The gold-standard lobby, conversely, seems to argue that fiat reality can be avoided only by commodity currency. But I don't think that's necessary or sufficient.

Hearing his views, I could not help exclaiming: "Why, Mr. Debs, you're an anarchist!"

rjt12@.....


[ Parent ]
Hate to tell ya... (4.00 / 1)
but EVERYTHING is a giant confidence game. America's credit status depends on how confident the rest of the world is we will pay them back. Our currency is backed by nothing but the stamp of the good 'ol USofA.

Ron Paul can be a crazy person but when it comes to the economy he's right.


It's much simpler than this (0.00 / 0)
Imagine two companies in the widget business.  For two straight years, they double their profit margin.

So they both increase capacity by 50%.

The price for widgets then collapses, and they layoff workers because demand even at the lower price is not enough to support the increased capacity.  

Bubbles occur when market participants draw a straight line from the past to the future, and think they can get REALLY Rich.  Of course, they forget that everyone else is doing this too.  When each participant realizes that the other participants have made the same bet they have, the bubble collapses.

In my graduate work in economics we simulated this: and it was amazing how if you split a class into 5 teams you would actually create a bubble.

This is, of course, why things like limits on leverage in financial markets are so important.  

And it also shows the limits of the invisible hand.  


I see what you're saying (0.00 / 0)
It's a good intuitive explanation for bubbles to occur naturally, but I think there is more going on here than that.  These aren't just accidental actions of uncoordinated parties creating some kind of undesirable confluence.

Because even when they see these bubbles in action, the Greenspan types do nothing.  

Am I wrong?


[ Parent ]
In fact, remember back in the late '90s (0.00 / 0)
when Greenspan continued cutting interest rates even as he talked of irrational exuberance and of an overheating economy?  Or when Bush pushed tax cuts whether the economy was surging or failing?  It is natural for investors to chase the good money, and then to have the second order effect wipe them out.

But that's why we have things like the Federal Reserve board and the Department of the Treasury in the first place--to minimize the likelihood of this sort of thing happening, and to minimize the impact when it does happen.

Instead, in the post-Reagan era, we have had regulators who have done exactly the opposite.  


[ Parent ]
Your very well written essay is the exact reason why (4.00 / 1)
daddy bush called Reaganomics 'voodoo economics' during the 1980 primary.  We need everyone rejecting the hell out of the whole Reagan mold of analyzing the economy now.  

Also, Herbert Hoover was Secretary of Commerce from 1921 to 1928, when he used it as a springboard to the Presidency.  At the time, he was considered to be one of the greatest economic minds ever to have lived.  


[ Parent ]
ha. (0.00 / 0)
The Hoover bit was an afterthought, I didn't imagine he was actually neck deep in the 20s bubble himself.  Even better.

[ Parent ]
Yes (0.00 / 0)
Greenspan added fuel to the fire by making liquidity available, but if there had been rules limiting leverage it still wouldn't have result in the conflagration we see before us.  

[ Parent ]
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