To Hell
in a Hand Cart - Again
By Robert Mercer-Nairne
When, in 1923, Germans were forced to
carry their depreciating currency around in hand carts, the world
was well on its way to hell. Could history be repeating itself?
Unless we can get a grip on the present situation, it easily could
be. A characteristic of these violent disruptions in human affairs
is that an over-arching order, which was thought to exist, turns out
not to, and the baseline for decision making becomes raw survival.
Trust between individuals and organizations collapses and in a dash
to survive, their actions further undermine the fragility of the
existing equilibrium, accelerating a downward spiral towards a more
primitive basis of control.
To avoid this fate we need to understand
how our human systems work. In the absence of consciousness we would
be subject to our biological drivers. Species seem to be
characterized by three drives, one tendency and one constraint. The
three drives a species is subject to are: (1) the drive to maintain
its structural integrity (so in human terms, to root for the home
team, regardless); (2) the drive to reproduce (in human terms, to be
subconsciously driven by sex), and (3) the drive to capitalize on
its distinctive advantage (which, in human terms, translates into an
attempt to dominate each other and our surroundings).
The tendency to mutate (which violates a
species' structural integrity and occurs as a result of random
outcomes that take place during reproduction) only comes to anything
(gives rise to a new species) if the equilibrium a species is part
of breaks down or is still fluid (allowing the mutation room to
establish itself). In human terms, mutation becomes innovation, and
as we know, human creativity only flourishes in an atmosphere that
supports it: where there exists a conscious belief that creative
change can improve our lives. A species' drive to capitalize on its
distinctive advantage leads not to one species (or in human terms,
to one tribe, one nation, or one giant corporation) conquering the
earth, but to an eventual equilibrium with other entities similarly
driven, on account of the fact that all are interdependent to some
degree. This interdependence is the constraint.
With the evolution of consciousness, man
has found himself in the position of being able to imagine future
outcomes and so arrange his affairs in an attempt to attain them.
However, these imagined outcomes tend to be of a general nature,
such as the pursuit of happiness and frequently fall foul of the
means we devise for achieving them. The idea of communism, for
example, embodied a lofty objective but the methods used to attain
it owed more to the law of the jungle than to intelligent and humane
thought. The adage that the end either does or does not justify the
means indicates that we are aware of the problem, even if we have
not grasped its full nature.
What we have attempted to do is to build
organizations that are intended to achieve specific functions, such
as defense, government, the transmission and augmentation of
knowledge, the resolution of squabbles and economic well being, that
reflect our human aspirations. However, these organizations behave
like proto-species, with 'minds' and agendas of their own, and
although we repeatedly try to lock them into a moral equilibrium,
one with another, the dynamic nature of things (variable
personalities, technological break-throughs, external shocks)
frequently disrupts it, allowing one or other of them to dominate,
thereby moving us away from our human ideal. As an example, military
dictatorships frequently emerge to re-establish order, when order
has broken down, but at the expense of social diversity and
individual creativity.
The difficulty we face is that the
systems we put in place today, however well thought out, will not be
effective indefinitely. The dynamic tension that powers them grows
thin when the story that justifies their use in people's minds
ceases to be believed. There are various reasons why this happens,
but the two most obvious are (a) that a changing environment (which
consists not just of the world around us but of our individual
aspirations and understanding) causes us to see our existing
arrangements in a fresh light, and (b) because organizations and
those in them tend, like species, to be driven by an urge to survive
rather than by an urge to achieve their original objective. We have
tried to get round both these problems by instituting systems that
enable governments to be chosen on the basis of popular will, and
corporations to be formed that exist only for so long as they serve
investor and customer needs. Unfortunately both these devices
existed before the catastrophic failures of the early twentieth
century, so neither is foolproof.
In fact the area in which we are weakest
is precisely that of being able to stand back from our systems so as
to adjust them to changing circumstances, before a serious crisis
forces us to do so. And the danger of waiting for a crisis is that
there is no guarantee we will end up with an improvement. Indeed,
there is every likelihood that any new equilibrium we manage to
establish will be based upon a cruder disposition of power - the
downward spiral of the opening paragraph. So what threatens to take
us to hell in a hand cart today, and how can we make this outcome
less likely?
The recent financial crisis that has
abated, thanks to an extraordinary conversion of private debt into
public debt which governments will now try to pay down, with
deflationary consequences, owes much to globalization. In effect,
economic decision making out-ran our global political structures (as
it has done before, most recently towards the end of the nineteenth
century). The growing importance of the emerging economies,
particularly China, and the commensurate weakening of American
hegemony (the position Great Britain found herself in versus the
rest of the world in the nineteenth century) has led to extreme
imbalances which western politicians have tried to accommodate
through leverage (consumer debt) and transfer payments. The former
gave rise to asset bubbles and casino capitalism - essentially debt
chasing its own tail. The latter has given rise to Greece (and to
the problems simmering in a number of other European nations), where
poor productivity was hidden for a time under the Euro blanket.
Intelligent control needs to be asserted
over the global economy, but on a regional basis so as to make our
problems more manageable. As an alternative to the present haphazard
structure of the United Nations, eight regions suggest themselves:
(1) North America, to include Australia, New Zealand, Mexico and the
peoples of the Caribbean and Pacific islands; (2) South America; (3)
the European Union; (4) Russia, to include its former satellites in
the Caucasus; (5) the Middle East, including North Africa; (6)
Sub-Saharan Africa; (7) the Indian subcontinent; and (8) the Far
East. In breaking the problem down in this way, global cooperation
would be made easier and regional coordination more effective. For
once, elected politicians (and dictators) should play second fiddle
to technocrats. Their brief would be this: to stabilize the global
economy, to create an environment in which private capital can seek
out solutions and to support structures that promote individual
freedom. Now is not a time for ideology or populist saber rattling,
but for sound morals and smart thinking.
Robert Mercer-Nairne has previously
published three novels and two collections of poetry. He has a
doctorate in the field of organization theory from the University of
Washington, Seattle. He lives in Malta with his wife.
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