Europe’s Greek Tragedy
John Mauldin
Aug 05, 2015
In this week’s Outside the Box we have a unique diagnosis of Europe’s ills from … a medical doctor. The author is Dr. Luc De Keyser, who currently serves as the chief medical information officer at Xperthis, the largest provider of hospital information systems solutions in Belgium. He has done pioneering work in multicenter clinical trials, medical ontologies, paleonutrition, and examining human conflict from an evolutionary perspective.
Dr. De Keyser (writing for Stratfor) is not sanguine about Europe’s future.
There are times, he reminds us, when a doctor has to make the tough call and conclude that the patient’s case is simply without hope. It's a painful diagnosis and not one that the doctor enjoys sharing with the patient. But at some point the patient must be told.
There are times, he reminds us, when a doctor has to make the tough call and conclude that the patient’s case is simply without hope. It's a painful diagnosis and not one that the doctor enjoys sharing with the patient. But at some point the patient must be told.
The fundamental obstacle to solving Europe’s problems, he asserts, is that Europe is simply too complex to fix in any straightforward or dependable way:
For such problems, there are no simple solutions. There aren't even complicated solutions. There are only best-guess measures with no guarantees of success. The currency union’s underlying flaws, like so many other modern problems, are far too intricate and perplexing for our minds and institutions to cope with. Failing to admit to our own overconfidence in dealing with the bloc’s problems will only perpetuate the crisis playing out across Europe.
Our poor human brains, the good doctor says, simply aren’t built to cope with a sociopolitical entity as big and complex as Europe. One thing we not-so-evolved apes like to do is interpret information in a way that confirms our preconceived notions. This is called confirmation bias, and in simpler times it kept us out of harm’s way by encouraging preferences for things we knew to be safe. This is a limitation that afflicts economists right along with the rest of us. And so we see, for example, Wolfgang Schäuble, finance minister of Germany, and Yanis Varofakis, former finance minister of Greece, obstinately pushing diametrically opposed economic programs. Which is OK, says Dr. De Keyser, until people on both sides start to claim that adherence to the other guy’s economic school of thought is going to ruin the livelihoods of millions of people.
We’re riddled with other sorts of biases, too – stuff that the field of behavioral economics is still trying to understand and help us all to cope with. Dr. De Keyser recommends humility: “[W]e must first accept that it is our fate to be overwhelmed by the problems of modern-day society.” Well, that’s a start, I guess; but maybe we should just bring the challenge closer to home and recognize that just as Europe’s (and the US’s and China’s) leaders struggle mightily and often futilely to manage their societies, we too should be keenly aware of our mental limitations in managing our investments and businesses.
We all have a lot to learn.
We all have a lot to learn.
All too often in our investment portfolios we want to make the investment world conform to our biases and opinions. More often than not we find out that reality is far more complex and that there is a plentitude of variables, many of which are unknown to us, that influence what we fervently wish to be a simple, straightforward solution.
This week’s Outside the Box is refreshingly short on words but long on wisdom.
This appears to be a week to get my geek on. Last night I had dinner with Art Cashin, Jack Rivkin, David Kotok, China expert Leland Miller, and half a dozen others. We discussed everything from Puerto Rico bonds (the implications of which I must admit I did not fully understand) to China to what the Fed will or will not do in September. The majority who were at the table (a total of 11) think the Fed will not raise rates in September. I am not one of them, but then I have been talking September for a very long time. Hardly any point in changing now unless something significantly different happens in the data.
Today I spent six hours doing a deep dive into analytical software that approaches equity investing from a entirely new perspective, truly rebuilding business analysis from the ground up and totally destroying any pretense that market cap weighting has a defensible rationale. I’m looking forward to being able to write about that software later in the year. This is something I’m going to have to spend a great deal of time on. Literally scores of the smartest mathematicians and programmers I’ve ever been around have been working on these models for 6–8 years. The results are just beginning to manifest – and my head is still swimming from what they showed me.
And now my youngest son, Trey, and I are getting ready to go to the Upper West Side here in New York City to have a “brain training” session with Dr. Lana Morrow. I expect that I will soon be able to tell you a lot more about the imaging work she does to help people learn to focus and concentrate. I know it sounds “out there,” but there is an enormous amount of science behind her work.
