More on Feedback-Free Regulatory Structures (January 17, 2009) Reader reports illustrate just how deep the Feedback-Free regulatory rot goes in the U.S. economy and culture. The main point of The U.S. Economy: Increasingly Marginal Returns (January 15, 2009) was to describe how feedback-free regulatory structures in the U.S. have become nonsensical taxes on the economy and disincentives to productivity. While I am occasionally accused by readers of reveling in the implosion of the global "bogus credit-bubble prosperity" for quasi-spiritual reasons--i.e. we deserve this, suck it up and like it--I would suggest that the pervasive, insidious rot caused by feedback-free regulatory structures is not a spiritual decline but a completely practical decline. Spiritual declines tend to meander into squishy debates and diatribes, but practical declines can be addressed with policies and intellectual frameworks which do what my little book Weblogs & New Media: Marketing in Crisis covers: add a feedback loop. In terms of governmental regulations, we need to add three feedback loops: one for price (what will this regulation cost the economy as a whole, and what is the price-value of the supposed benefits?); one for energy (how much energy will this require which could be otherwise be deployed to do things like grow and transport food, etc.) and a third which addresses the incentives and disincentives to the actual engine of the U.S. economy, entrepreneurs and small business. I received two cogent comments from readers on this topic which illustrate the absolute insanity of feedback-free, price-is-no-object regulatory structures. Please note I keep saying "structures," because this isn't a "problem" of tweaking one regulation overstep here and there--it's fundamentally a system running out of control bexcause there are no feedback loops to control the craziness. Here is correspondent Trey S. (North Carolina) on the absurd waste of mindless/feedback-free regulation and the disincentives to entrepreneurship:
My dad loves this topic because he hates local regulations. He owns granite countertop/flooring company in downtown Charlotte. He doesn't make any money and is only staying open because his monthly loss is less than the cost of medical insurance for a 57 y.o. with a pacemaker. That's a whole nother story.Next up, correspondent Dan K. (Washington state) filed this report on that supposedly encouraged activity known as farming/growing food and the buzzsaw of mindless regulations which chews up entrepreneural dreams without regard for the eventual costs to our society and economy:
I live in King County, WA. Seattle is the major city here. At one time the county was primarily agricultural, but that was a long time ago. Now there are still a few 'protected' farms, but nothing like there used to be in the past.So here is what we have from Washington state to the mid-Atlantic states and everywhere in between: a governmental regulatory system which doesn't care if companies close down and fire all the employees and which doesn't care if food is grown near cities or not.
Once we're going hungry and there are no jobs to be had at any wage, then maybe we'll
add some desperately needed feedback loops to the governmental structures which
have run amok. Or the Depression (made worse by the very regulatory structures illustrated
above) will bankrupt all local and state government and the regulatory system will in effect
destroy itself much like cancer kills the body it inhabits.
I am again way behind on responding to email--thank you for your patience. I have concluded (painfully) that my time management is horribly deficient. As a consequence, please excuse the occasional miss, and the tardiness and brevity of my replies; I do read each email carefully but time constraints will likely limit the length/consistency of my responses. Ironically, perhaps, the growing readership of this site threatens to cave in the entire structure, as the feedback loops of data, reader queries and comments are overwhelming the host. Many readers have suggested I set up a forum. I have explored the idea and concluded I have zero time to manage that feature and the fact is that any forum requires significant oversight/management to maintain its quality. My savvy colleague Karl Denninger, whom I greatly respect and admire, has kindly shared his experience in what it takes to maintain his very successful forum over at the Market Ticker: several hours a day. I don't have even several minutes a day for another project, never mind hours. So here's my conclusion: if a reader of this site wants to start and maintain a third-party hosted forum for oftwominds.com readers, then I will post a prominent link to the forum as long as the quality remains high, i.e. it is monitored and managed to the same level as The Market Ticker or theoildrum.com. There are already thousands of other forums and I really don't think oftwominds would add anything of value by being open forum 1,000,001. I note that another of my respected and admired blogger colleagues, Jesse over at Jesse's Cafe Americain has no forum or comments, and his site does not seem to suffer whatsoever from this deficiency. Thus it seems some of us prefer to host sites without comments or forums, as frustrating as this may be to some readers. I apologize for this inability to host a forum but "me only pawn in game of life" and given that my livelihood comes from doing several other jobs, some prioritizing of my limited time/energy is necessary. I am also seeking a Web-tech expert in the San Francisco Bay Area (where I reside) who can help me make a realistic assessment of the pros and cons of site management software, specifically, WordPress and Serendipity. I would pay for the consultation at a non-corporate rate. (Feel free to refer a friend who charges a reasonable rate and who isn't an evangelist for any one system. I am not seeking a new religion, just objective, experienced advice on basic web management software.) I have begun analyzing my actual time management of this site and discovered that the vast majority of time is spent in research/writing and reader correspondence, neither of which would benefit from software, at least software from this planet. (Those with extra-terrestrial sources of software, please share your secrets! I need a clone or self-programming A.I. avatar!)
Thank you to everyone who has offered me advice and insight, especially Don E. and
Harun I. Thank you, those readers who have generously contributed recently--
there is no superior form of encouragement than your support. I can only promise to do
my best with whatever time and energy is available to me.
"This guy is THE leading visionary on reality.
He routinely discusses things which no one else has talked about, yet,
turn out to be quite relevant months later."
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Or send him coins, stamps or quatloos via mail--please request P.O. Box address. Your readership is greatly appreciated with or without a donation. For more on this subject and a wide array of other topics, please visit my weblog. All content, HTML coding, format design, design elements and images copyright © 2008 Charles Hugh Smith, All rights reserved in all media, unless otherwise credited or noted. I would be honored if you linked this wEssay to your site, or printed a copy for your own use. |
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