Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Recession Is Good

 In the 1987 movie “Wall Street”  Gordon Gecko (played by Michael Douglas) utters the line “greed is good”. It was a time of supreme greediness, indeed: buyouts, LBOs, junk bonds, Drexel, Milken… and it was all followed by the Crash of October 1987. It was the largest one day drop in stock prices, bigger even than 1929 and, despite what you may read, it was NOT technical in nature but very much the result of extreme overvaluation driven by… yup, you guessed it, greed. Just like today, may I say.. But today’s post is not about that. Instead, I’m borrowing Gecko’s infamous line not for its message but in order to paraphrase it. So, Recession Is Good. 

Why?

Yesterday I had a discussion with my niece who is a brilliant university student in Geography. We quickly came to the subject of climate change and she astonished me by saying that every time she has to look at data for her research she starts crying! She is horrified by the destruction of our Earth by humanity and the immense danger to our biosphere. 

How bad is it? It’s  really, really bad. 

From melting ice caps to methane emissions the destruction of our ecosystem is fast and accelerating. As a chemical engineer I used the example of a reaction which proceeds hundreds of times faster when a catalyst is added. 

Her summation was simpler: We are approaching the Tipping Point.

We then discussed ways to solve the problem. She suggested involving industry, ie make the necessary changes attractive, or at least palatable, to big economic players. My suggestion was that you cannot cure gangrene with aspirin, and proposed a complete upheaval of our global economic Permagrowth model. 

My solution: We need Permarecession.

Is it realistic? Definitely not, right now. We cannot turn centuries of ingrained economic dogma on its head, not without some astonishing event(s) which will stun people and force them into the necessary changes in their daily habits. Sadly, it may be too late by then… 

Anyway here are the 5 necessary R’s to get us started. Obviously, they are anathema to 99% of industry and 100% of mainstream politicians…in order of importance and effect:

Reject

Reduce

Repair

Reuse

Recycle (this is a sop, thus acceptable. Notice, it’s  last)

A last thought: Man’s hubris against Nature is currently at an all time high. Instead of seeing COVID as Nature’s warning we are already declaring us winners, what with vaccines and trillion$$.  We may indeed win this battle, but the war is raging and we are losing - badly.






4 comments:

  1. i think perma war is more politically feasible. =)

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  2. sighz... i dunno man... I really don't see a way out of this... why not we accelerate the coming war, at least the winner would get a less damaged planet...

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    1. I think the only way things will change is if a catastrophic natural event happens which can be directly attributed to man-made climate change. Example: For at least a decade before 9/11 terrorism was a known major threat… but it took a most terrible action to wake Americans up… likewise, Hitler was poised to take over when Pearl Harbor forced America’s hand. Hopefully, whatever happens won’t come too late to take action.

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    2. people don't move until it affects them personally.... the people causing the problem are the last people to be affected (basically Americans.... specifically the 0.01%)... for much of the world, the catastrophe has already happened... its just that there is nothing they can do about it...

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