I’m moving out of my Georgetown rowhouse and just started my job, so I’ve been a little busy and haven’t been able to write much. That’s one reason Twitter is so great — I’ve been able to just send some quick tweets (the other reason it’s so great is its generativity (see Jonathan Zittrain) — Twitter provides such a vast platform/ecosystem for other ideas to thrive in).
[edit: I didn't know this until after I published the post, but apparently the Pop!Tech 2008 conference was focused on the subject of abundance and scarcity. Fitting! Here's the opening video presentation that the Pop!Tech conference began with.]
Anyway, since it’s been so long, I’m going to ramble a bit. The blog is still great for that.
When I took all my money out of the market back in September/October of 2007, I did it because there were vapor bids on all the stocks out there. Nothing was supporting any equities. About two years later, the financial markets have stabilized quite a bit, with the TED spread finally dropping back to the levels before the markets got a whiff of collateralized debt obligations going sour. Companies have shed a lot of jobs and have made a lot of cutbacks.
As an investor, I’m feeling a lot safer about putting my money back in. I wanted to wait until at least this summer, when a lot of mortgage and housing resets hit the market. Now is the dreaded velocity period of August-October, when the market is most likely to crash, historically. But it can also rally pretty strongly in that time period — I think this has something to do with new fiscal years beginning and a lot of annual inflows/outflows taking place around that time.
I’m still only interested in Amazon ($AMZN) stock, but since it’s already pretty high I have to leave it alone. There is no other stock out there worth holding right now, in my opinion. I suspect the next big runner in tech will be a Facebook IPO or perhaps Yahoo! ($YHOO), if they can ever find a moneymaker.
I went to the premiere of Barack Stars, a play showing at the Woolly Mammoth Theater in DC, done by the Second City Comedy Troupe (SCTV, some Saturday Night Live folks). It’s a play lampooning the reverence for Obama and all the political scandals in DC lately. One of the joke skits involved poor laid-off finance guys from NYC.
Funny to be sure (I highly recommend you go see this), but how accurate? My suspicion is that while a lot of finance types in NYC lost their jobs, it wasn’t long before they found new ones. All the smart money that didn’t vaporize probably went to the next unregulated market out there, or as some have hinted, towards carbon credit markets, the next bubble target according to Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi. The NYTimes just ran a story about how the big brokers were trading with a 3ms advantage on retail traders, racking up tons of money through arbitrage. This just goes to show you that when you combine fierce NYC finance types with the new quant PhD players, every aspect of the market is a game that no layperson is going to win. Back in the 90′s, daytrading was somewhat fair, but now the game is entirely stacked towards brokers. Combine this with the scam that is now common stock: common stock is worthless, effectively, since there’s now so many classes of preferred and private stock for the company insiders that no common stock holder is actually entitled to as much equity as he/she may have thought.
That really leaves the only effective vehicle for making money in the stock market picking solid companies that are undervalued. Tech stocks are especially good for this; the thing about NYC types and PhD folks is that they’re not particularly good at identifying good companies. Yes, they make money selling companies’ stock to their clients, but they come up with long bullshit reports that they charge over $100 for that just basically say how every company in a sector is worth buying. However, if you know your tech, or you know the zeitgeist about a company, you can still stand to get a triple-bagger on a stock (triples from the price you bought at). Long-term investing, in my opinion, is dead. The market is set up to scam you unless there’s a major regulatory overhaul.
Anyway. Surely there are many people who were working in NYC because of connections, hook-ups, etc. and they don’t have the goods to keep doing it. But I bet many of the financial class either have merit-based wealth (good skills either in smooth-talking or in quant models) or status-based wealth (being born into east-coast privilege), a dichotomy discussed in John Clippinger‘s “A Crowd of One”. In other words, they did not lose their money and leave town. This wasn’t like the Great Depression, where people ended up leaving the cities and going back to their family farming traditions or joining the military.
Sadly, the military adventure continues. Afghanistan now looks a lot like Iraq a few years ago. Soldiers are still dying and money is being wasted. To Obama’s credit, we are now pressing into the Taliban as we always should have been doing, and Robert Gates seems to be a responsible steward of the armed forces. But the inertia of occupation still continues forth and it’s only those Americans who give a damn and enlist who seem to be paying the price.
