Fabrice Grinda

  • Playing with
    Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • AI
    • Pitch me your startup!
    • Fabrice AI
  • PL
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • IT
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Menu

  • PL
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • IT
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
  • Home
  • Playing with Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Przejdź do treści
Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

Miesiąc: maj 2011

How to minimize human misery in recessions or the macroeconomic implications to hedonic adaptation

How to minimize human misery in recessions or the macroeconomic implications to hedonic adaptation

 

As I was reading The Upside of Irrationality, Dan Ariely’s sequel to the brilliant Predictably Irrational, I started wondering whether there were macro implications and applications for behavioral economics and specifically to the concept of hedonic adaptation.

As I described over the years in my musings on happiness, hedonic adaptation is the process by which we rapidly adapt to changes in our life circumstances and return to our mean level of happiness. Because we disregard its existence, we humans are particularly bad at predicting how positive and negative changes in our lives will affect our happiness. People in Michigan predict that people in California will be happier than they are given the weather. Empirical evidence suggests that a move to more clement weather does temporarily improve people’s happiness, but their happiness level rapidly reverts to the mean as they get used to the gorgeous weather. Likewise, when asked to predict how they would react in the face of negative events such as losing the ability to use their legs, people underestimate their ability to cope. They predict they would be miserable forever while research suggests that after an initial dip in happiness, people rapidly revert to their mean level of happiness.

Behavioral economics suggests ways to delay or speed up our adaptation. If you are considering indulging yourself by buying a new wardrobe and plasma TV for instance you are better off spacing the purchases. Likewise, if you are receiving a massage, you are actually better off interrupting it for a few minutes in the middle.

The reverse applies to negative changes in your life, especially economic cutbacks. People intuit that they should spread the pain, but research suggests that are much better off reducing consumption all at one. In other words, you should move to a smaller apartment, give up cable television and cut back on expensive coffee all at once rather than in increments. The initial amount of pain will be higher, but as we rapidly adapt to our circumstances, the total amount of agony will be lower.

It strikes me that our society and politicians have been making the wrong choices over the last few years in terms of economic policies as we seem unable to take a bit more pain in the near term and thus end up enduring pain for much longer than we might otherwise have to. It was not always the case. In 1981, when Paul Volcker increased the Feds Funds Rate to up to 20% in June 1981, he plunged the US in a deep recession increasing the unemployment rate from 5.8% in 1979 to 9.7% in 1982. However he tamed inflation which peaked at 13.5% in 1981. By 1983, inflation was lowered to 3.2% and the stage had been set for a period of sustainable growth.

More recently though we have artificially propped up many sectors of the economy through bailouts, subsidies and policies which delay those markets reaching equilibrium. We thus create an impression of continued economic malaise as these markets slowly reach equilibrium. In other words, we have longer lower level pain instead of more pain for a shorter period of time.

Even assuming that the total amount of pain is the same in the case where we let markets clear on their own versus propping them up and it’s just the intensity and duration that changes (and I suspect that it’s not), we are clearly making the wrong choice. The continual arrival of bad news prevents us from adapting to our circumstances and we are thus suffering much more than we would otherwise if we had experienced the entire negative outcome in a brief period of time. Moreover, I suspect that continued arrival of negative or mixed economic news is detrimental to society at large and not just for those who have lost their jobs and/or home as the economic uncertainty makes them fear for their own well-being. In other words it’s better to have brief deeper recession than 20 years of Japan like stagnation.

This is not to say we should not act when the economy is in recession. Running counter cyclical fiscal and monetary policy has proven effective time and time again. The issue has more to do with policies that prop up real estate, car manufacturers, and banks, and delay the inevitable reform of public pensions and our overall fiscal adjustment. Despite the potential for moral hazard, you actually can’t let your financial sector go out of business because it is the engine of credit creation without which you don’t have an economy. My concern is less with the need to bailout banks (unfortunately we had to), but the fact that we did not do a good job at cleaning their balance sheets. Instead of disposing of most of their toxic assets with a good bank / bad bank approach (or a number of approaches with the same outcome), we are hoping to let them earn their way out of the problem by keeping short term interest rates low (banks make a lot of money in low rate environments because their borrowing decrease which increases the spread with the rate they earn on the long term loans they made). The result is not dissimilar to the zombie bank problem that infected Japan for the last twenty years. It took twenty years for these banks to clean their balance sheets and start lending again. Credit creation remains broken in the US and might worsen if housing takes a turn for the worse, which it very well might as we don’t seem to have reached the market clearing equilibrium as suggested by continuing price decreases.