Then later we’ll all meet Altegris CEO Jack Rivkin for dinner. It was Jack who introduced me to Dr. Morrow. And tomorrow Trey and I travel to Grand Lake Stream, Maine, were 60 economic geeks gather to fish, drink, and talk investments and politics and economics and whatever else comes to mind. Somewhere in the course of that journey I’ve got to figure out how to get this week’s letter written. I’m going to have a great week being with old friends and meeting new ones.
You’re trying to figure out how to be more productive analyst,
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box
Europe's Greek Tragedy
By Luc de Keyser
August 5, 2015
The eurozone is unraveling. Each swing of the
pendulum between financial infusions and economic strafing for Greece further
weakens the unity of the bloc.
Some, including Ian Morris, take heart in the
belief that the crisis, though painful, is just one of the many obstacles on a
path that generally points toward success for the European experiment. Others
point to Europe's economic woes as a proof of concept that merely affirms the
Continent's need for even greater integration.
As a clinician, I see things differently. There
are times when those in my field have to make the tough call and conclude that
the case of our patient – the object of diagnostic study here being the
European economy – is simply without hope. It's a painful diagnosis, and one
that a doctor is often hesitant to share with his or her patient. But at some
point, the patient must be told.
The following is a physician's honest, if
difficult, diagnosis of the Greek tragedy unfolding in Europe and of the
Continent's hopeless attempts to keep itself from falling apart.
Prologue
A little more than a month ago, the presidents
of the five EU institutions published a roadmap for strengthening the Economic
and Monetary Union. At the same time, European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi
called for a quantum leap in European integration efforts to safeguard the
union's irreversible nature. But these leaders' proposals came too little, too
late; the mechanisms they have suggested should have been in place from the
outset. Attempts to cobble them together by 2017, as the first phase of the
roadmap suggests, simply show Europe's desperation to hold itself together.
The troubles afflicting the eurozone are just a
few of many complex societal issues that decision-makers must wade through on a
daily basis. For such problems, there are no simple solutions. There aren't
even complicated solutions. There are only best-guess measures with no
guarantees of success.
The currency union's underlying flaws, like so many
other modern problems, are far too intricate and perplexing for our minds and
institutions to cope with.
Failing to admit to our own overconfidence in
dealing with the bloc's problems will only perpetuate the crisis playing out
across Europe.
Parode
The Greek crisis has left few, if any, winners.
Within the broad and varied chorus of commentators, there are many different
chants about what happened in the lead-up to the crisis and what should happen
next. Overall, though, most seem to agree that the financial tragedy could have
been prevented. Why, then, wasn't it?
It is said that in ancient Greek tragedies, fate
determines the inescapable outcome of the play's plot. But in English, the word
“fate” only encompasses a small subset of the meanings of the corresponding
Greek terms. With many other, similar gaps between the English and ancient
Greek languages, translators trying to express the subtle richness of ancient
Greek mores have their work cut out for them. So, too, we face an uphill battle
trying to keep the lessons of Greece's financial woes from being lost in
translation for future leaders. But this time, it's a different language we
must translate: economics.
Today's economists are locked in a scrimmage
between half a dozen schools of thought that advocate measures across a spectrum
ranging from tightly disciplined austerity to balanced interventions.
Meanwhile, politicians ride the moody whims of their constituents, and the
media selectively report on the clashes between hard-liners and moderates,
pessimists and optimists, increasingly steering the opinions of their readers.
Within this quagmire, who could blame Europe's decision-makers for failing to
craft solutions more durable than the last-minute compromises they inevitably
settle on? After all, as even former European Council President Herman Van
Rompuy admits, decisions are only made when “they feel their backs are against
the wall, the abyss is looming in front of them, and a knife is on their
throat.” Surely there is a better way to make decisions on important affairs of
state.
Despite the flurry of discussions about facts
and figures, theory and practice, policy and politics, opinion leaders are
essentially divided into two camps: those who believe in the measures forced by
an economic majority, and those who do not. The degree of polarity between the
two positions, taken up by the Continent's best and brightest to whom
governance has been entrusted, sets no one at ease.