The rest of America goes on as usual. Unemployment is higher, for sure. This could end up being a large problem, especially since I view those lost jobs as jobs that will never return — the high velocity of job destruction and creation requires adaptability, quick learning, and higher and higher levels of education…qualities that the American innovation and education systems are no longer producing in any citizens except wired kids, who are doing all that learning outside of the system anyway.
The fact that America and the rest of the world are still pumping away and doing okay must be because the world is just awash in money. There are far too many people you or I or anyone can name who do not seem to have earned their money or their ease of life. Deals that are completely nonsensical still seem to happen. People make careers out of nothing more than proposing meetings that never happen. Job hiring, as I’ve talked about a lot lately, is a complete farce of a system, an inane game that we all have to play.
My own impression of venture capital is that it’s become extremely risk averse and dumb money. There are some cool angel firm ideas, seeding start-ups with a little money and lots of training. But look at the trash they are producing. Some incremental improvement on video watching. Some tiny adjustment to file sharing. Did Twitter come out of one of these programs? No, and it never would: it had no financial model (if you’re unimaginative, anyway, like most people) and it took a while to catch on. As it turns out, Twitter is a massively open platform for innovation. How do you put a valuation on that, exactly, using today’s financial models? You can’t. That’s why vencap and angel insistence on financial modeling is so retarded.
If the world is awash in money, why are there so many poor? Amartya Sen intimates that there are no longer food shortages worldwide, just rationing. More specifically, he says that no democracy has ever had a famine. In other words, when food is allocated at least somewhat responsibly and with a conscience towards those who need it, there is enough of it.
The fact that people are poor, hungry, weak, sick, etc. has, in the past, been because of material shortages. But now it seems as though poverty exists because of socio-political power structures. Clientelism, warlordism, authoritarianism: these are the systems that withhold from those who need resources to survive.
The American Republican party itself has become a curious modern system bordering on clientelism but within a democratic system. Made up of a steeply declining older white male base of paternals, the Republicans have somehow convinced even the poor that cutting taxes, reducing responsibilities and ties to the government, and getting more privileges in society will somehow benefit everyone. That Republicans immediately think of government as being 100% inept, refuse to pay more taxes to help out fellow Americans (even when more accountability and transparency has been promised, under Obama’s Gov2.0 plans), and yet still claim themselves to be the most patriotic Americans is absurd. That poor, disenfranchised white people go along with it is even worse. You have people who have never been rich before advocating that Goldman Sachs plunderers and profiteers MUST receive higher and higher bonuses in order for them to be sufficiently motivated to work at all. What the heck?
The Republicans have successfully blended Friedman/Reagan trickle-down economics with moral conservatism — highly successful for recruiting, but only if you’re white, old, and usually rich. No one takes them seriously in financial conservatism anymore, their having been responsible for ballooning the national deficit in the name of security. Sadly, fiscal conservatism is probably one of their strongest platforms. That they abandoned it gives you some idea of how defunct their party is. Perhaps one of the biggest flaws was assuming that the “invisible hand” is naturally benevolent. Incentives can, at some level, often be predictable, and that’s where economists and public policy people would be important for identifying where the market will exploit resources and prices to make a lot of money. The proof of this most recently was in the financial crisis, which resulted from the market splendidly moving away from regulated areas into shadow pools through hedge funds, cascading collateralized debt obligations and packaged mortgages on top of each other. The market did exactly what it was allowed to do. But that impulse is not always used for good. Does that not imply a need for government checks and balances upon ravenous capitalist incentive?
So the US needs a jumpstart to get its innovation pipeline going again. China and India and other countries are hungrier than we are. They want success more than we do. And they are at least attempting to modify their education, technology, innovation, legal, and health care systems to get success.
We, meanwhile, are plodding along with a broken health care bill. Health care is a massive taboo subject in the US and, as I’m interested in reading about lately, anywhere where there’s a taboo, there’s some deep-seated cultural issue that is a dangerous setback for that culture’s competitiveness and advancement within the international community.
Fortunately we have smart people assessing our national broadband plan (Obama has picked some great tech guys and has enlisted the Harvard Berkman Center to look at broadband). Combined with a great secretary of education, a new CIO, et al, the US should start to pick up again in another 5 years after the investments in basic research and education start to kick in…or at least the promise of them. The force multipliers of these basic investments will be greatly increased if Obama is elected to a second term. I can only hope.
