A Time of Economic Transitions? 1 comment
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Let’s start with the bad news first. I believe that we are in for an extended period of economic adjustment. This will take time for we are at a point where the foundation for the world economy has to be restructured in order to bring us to the start of a new era.
The good news is that the adjustment is taking place in a relatively orderly fashion. Yes, a lot of work still needs to be done on repositioning portfolios and on the structure of industries, and yes, there will still be some surprises along the way, but people are systematically working things out. By-and-large, people have stopped hiding things and are finding out that within the current environment it is best to identify problems, disclose them, and then get to work on them. It just seems that the issues are deep and broad and it will take an extended period of time to accommodate them.
In the
Perhaps the greatest transition underway is that in the field of energy. Transitions always hurt a lot of people. Major transitions are just that much worse. Yet, many agree that this transition has to take place - eventually. The
Transitions hurt. Did I say that before? It is going to hurt many, many people to move on to the new way to power the world but maybe it is time for the United States, and others, to deal with the energy problem seriously and encourage the transition. Humans are problem solvers. Humans are great innovators. Look what has happened in terms of Information Technology over the past 50 years! Over the past 50 years, there have been significant changes in the fields of biological and physical! We can only be optimistic about what humans can do to solve problems.
Yet, over the last 50 years, politicians have provided incentives to the energy industry to maintain existing energy platforms. In doing so, they raised the “switching costs” of moving on to other energy platforms because the incentives have been structured away from innovation and change. Sure, the day would come when new sources of energy would be forthcoming, but the politician's creed is to keep getting re-elected in the current environment, while the transition to these new sources and the disruption accompanying the transition will come on someone else’s watch.
Maybe we should celebrate oil selling for $135 per barrel. Maybe we should celebrate gas at the pump selling in excess of $4.00 per gallon. Maybe we should hope that prices go even higher! The transition is here! Let it happen!
My concern is that efforts will be made to alleviate the short run pain of the energy problem and drug the world once again in order to maintain the status quo for a little longer. It seems that the
The new energy platform…whatever that platform will be…will result in a substantial change in the way people live their lives. I can’t predict what the new platform will look like. I don’t believe that anyone can predict what the new energy platform will look like. As an economist, all I can say is that relative prices will change, incentives will be altered, and innovation will take place. What exactly this will mean for life on this planet is currently a mystery.
Individuals, as early as the 18th century talked about computing machines. However, who predicted the changes in life that the mainframe computer brought about in the 1950s and 1960s? Who predicted the creation of the personal computer and even imagined how it would alter how people worked in the 1980s? Who predicted the development of the Internet, and how it would change how people lived and worked in the 1990s and beyond? And so on, and so on…
This adjustment will take time and the transition will be painful for individuals, for businesses, for industries, and for governments. I talked about a 50-year periods in terms of other transition cycles. Maybe…just maybe…we need to bite-the-bullet and move on into the future.
There is another transition that needs to take place and this is as good a time as any to accept the need for it and move forward with it. This is the transition that the
The period of the liquidity crises has been passed in this policy cycle. It appears that further adjustment of portfolios and expectations are proceeding in an orderly fashion. However, the full adjustment back to robust economic health is expected to be slow and painful. The
The new President and his administration must also bring fiscal discipline back to the government. Again, this will be difficult and cannot be fully achieved in the near term. It is hard to see how the Bush tax cuts can be rescinded within the current environment. It is hard to see how other tax cuts can be implemented anytime soon. Will new programs be introduced? Well, prudence must rule the day. Any new president is going to be limited in what can be accomplished in the near term if this fiscal discipline is going to be achieved. If the transition is going to be made, however, it should be done now and not postponed indefinitely.
The reality of the situation is one in which the
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John, Your thinking is right on target. You are articulate and have the broad and specific experience to make your statements. Your vision for accepting where we are as a nation and joining the rest of the world is so correct. America needs to reinvent herself and find a new sense of purpose - which you hint at. Great work!2008 Jun 26 02:09 PM | Link | Reply




















