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Man Still a Slave to Human Nature


By Bill Bonner • February 12th, 2010 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Articles by This Author

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Filed Under: Market • The Americas
Tags: bernanke • blizzard • economics • human nature • inflation

Not much action in the financial markets yesterday. The Dow fell 20 points...completely inconclusive. We don't know whether the final stage has begun or not. We think it has...but we're not sure.

The big action was in the bond market, where the US government tied its all-time record by borrowing $25 billion worth of 10-year notes. All in all, the sale went well...but yields rose slightly...to 3.69%. At some point, bond yields will rise decisively to the upside. But whether that has begun or not...we don't know yet.

Ben Bernanke says he will raise the discount rate "before long." The inflation numbers are coming in higher than expected. At some point, Mr. Bernanke will have to raise rates to stop inflation. But we suspect that that will not happen any time soon. We have a depression to live through first.

But we strongly suspect that Mr. Bernanke has no idea what he is doing.

In short, we don't know what will happen or when it will happen. But we're pretty sure that Mr. Bernanke understands even less than we do. (For reasons we elaborate below...) Still, we're counting on him to guide us. We just watch what he does...and listen to what he says...and head in the opposite direction!

In the meantime, we are snowed in tight...at least three feet of snow is outside our door.

Washington went from panic to desperation yesterday. The snow came down lightly...but then the wind whipped it up. Local officials ceased road clearing operations when it became 'too dangerous' for them to operate. They couldn't see where they were going or what they were doing.

Local motorists were told to get off the road. This seemed unnecessary, from our point of view, since it was impossible to get on the road...or even to tell where the road was. Still, we were warned to stay off so that emergency vehicles could get by.

Wind gusts up to 60 mph were reported. Power went out for thousands of homes. Then, the power company stopped trying to fix the downed wires. They judged it too dangerous to continue working.

Then, the police too, announced that they could not respond to calls. They might as well have sent out an invitation to criminals: Rob a liquor store; please.

Fortunately, the miscreants were holed up too. Nobody wanted to go out. And those that did risked their lives...at least, that was how the authorities made it sound:

"If your car is stuck, remain in your vehicle. Do not attempt to walk to safety. You may become disoriented by the white-out conditions."

They were afraid you would fall into a snow bank. Then, when the giant snow-blower came through, your frozen body might damage the machine.

And so the nation's capital and surrounding suburbs went quiet. No one moved. No one went to work...because there was no work to go to. No one went shopping because there were no shops open. Schools were closed. Edward - who escaped to a friend's house before the snow began - has the whole week off.

This winter is setting records in the Mid-Atlantic region. Fine by us. Our juice works. We have a gas fire in the living room. And we stocked up a supply of wine that would last us through the apocalypse, if necessary.

We are comfortably snowed in. Warm. Well-fed. Even content.

Our refuge yesterday was marred only by one thing - our own thoughts.

"What about the poor people in hospitals and old-age homes?" asked our mother...88 years old. "People can't get in to work. Who looks after them?"

"Well, it's probably time for a little culling," we joked. "Nature has to assert herself from time to time."

Of course, mankind is always trying to get the upper hand against nature. In matters to do with science and technology, he has clearly succeeded. His efforts, compounded over generations, make it possible for your editor to enjoy one of the fiercest blizzards to hit this part of the world in 100 years. He is able to watch the snow through his double-paned, insulated glass windows...while drinking a glass of wine that came all the way from South America. He is able to check the financial news from all over the world on his laptop computer...and then pass on his own opinions and thoughts to hundreds of thousands of readers all over the planet.

To nature, man is master. But to human nature he is still a slave.

Ah...dear reader...that is the kind of thought you get in a blizzard... A thought worth having but one that, on a normal day, would have driven by like a Post Office van. But yesterday, it was stuck in a drift...right in front of the house, impossible to ignore.

Yes, dear reader...man makes progress in things he can touch and feel...twist and hammer. He can fashion himself a warm house...and a truck to deliver the newspaper.

But there are many things he can't get a grip on. Even in the 21st century, despite all the study of domestic relations, he gets along with his spouse no better than Henry VIII got along with his...and he fares no better with his children than Jacob did with his boys.