The Republicans see anyone in government as being inept and unable to control costs or execute even the most basic project (as David Brooks pointed out recently, this is partially true). But what is the proposed solution? Radical privatization? Are we supposed to trust the “invisible hand” of the markets to manage complex human health care problems or educational pipelines? The problem with the libertarian viewpoint is that it seems to not take much interest in HOW you actually make people healthier, or make people smarter. You just let the market do it. But SOMEONE has to know these things, whether it’s a government or a private company established to do that task. In a democratic system, citizens are the deciders of how those things are done, so it is their responsibility to become better educated about their mission. A private company’s sole task is to make money, and combined with profiteering hit-and-run executives, there is little incentive to act with accountability — unless government puts legal safeguards on it to keep it from running off the rails. For all their talk of incentives, Republicans can be pretty selective in how they decide to employ them.
I see the US government in today’s massively complex world as being a gardener of a national ecosystem. The libertarians are right that a government with no incentives to cut costs will use its bottomless pockets to buy influence. But conservatives and libertarians are wrong that government cannot play a role. It seems anti-competitive to suggest that only private companies should be the sole provider of all goods and services and public space. The truth is that companies provide excellent goods and services, but only with intense competition. The truth is that companies are HORRIBLE at providing public space, because giving something away is not part of their incentives. As Naomi Klein points out, a public square lets you protest and assemble, whereas you can’t even run a camera at a shopping mall because it’s private property, let alone pass out flyers or collect petitions.
So it seems simple-minded now to not talk about an ecosystem where public companies, private companies, the government, non-government non-profits, unions, and community networks all work in the same space with and against each other. The competitiveness imperative must be extended from not just providing good and services but to also providing public space, social capital, and public capital.
The only factor that has mitigated the lack of such space and capital has been the internet. Its realm of free speech and free time/space has led to places for minorities and youths and fringe movements to experiment and organize. It is no secret that social networking has exploded online, while a privatized “meatspace” has become deathly quiet in terms of social capital, as Robert Putnam’s famous “Bowling Alone” book described, with the death of American civic life.
The people who created the building blocks for the internet should be recognized for their massive contribution to society and for bringing an end to a pretty savage era of radical privatization.
The internet and computing have driven storage and connection costs down rapidly, killing many industries and incumbents except those with the power to lobby our old, white Congressmen (i.e. the telcos and “entertainment” labels). One of the only correct things Tom Friedman wrote about was how the internet, combined with globalization, led to a massive networking of human effort worldwide.
If you are to look forward, it is getting to the point where there are not many shortages left in the world to limit human progress. I already discussed money — I do not see money as something there’s a shortage of in the world anymore. Aggregate time is no longer a shortage. People can be more productive with better online tools, and they are also watching less TV. As Clay Shirky hints at, this means there’s a lot of surplus time out there now, although it’s up to us to figure out how we want to distribute that time. Food (energy) is no longer a shortage — while we do it incredibly wastefully and unsustainably, we have figured out how to have more obese people in the world than starving. There is not exactly a shortage of energy inputs either — “peak oil” seems highly dubious compared to when we will drastically reduce petroleum consumption, while the sun provides easily enough power to provide to the entire world. If we just knew how to harness it properly.
We can expect processing power and time and storage to continue to plummet. The cloud online will allow us to build holy grids of collaborative supercomputers, eventually perhaps providing a platform in which we can upload ourselves, the digital singularity. At that point, it will be interesting to see which people stay and which people “go”. Who will maintain the systems that keep the internet going so that we may live digitally forever? When will that question cease to be relevant?
There is, right now, a significant limitation in one area of electronics that has hindered all othes: energy storage. It affects what kinds of cellphones we can use (a G1 barely lasts a day with background apps and GPS on), the miniaturization we can achieve with smarter devices, the distance our devices can be from plugs, and so on.
I was using a lot of electronics gear while I was in the Army. Our equipment could operate off standard power, but it could also run off batteries if we were in the field. But these batteries seemed to weigh 1-2lbs each, and we needed to replace them maybe once a day. So if we were on a mission, we might need to carry 7-14 extra lbs of batteries, plus spares. On top of our other gear. Batteries just haven’t miniaturized like everything else in an electronic gadget has. This is holding us back tremendously. At the very least, we are starting to use RFID chips that are activated briefly by being stimulated by electrical interfaces like at metro stations.