Likewise, the entire slew of policies enacted to stem the decrease in housing prices have merely delayed many foreclosures, price decreases and decreased labor mobility as people have stayed in their home longer than they should in the hope of a price recovery. Instead of seeing a rapid adjustment to the market clearing price and acting accordingly, homeowners are enduring agonizing small decreases in prices year after year. Again, in this, we seem to be copying the Japanese example where house prices fell a few percent a year every year for 18 years from 1989 to 2007. In the end residential real estate prices fell over 90% in Tokyo between 1989 and 2007 and commercial real estate fell over 99% in some cases!

As our politicians and public unions face fiscal retrenchment, they should really focus on decreasing human misery by making more cuts and adjustments upfront rather than spreading them little by little over many years.

Hedonic adaptation is one of the most powerful tools at our disposal for stemming human misery. Let’s make the most of it!

Autor FabriceData publikacji 16 maja, 201118 lipca, 2023Kategorie Gospodarka9 komentarzy do How to minimize human misery in recessions or the macroeconomic implications to hedonic adaptation

Great Speech by Seth Priebatsch on gamifying the world

Great Speech by Seth Priebatsch on gamifying the world

Autor FabriceData publikacji 10 maja, 20114 sierpnia, 2023Kategorie Quotes & Poems1 komentarz do Great Speech by Seth Priebatsch on gamifying the world

Augustus: The Life of Rome’s First Emperor by Anthony Everitt is enriching

Augustus: The Life of Rome’s First Emperor by Anthony Everitt is enriching

As a self-styled Roman history buff who has always considered Augustus to be my role model because he essentially singlehandedly created the Roman Empire, I had to read his biography to get the detailed backstory.

I had learned a lot on the topic from Edward Champlin’s fantastic lectures on the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire while at Princeton and had enjoyed HBO’s fantastic TV show Rome and was looking forward to learning more.

The book is not nearly as well written or as enjoyable as Ron Chernow’s brilliant biographies, but I loved both learning more about Augustus’ life and the social and cultural mores of the time.

If you are a fan of Roman history, you owe it to yourself to check it out!

Autor FabriceData publikacji 7 maja, 201125 sierpnia, 2023Kategorie Książki3 komentarze do Augustus: The Life of Rome’s First Emperor by Anthony Everitt is enriching

The Metropolis Case is beautifully written and shockingly compelling

The Metropolis Case is beautifully written and shockingly compelling

I am a bit at a loss for words when it comes to describing my liking of The Metropolis Case. I am not a huge fan of music, dislike opera and don’t particularly care for gay male leads. Yet, somehow, the intertwining tale of four characters connected by music over a period spanning from 1860s Paris to New York after 9/11, becomes slowly engrossing.

I am not quite sure why the characters are so compelling. Their coming of age is predictable. More likely, the underlying, if secondary, issue of aging and its consequences resonated with me. I share the characters’ fears and annoyances at the prospect of aging and lust for the fountain of youth. I suspect the beautiful prose also played a large part in keeping me captivated. As I have mostly been reading non-fiction books and a few thrillers, I have not come across a book as beautifully written in a long time. I also appreciated the whiff of magic realism towards the end of the book (even though it was highly predictable).

If you are looking for a beautifully written novel definitely check out The Metropolis Case.

Autor FabriceData publikacji 6 maja, 201118 lipca, 2023Kategorie KsiążkiDodaj komentarz do The Metropolis Case is beautifully written and shockingly compelling

Fast Five is surprisingly good!

Fast Five is surprisingly good!

This might yet again be an illustration of the power of low expectations. I was not impressed by the prior movies in the series, but was looking forward to a fun mindless evening and ended up with more than I bargained for.