But wait... You're probably thinking that this snow is causing your editor to go a little stir-crazy...right? He has a case of cabin fever, maybe...he's getting pretty far afield from his Daily Reckoning subject matter, right?

Well, you are wrong.

We'll explain why...below...

One thing that man cannot get a grip on is central banking. Or, more broadly, economics.

Wait a minute. If he can send a man to the moon he can certainly make some progress in economics, right?

Wrong again!

Economics is not a hard science. It's a human science. Like psychology or history...it's an observational science. A decent historian observes what happens and does his best to tell the story faithfully. He is a fool if he thinks he can control it or make it turn out differently. An honest psychologist, also, can sometimes help people understand what they are doing. At the margin, he can even change human behavior - perhaps. But he cannot really change the way people think or feel. Because he cannot change human nature.

Likewise, an economist with a residual trace of dignity and integrity admits that he is only half-capable of describing how people get along in their economic undertakings. At best, he has a dim, vague idea of what is going on. He may even be able to give some good Dutch-uncle advice from time to time. 'Don't spend more than you earn,' he might tell his nephew. Or, 'a penny saved is a penny earned.' Or, 'don't put all your eggs into one basket.' That kind of thing. At the margin, this advice might even be helpful.

But never in his wildest delusions does he imagine that he can improve or control an entire economy. In a theoretical sense, this would mean improving human nature...and he knows this is impossible.

Human nature expresses itself in an infinite variety of ways. One man wants to work hard. One wants to spend every penny. One likes gaudy automobiles. Another is afraid it will be a cold winter...he spends all his money stocking up on food and firewood. Who's right? They all are expressing their own fears, desires, and ideas - through the markets and the economy. Any action an economist takes to improve things necessarily means bending these people away from what THEY want towards what HE thinks they should have. And since prosperity makes no sense outside of the voluntary choices of the people themselves, the meddling economist inevitably makes them poorer. Because his interference shifts time and resources away from what people really want.

The economist is human too. As such, he is prone to human error...and a prisoner of human nature.

What do all these people in Washington do?

Well, we got a copy of the free local paper - The Politico. Want to get a job in the capitol? Just look in the paper. There are dozens of jobs on offer.

"Energy Analyst," says one. They ask for a "proven analyst," whatever that is.

Another 'trade group' advertises for a "Director, Policy and Research...to guide its policy/research initiatives..."

Still another wants a "Vice President for Government Affairs." What is that? "Lobby experience" required, it explains.

How about this: "Legislative Assistant." Senator Bob Corker is looking for someone to handle "energy and natural resources" issues for him. What kind of government is this, dear reader? The people's elected representative knows nothing; so he hires a policy wonk.

Gosh...there a dozens of jobs on offer. And none of them seem to require any real skill...except a talent for BS: Congressional Relations...Federal Relations...Director of Public Policy...Government Affairs Director...

If none of these people ever came to work again, would the Republic be worse off?

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • Salt vs. Snowflakes
  • Here Comes More Snow!
  • Don’t Trust the Numbers
  • Global Warming Temperatures Falling for the Last 10 Years
  • Tackling Economic Clouds

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Posts by This Author

There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. Comment by Dan on 12 February 2010:

    The key to wisdom is humility (quite simply because it reduces confounding when analysing information), yet humility becomes ever more elusive as leaders are shoved into the limelight and forced to lead and strut the stage. They become blinded by the smoke of pride - and so they fall (or become completely compromised). Indeed those groups celebrating 'pride' are merely celebrating their own blindness, and cultures where pride is valued over humility - like our own - are weak and vulnerable. Just watch.

    I doubt the people behind Bernanke are unintelligent or particularly foolish. They (I am sure) know the rules of Chess. But they have chosen the path of bringing about change through destruction, instead of (what most of us think is) the right path of building a system based on simplicity and integrity. It's very difficult to prove that one is better than the other in practice, but even the most ancient wisdom suggests that they are on the path of failure. I do suspect Bill is sensing the fear coming from the banks as they perhaps realize that their gamble is becoming a little too risky.

    As for 'proven analyst' they mean 'you have no hope at all getting this job unless we arranged for you to get it first'.

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