The good news is that Obama has put $2 billion into manufacturing and research for battery technologies. Even that has a wrinkle, according to the “Breakthrough team”, quoted in a NYTimes blog post: if money is diverted into deployment, it will take away from basic R&D:
“The Breakthrough team warns that while deployment of today’s technologies is vital, if money for deployment is included in the $150-billion pie, that dangerously reduces the amount of money for laboratories pursuing vital advances on photovoltaics or energy storage and for big tests of technologies that must be demonstrated at large scale — like capturing carbon dioxide from power plants.”
Our inability to localize energy storage has meant that concentrated power has been the name of the game — it is the same for wifi right now, but WiMAX will make that issue obsolete.
So eventually there will be at least one valuable resource which is always limited and finite and definitive of our cultures and personalities: individual time. We will only have 24 hours in a day. If our brains can handle more than one task at a time, our bodies can’t. We still require sleep, eating, drinking, education, socialization, play, etc. What’s more, we love to take part in those things, even so far as to do it alone or with others, whichever we have the opportunity to take part in.
What becomes most valuable to us, on an individual level, is whatever we spend our time doing. And the chances are that it will be interacting with each other, or building things, or being creative, or relaxing. These, as they should be, will be the most valuable things we both seek and trade and sell and share. Time will dominate as a currency.
To some degree this is already occurring. There are a lot of poor people willing to work for next to nothing, and their active time is being used abusively to produce stuff so we don’t have to. We develop a product and market it and then buy and sell it, but it’s the poor people who put in the hard labor.
I’m not sure this human tendency to exploit the weak and poor will change on its own — certainly not under capitalist impulses. Perhaps robots could take their place, ultimately becoming more productive than humans, who require food and water and sleep. This is why some scifi people dwell so much on what happens when the robots decide they’ve had enough with us treating them like slaves. Less a Terminator outcome than an I, Robot outcome.
The Pope released an encyclical which discussed globalization and economics at length. I think his emphasis on helping the poor makes a great deal of sense; only through humanity’s constant effort will the number of poor be reduced. We’re obviously not sure how that is to be done yet — but I think the development economists on the cutting edge who suggest that it has to do with leadership in government and power mainly, but then reinforced by all the other stuff: human capital, good governance, nutrition and health, girl’s education, non-intervention, etc., are going to figure it out.
I’m not pushing for paternalistic top-down programs by any means, even if I’m talking about strong government leaders and a Catholic papacy. Certainly I feel I’m as entrepreneurial as they come, wanting to build a massive reputation and identity platform and make big bucks from it, along with fame. But it has a not-for-profit data-protecting component as well, and I am after all a product of mostly public institutions (public high school, UT Austin, the Army) until I went to a private institution (which is heavily influenced by Catholic Jesuit values). I have benefited from a healthy blend of so many different structures and organizations, to include a multi-racial lineage and multiple nationalities among my family and friends, that I can hardly avoid seeing the world as REQUIRING a flourishing ecosystem of diversity and intense competition that also provides for learning and apprenticing and mentoring and teaching.
So at some point I’m looking to bring the international development component of my studies back in to my career. But more and more this is looking like I’ll have to apply development theory to my own country, as it struggles to balance its technological and entrepreneurial bents along with entrenched and powerful radical corporatism, along with a declining propensity to seek bold policy overhauls where it needs it (education, health care).
To me, the economics of our world system demand that the most important future input will be education from low-level grade school all the way to advanced studies. The effects of technology upon society and economics have been pervasive and profound, and in order for us to continue making breakthroughs, we’re going to need more and more advanced understanding to reach even basic levels of academic research in tomorrow’s future areas: solar, nano, genetic modification, quantum-level, as well as reputation and forgetting/forgiving, identity, cultural anthropology, ecosystem gardening/curating, gift economics, happiness economics, etc.
The US, being so heavily reliant on its entrepreneurial technology, should be even more concerned in building up its education pipeline than any other country on the planet, because technology and risk is the US lifeblood. So I feel as though any efforts I make in the future will have to incorporate policy and private incentives towards education.
These are my first few stabs at understanding what my career will ultimately look like, but I see them in line with the needs of the country, the trends of technology, and the progress of social demographics. It’s kind of exciting, don’t you think?