Many sequels which extend and mix the cast of characters from prior movies end up not developing any of them enough and feel like they lack depth and are all over the place (e.g.; Spiderman 3 & Shrek 3). In some movies the ensemble comes together in support of a single coherent storyline as it did with Ocean’s Eleven.

Fast Five brings together all the main actors of the past movies and manages to utilize them effectively and coherently by focusing them on a heist whilst being chased by The Rock and his team. In many ways, the movie is more Ocean’s Fourteen than The Fast and the Furious and is all the better for it.

The movie is a much more violent and action packed Ocean’s Eleven. It’s a bit less slick than that movie, yet manages to mix extreme brutality with humor in a way that makes it highly enjoyable. It goes without saying that the car chases and action scenes were fantastic (the best in the series yet) and a ton of fun to watch.

Turn off your brain and go along for the ride, you won’t regret it!

Autor FabriceData publikacji 4 maja, 201131 lipca, 2023Kategorie Filmy i programy telewizyjne7 komentarzy do Fast Five is surprisingly good!

Search

Recent Posts

  • Sens życia
  • Aktualizacja FJ Labs Q2 2025
  • Rozmowa z Aurenem Hoffmanem na temat świata DaaS: zdywersyfikowane portfele, sprzedaż wtórna i przyjęcia obiadowe
  • Odcinek 50: Trendy na rynku venture
  • Dekodowanie przyszłości: AI, rynek venture i rynki zbytu

Recent Comments

  • Ahmed Aladdin - The Meaning of Life
  • Ahmed Aladdin - The Meaning of Life
  • Germine Rose - The Meaning of Life
  • Fabrice - 2024: Amélie
  • Michael J - 2024: Amélie