But we should not be surprised by the lack of
agreement on the roots of the crisis or the failure to craft a coherent vision
of the path toward a Greek recovery. The processes of the human mind were
perfected and finely tuned for a different world, full of different problems of
a different level of complexity. The eurozone crisis, by comparison, is so astoundingly
complicated that it confounds even the most learned economists and politicians.
Perhaps accepting this reality, then, is the first step toward escaping our
fate of repeating history all over again.
Episode 1:
Confirmation Bias
The human brain has evolved to search for or to
interpret information in a way that confirms its preconceived notions. In
prehistoric times, this confirmation bias kept man out of harm's way by
encouraging preferences for things known to be safe.
Today, it is wreaking havoc in Europe. It is one
thing to observe the obstinacy of those supporting opposing economic theories;
it is another to accept accusations that adherence to other schools of thought
will ruin the livelihoods of millions of people. As the debate between proponents
of different theories and solutions rages on, advocates on all sides of the
argument tend to become more entrenched in their positions, selectively holding
up various facts and figures to support their ideas. Though there has been
little research into ways of avoiding the adverse effects of confirmation bias,
the advice of Philip E. Tetlock seems to be a good place to start: “[gather]
evidence from a variety of sources, [think] probabilistically, [work] in teams,
[keep] score, and [be] willing to admit error and change course.” In doing so,
European policymakers (much like geopolitical analysts) may become more honest
with themselves and, consequently, more accurate in th eir predictions of the
bloc's future.
Episode 2:
Behavioral Macroeconomics
The mechanisms of behavioral macroeconomics are
yet another of the many factors to blame for Greece's crisis. Behavioral
macroeconomics, which enriches the principles of economics with theories of
psychology, studies the drivers of consumer behavior, among other things. It
describes our use of rules of thumb as shortcuts for making decisions in
complex situations and the role of mental metaphors in understanding and
responding to those situations.
These natural human behaviors explain some of
the bafflingly irrational phenomena, such as bubbles and crashes, that occur in
markets. Upon analyzing the eurozone crisis, it would be hard to argue that
these mechanisms aren't at work. For example, believers in austerity often put
forth versions of the tale of the ant and the grasshopper to defend the idea of
attaching severe requirements to aid: The grasshopper (Greece) spent its summer
playing the violin instead of harvesting food, as the ant (Germany) wisely did,
and it would be unwise to lend the grasshopper food during the winter without
his promise to mend his ways when summer returns. In a similar fashion, the
non-believers offer up their own metaphor: The impatient couple (the creditors)
will get no returns in the future if they kill the goose that lays the golden
eggs (Greece).
Unfortunately, the field of behavioral
macroeconomics is relatively new, and as such, it is not yet widely understood.
The chances are very slim that those with an awareness of behavioral
macroeconomics mechanisms will reach a critical mass at any level of governance
or that they will have the necessary energy and focus available to incorporate
the principles into their daily decision-making processes.
Episode 3:
Dunning-Kruger Effect
The final and most impactful cognitive deficit
underpinning the crisis is the Dunning-Kruger effect, or the inability of
people incapable of understanding the situation at hand to recognize their own
incompetence. I do not mean to say that Europe's best and brightest are stupid;
quite the opposite in fact. But their skills – and the skills of any human
brain, however intelligent – are far outmatched by the complexity of Europe's
contemporary problems, so much so that they cannot recognize their own
limitations in forming a solution and consequently cannot counter the negative
impact their unwarranted overconfidence has on European policy.
Exode
To shake the effects of our various built-in
biases, we must first accept that it is our fate to be overwhelmed by the
problems of modern-day society. This conscious act of humility is the necessary
precondition for the painstaking process of exploring, through trial and error,
a world of problems that we have not evolved to solve. It is a process that
cannot be rushed; when time runs out and emergency measures are called for,
most of the power of rational thought is already lost. Likewise, the debate
over whether, in hindsight, politicians avoided a deeper depression or added to
the damage with their specific policy decisions is moot. Instead, all we can do
is watch and wait, hoping that somewhere in the pantheon of politicians, one
will be brave enough to admit that he is not competent enough to solve the
problem at hand.
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