Showing posts with label Covid-19. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Covid-19. Show all posts
November 11, 2023
Sir, I refer to “Please put statisticians in charge of data for the next crisis” Sir David Norgrove, FT November 11.
July 2020, I tweeted:
Sweden kept all schools until 9th grade open. Parents of children in 9th grade are almost always less than 50 years of age. In Sweden, as of July 24, out of 5,687 Coronavirus deaths 71, 1.2%, were younger than 50 years.
Conclusion: Keep schools open, keep older teachers at home and have grandparents refrain from hugging their grandchildren. Disseminating data on COVID-19 without discriminating by age, is in essence misinformation.
I had obtained the data for the above from: https://www.statista.com/statistics/1107913/number-of-coronavirus-deaths-in-sweden-by-age-groups/
October 2020 the Washington Post published a letter in which I opined:
“Roughly 90% of all coronavirus deaths will occur in those 60 years of age and older.
Equally roughly 90% of the virus’s social and economic consequences will be paid by those younger than 60. It’s an intergenerational conflict of monstrous proportions."
March 2021 I tweeted:
“Georges Clemenceau’s “War is too serious a matter to entrust to military men” could be updated to: A Covid-19 response ‘is too serious a matter to entrust’ to epidemiologist”
At this moment I feel that besides not entrusting epidemiologists I might have to include some statisticians e.g., from the UK Statistic Authority. They must have known it, so why did they not speak up?
June 2023 I asked ChatGPT-OpenAI:
"Suppose a virus hits a nation, and to its authorities it's evident that its mortality rate depends the most on age. In such a case, transmitting data to the population about the total number of deaths without discriminating this by age, could that be deemed to be misinformation?"
A.I. answered:
"In the scenario you described, if the authorities have clear evidence that the mortality rate of the virus is significantly influenced by age, transmitting data about the total number of deaths without providing any information or context about age distribution could be considered incomplete or potentially misleading information”
Sir David Norgrove ends his opinion with “Churchill recognized the need for high quality statistics to help him run the war.”
In March 2020 I tweeted:
“In February, I visited Churchill War Rooms in London Reading UK’s plans of building up herd immunity against coronavirus, I have a feeling Winston would have agreed with such stiff upper lip policy: “I have nothing to offer but fever, coughing, chills and shortness of breath”
Now I ask you Sir. Is this not a kind of document that should be presented to any Covid type of inquiry that, without fear and without favour, really dares to get to the bottom of the problems?
@PerKurowski
June 25, 2023
A strong national spirit/character is what’s most needed for any preparedness, even against a pandemic.
Sir, I refer to Tim Harford’s “Is it even possible for countries to prepare for a pandemic?” FT June 24, 2023.
“Be prepared! It’s the scout’s motto. But prepared for what?” I was never a boy-scout but as I have understood that movement it was to be prepared courageously for the unexpected, not silently accepting a lockdown; and to be able to lit a fire without matches, not to learn to deploy sewage monitors.
So sadly, though Harford does indeed know much of economy, here I think he does not even scratch the surface of what’s most needed, like:
First: The understanding that, for a nation/society as a whole, a response to the pandemic can be much more harmful than the pandemic itself.
Second: That just as George Clemenceau opined, “War is too serious a matter to entrust to military men”, a pandemic is also too serious a matter to entrust to epidemiologists” Any preparedness against a pandemic must include a wide diversity of opinions.
Third: Information, information and information: With respect to this Harford mentions: “Joshua Gans, economist and author of The Pandemic Information Solution (2021), argues that we’ve learnt that pandemics can be thought of as information and incentive problems.” No, begin by giving the people full information and then let them understand and decide if and what incentives are needed.
In July 2020 I tweeted:
“Sweden kept all schools until 9thgrade open. Parents of children in 9th grade are almost always less than 50 years of age. In Sweden, as of July 24, out of 5,687 Coronavirus deaths 71, 1.2%, were younger than 50 years.”
“Conclusion: Keep schools open, keep older teachers at home and have grandparents refrain from hugging their grandchildren. Disseminating data on Covid-19 without discriminating by age, is in essence misinformation.”
Clearly information on the relation between Covid-19 and age was available but was not sufficiently provided. One explanation could be that the Covid-19 pandemic hit the world in the midst of a polarization pandemic. 17 October 2020 I wrote in a letter to FT “way too many polarization profiteers just don’t want harmony vaccines to appear.”