Archives

  • lipiec 2025
  • czerwiec 2025
  • maj 2025
  • kwiecień 2025
  • marzec 2025
  • luty 2025
  • styczeń 2025
  • grudzień 2024
  • listopad 2024
  • październik 2024
  • wrzesień 2024
  • sierpień 2024
  • lipiec 2024
  • czerwiec 2024
  • maj 2024
  • kwiecień 2024
  • marzec 2024
  • luty 2024
  • styczeń 2024
  • grudzień 2023
  • listopad 2023
  • październik 2023
  • wrzesień 2023
  • sierpień 2023
  • czerwiec 2023
  • maj 2023
  • kwiecień 2023
  • marzec 2023
  • luty 2023
  • styczeń 2023
  • grudzień 2022
  • listopad 2022
  • październik 2022
  • wrzesień 2022
  • sierpień 2022
  • czerwiec 2022
  • maj 2022
  • kwiecień 2022
  • marzec 2022
  • luty 2022
  • styczeń 2022
  • listopad 2021
  • październik 2021
  • wrzesień 2021
  • sierpień 2021
  • lipiec 2021
  • czerwiec 2021
  • kwiecień 2021
  • marzec 2021
  • luty 2021
  • styczeń 2021
  • grudzień 2020
  • listopad 2020
  • październik 2020
  • wrzesień 2020
  • sierpień 2020
  • lipiec 2020
  • czerwiec 2020
  • maj 2020
  • kwiecień 2020
  • marzec 2020
  • luty 2020
  • styczeń 2020
  • listopad 2019
  • październik 2019
  • wrzesień 2019
  • sierpień 2019
  • lipiec 2019
  • czerwiec 2019
  • kwiecień 2019
  • marzec 2019
  • luty 2019
  • styczeń 2019
  • grudzień 2018
  • listopad 2018
  • październik 2018
  • sierpień 2018
  • czerwiec 2018
  • maj 2018
  • marzec 2018
  • luty 2018
  • styczeń 2018
  • grudzień 2017
  • listopad 2017
  • październik 2017
  • wrzesień 2017
  • sierpień 2017
  • lipiec 2017
  • czerwiec 2017
  • maj 2017
  • kwiecień 2017
  • marzec 2017
  • luty 2017
  • styczeń 2017
  • grudzień 2016
  • listopad 2016
  • październik 2016
  • wrzesień 2016
  • sierpień 2016
  • lipiec 2016
  • czerwiec 2016
  • maj 2016
  • kwiecień 2016
  • marzec 2016
  • luty 2016
  • styczeń 2016
  • grudzień 2015
  • listopad 2015
  • wrzesień 2015
  • sierpień 2015
  • lipiec 2015
  • czerwiec 2015
  • maj 2015
  • kwiecień 2015
  • marzec 2015
  • luty 2015
  • styczeń 2015
  • grudzień 2014
  • listopad 2014
  • październik 2014
  • wrzesień 2014
  • sierpień 2014
  • lipiec 2014
  • czerwiec 2014
  • maj 2014
  • kwiecień 2014
  • luty 2014
  • styczeń 2014
  • grudzień 2013
  • listopad 2013
  • październik 2013
  • wrzesień 2013
  • sierpień 2013
  • lipiec 2013
  • czerwiec 2013
  • maj 2013
  • kwiecień 2013
  • marzec 2013
  • luty 2013
  • styczeń 2013
  • grudzień 2012
  • listopad 2012
  • październik 2012
  • wrzesień 2012
  • sierpień 2012
  • lipiec 2012
  • czerwiec 2012
  • maj 2012
  • kwiecień 2012
  • marzec 2012
  • luty 2012
  • styczeń 2012
  • grudzień 2011
  • listopad 2011
  • październik 2011
  • wrzesień 2011
  • sierpień 2011
  • lipiec 2011
  • czerwiec 2011
  • maj 2011
  • kwiecień 2011
  • marzec 2011
  • luty 2011
  • styczeń 2011
  • grudzień 2010
  • listopad 2010
  • październik 2010
  • wrzesień 2010
  • sierpień 2010
  • lipiec 2010
  • czerwiec 2010
  • maj 2010
  • kwiecień 2010
  • marzec 2010
  • luty 2010
  • styczeń 2010
  • grudzień 2009
  • listopad 2009
  • październik 2009
  • wrzesień 2009
  • sierpień 2009
  • lipiec 2009
  • czerwiec 2009
  • maj 2009
  • kwiecień 2009
  • marzec 2009
  • luty 2009
  • styczeń 2009
  • grudzień 2008
  • listopad 2008
  • październik 2008
  • wrzesień 2008
  • sierpień 2008
  • lipiec 2008
  • czerwiec 2008
  • maj 2008
  • kwiecień 2008
  • marzec 2008
  • luty 2008
  • styczeń 2008
  • grudzień 2007
  • listopad 2007
  • październik 2007
  • wrzesień 2007
  • sierpień 2007
  • lipiec 2007
  • czerwiec 2007
  • maj 2007
  • kwiecień 2007
  • marzec 2007
  • luty 2007
  • styczeń 2007
  • grudzień 2006
  • listopad 2006
  • październik 2006
  • wrzesień 2006
  • sierpień 2006
  • lipiec 2006
  • czerwiec 2006
  • maj 2006
  • kwiecień 2006
  • marzec 2006
  • luty 2006
  • styczeń 2006
  • grudzień 2005
  • listopad 2005

Categories

  • Crypto/Web3
  • Gospodarka
  • Rynki zbytu
  • Gadżety techniczne
  • Podróże
  • Polecane posty
  • Nowy Jork
  • Przegląd roku
  • Zabawy
  • Przedsiębiorczość
  • Szczęście
  • Przemówienia
  • OLX
  • Zabawa z jednorożcami
  • FJ Labs
  • Filmy i programy telewizyjne
  • Wywiady i rozmowy przy kominku
  • Osobiste przemyślenia
  • Książki
  • Przemyślenia biznesowe
  • Gry wideo
  • Przegląd roku
  • Optymalizacja życia
  • FJ Labs
  • Podejmowanie decyzji
  • Gospodarka
  • Asset Light Living
  • Przemyślenia
  • Optymizm i szczęście
  • Psy

Meta

  • Zaloguj się
  • Kanał wpisów
  • Kanał komentarzy
  • WordPress.org
Pitch me your startup!
  • Home
  • Playing with Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

>
This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.