Individuals not clear on the Paradox of Aggregate Thrift argue that it's perfectly rational for any individuals anywhere, no matter their aggregate context, to seek personal savings as a solution to their retirement needs.
Yes, that may seem rational, but it's not rational enough, by a mile!
If the cells in our body had such a definition of rational ... we call them rogue adipose cells, or even cancers.
Once aggregate investment falls short of the demand leakages ... the boom cycle ends in another bust.(And yes, for those new to semantics, aggregate financial savings is called a "deficit in fiat" ONLY in narrow accountants jargon.)
Yet everyone also knows that it's not enough to act on what's ONLY locally rational. Personal, local, regional and aggregate rationality all matter, in everything we do, or we wouldn't call ourselves a social species! A modern culture formed by a social species requires that the sum of all local+aggregate rationalities be greater than the sum of it's respective parts. And that's just the 1st step. It's the ante for even being in the cultural competition game.
We're never acting alone, and we all know it. Everyone is interconnected to those we have affinity for ... and responsibility for.
Somehow, our current training & education is failing to scale that affinity and responsibility past the primitive state of NeoLiberalism.
Why? And how? Distraction, I'd guess. Wealth breeds complacency and narrowing tunnel vision, until the next train comes down the track. Learning well comes down to teaching well ... to aggregate context, not arcane tests minus context.
If we don't do a better job of teaching emerging citizens how to optimize the optimal sum of personal savings PLUS aggregate options ... the only thing we'll accelerate is our Output Gap and our cultural demise.
Nice post, Roger, but that is not an Einstein quote. It seems to have been cobbled together based on some things he said.
ReplyDeleteDid Einstein ever say, “The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift,” and if so, what did he mean?
Thanks Tom,
ReplyDeletefixed
Actually, you didn't, Roger.
ReplyDeleteThis is from Tom's link.
"The origin seems to actually be Metaphoric Mind: A Celebration of Creative Consciousness by Bob Samples (1976):
"Albert Einstein called the intuitive or metaphoric mind a sacred gift. He added that the rational mind was a faithful servant. It is paradoxical that in the context of modern life we have begun to worship the servant and defile the divine." (p. 26)
Only the first part is what Samples claims is from Einstein, though he gives no source or citation and it fits with nothing that is recorded of Einstein's quotes. The second part is Samples' own observation. The two parts have been conflated into a "quote" of Einstein, when there is actually no evidence he said the first part and the second isn't even attributed to him in the original source."
There, I fixed it, MRW.
ReplyDeleteI'd hoped there'd be some comments about the intent of the article ...
C'est la Vie. (Please don't ask me who first said that. I don't think it matters anymore.)
Roger I'd bet the person was French! ;)
ReplyDelete