March 2020 I tweeted:
“In February, I visited Churchill War Rooms in London Reading UK’s plans of building up herd immunity against coronavirus, I have a feeling Winston would have agreed with such stiff upper lip policy: “I have nothing to offer but fever, coughing, chills and shortness of breath”
Sir, Neville Chamberlain’s spirit inspired UK’s pandemic answer. Just like he is present in the risk weighted bank capital requirements which incentivize much more the refinancing of the “safer” present than the financing of the “riskier future”
I summarized the result of the above three failings in a letter published by the Washington Post in October 2020 in which I stated: "Roughly 90% of all coronavirus deaths will occur in those 60 years of age and older. Equally roughly 90% of the virus’s social and economic consequences will be paid by those younger than 60. It’s an intergenerational conflict of monstrous proportions."
PS. Sir, if you are interested you might want to read what ChatGPT – OpenAI answered when I asked "Suppose a virus hits a nation, and to its authorities its evident that its mortality rate depends the most on age. In such a case, transmitting data to the population about the total number of deaths without discriminating this by age, could that be deemed to be misinformation?"
PS. Sir, you should be interested in the above, it evidences how humans can begin dialoguing with artificial intelligence, so as to have a better chance of keeping their Human Masters and appointed experts in check.
@PerKurowski
June 16, 2021
Spurn bank regulators' false promises.
Sir, Martin Wolf makes a good case for “We should not throw liberal trade away for the wrong reasons and in the wrong way”, “Spurn the false promise of protectionism” FT June 16.
Yet, when regulators, decades ago, decided to throw liberal access to bank credit, by imposing credit risk weighted bank capital requirements, something which completely distorted the access to bank credit, Wolf and 99.99 percent of those who should have spoken up, kept mum.
Though I’ve no idea whether they read it, in a 2019 letter I wrote to the Executive Directors and Staff of the International Monetary Fund, I argued that these risk weights are to access to credit, precisely what tariffs are to trade, adding “only more pernicious”
Wolf writes that “the US economy has suffered from high and rising inequality and a poor labour force performance” and includes among other explanations the “rent-extracting behaviour throughout the economy”
But anyone who reads “Keeping at it” 2018 in which Paul Volcker’s 2018 valiantly confessed: “The assets assigned the lowest risk, for which bank capital requirements were therefore low or nonexistent, were those that had the most political support: sovereign credits and home mortgages”, should be able to understand that rent-extraction also occurs by means of cheaper and more abundant access to credit.
And boy did regulators throw away unencumbered access to credit in “the wrong way”
Here follows four examples:
To establish their risk weights, they used the perceived credit risks, what’s seen “under the street light” while, of course, they should have used the risks for banks conditioned on how credit risks were perceived.
By allowing banks, when the outlook was rosy, to hold little capital, meaning paying high dividends, lots of share buy backs, and huge bonuses, they placed business cycles on steroids.
Very little of their capital requirements cover misperceived credit risks or unexpected events. Therefore, just as in 2008 with the collapse of AAA rated mortgage back securities, and now with a pandemic, banks were doomed to stand there with their pants down.
With risk weights of 0% the sovereign and 100% the citizens, which de facto imply bureaucrats know better what to do with credit they’re not personally responsible for than e.g., entrepreneurs, they smuggled communism/statism/fascism into our banking system.
“We will make your bank systems safe with our credit risk weighted bank capital requirements” Sir, what amount of wishful thinking must have existed for the world, its Academia included, to so naively have fallen for the hubristic promises of some technocrats.
@PerKurowski
June 10, 2021
Bank regulators never considered the unexpected, like a pandemic
Sir, Angela Merkel, Justin Trudeau and Erna Solberg opine: “The Covid-19 pandemic has taught us that the costs of prevention and early response are small compared with the consequences of under-investment.” “G7 should pay lion’s share of costs to help end the pandemic” FT June 10.
That’s correct but it should not have taken a pandemic to understand that banks need also to have sufficient capital so as to be able to respond to unexpected events. Unfortunately, instead of basing their bank capital requirements on such possibilities, or on that of misperceived credit risks e.g., 2008’s AAA rated mortgage-backed securities, bank regulators, the Basel Committee, doubled down on perceived credit risks, those which were already being cleared for by banks.
The result? Though so many don’t want the innocent child to be heard, the banks now stand there naked.
Sir, again, if what’s perceived as safe is safe, and what’s perceived as risky is risky, would banks need capital. Not much.
Bank regulations need a complete overhaul, meaning going back to the humbling reality of risks being hard to measure; instead of digging us down even deeper in the hole with Basel IV, Basel V and so on.
PS. July 12, 2012 Martin Wolf wrote: “Per Kurowski, a former executive director of the World Bank, reminds me regularly, crises occur when what was thought to be low risk turns out to be very high risk.” Martin Wolf clearly heard me, but he did not listen.
@PerKurowski
December 01, 2020
The need for debt to equity conversions is an inescapable reality
Sir, Martin Wolf writes: “It will be crucial to deal with debt overhangs. As the OECD stresses, converting debt into equity will be an important part of this effort”, “A light shines in the gloom cast by Covid” December 1.
Indeed, with so much corporate debt in being pushed down by Covid-19 into junk rated territory, both debtors and creditors will need massive debt to equity conversions, in order to buy the time needed to reactivate assets, before these also become junk. And whether highly indebted companies, are important and viable enough to merit help from taxpayers, from money printers or from banks, by grants or other means, the proof in the pudding is precisely first seeing hefty debt to equity conversions.
The credit rating agencies could also be helpful by indicating how much of each investment grade rated bonds that has been downgraded to junk, should be converted into equity so as to have the remainders of those bonds recover an investment grade rating.
Now, with respect to the restructure emerging and developing countries’ debts, given the current very low interest rates, we unfortunately do not count with the highly discounted US 30 years zero coupon bonds, those which helped create the guarantees that allowed the Brady bonds to become so useful when restructuring many Latin American debts in 1989.
@PerKurowski
November 30, 2020
12 years since, and yet the true cause of the 2008 crisis shall seemingly not be told
Sir, John Flint a former Before chief executive of HSBC writes: “Before 2008, regulators’ approach to conduct risk in banking was what they called “principles based” — deliberately light touch. It relied too much on banks’ abilities to govern themselves and it failed.” “Warning lights are flashing for Big Tech as they did for banks” November 30.
“principles based”? Yes, but tragically with risk weighted bank capital requirements based on a very wrong principle, namely that what’s perceived as risky is more dangerous to our bank system than what’s perceived as safe.
“It relied too much on banks’ abilities to govern themselves and it failed.”? No, it relied way too much on some very few human fallible credit rating agencies, a systemic risk.
“deliberately light touch”? If as Basel II allowed, banks could leverage a mindboggling 62.5 times their capital with assets rated AAA to AA, I would not call that a “light touch”, I would call it putting Minsky Moments on steroids.
“This time it is the technology sector rather than the financial that is leaving us all exposed.”
Sir, current bank capital requirements, 12 years since the 2008 crisis, are still mostly based on the expected credit risks banks clear for on their own; not on misperceived credit risks, 2008’ AAA rated MBS, or unexpected dangers, like COVID-19. Therefore, banks will again stand there with their pants down. A good job Sir?
@PerKurowski
November 24, 2020
FT you have the manpower to analyze how risk weighted bank capital requirements distort the allocation of bank credit.
Sir, Megan Greene writes: “Stubbornly low interest rates have failed to generate significant aggregate demand. That suggests the world has been stuck in a prolonged liquidity trap.” “Financial policymakers are right to fight the last war”, November 24.
FT would do all a favor if it sends out its savvy journalists to investigate bank rates given the current different capital requirements. That should cover assets risk-weighted 20%, 50%, 100% and 150%. And then they should try to analyze how these rates relate to each other and how this compares the relation of interest rates for similar assets, before the introduction in 2004 of the risk weighted bank capital requirements for private sector assets.
That would allow FT to understand how these regulations distort the allocation of credit in favor of those who being perceived as safe are favored anyway, and against those who perceived as risky are anyhow disfavored.
But what fighting the last war is Greene talking about? The 2008 crisis was caused by AAA rated securities turning out risky but our bank regulations still are mostly based on the expected credit risks banks should clear for on their own; not on misperceived credit risks or unexpected dangers, like COVID-19. As a consequence, banks will now stand there with their pants down. Good job!
@PerKurowski
October 17, 2020
The most dangerous underlying condition of the US, is that like so many other nations, it has been hit by the Polarization Pandemic.
Hannah Kuchler writing about her FT lunch with Atul Gawande on the battle to beat Covid-19, writes: “The US is polarised over its priorities, between those arguing in favour of putting the economy first, and those who want to concentrate on saving lives.”. It also states “People are more at risk of Covid-19 if they have underlying conditions such as diabetes and hypertension.”
Sir, when compared to age, diabetes and hypertension read like truly insignificant underlying conditions. In USA, as of October 14, those older than 70 years comprise 89% of all those dead from Covid-19 in USA, those under 45 years, 3%. Yet, in terms of who will have to pay the economic/ mental health/ societal costs of any top down imposed responses to the virus that favors saving lives, the reverse percentage is to be expected.
Sir, with those kinds of figures, don’t you think one could develop a response to Covid-19 that could better consider both priorities?
Of course, one could. Just look at Sweden keeping schools up to 9th year open while asking grandfathers to refrain from hugging their grandchildren.
Why has that not happened in the US? The answer to Hannah Kuchler’s “Is the US as a country more at risk because of the underlying condition of its healthcare system?” Is YES! It also suffers the polarization virus, and way too many polarization profiteers just don’t want harmony vaccines to appear.
@PerKurowski
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