Showing posts with label Tyranny of experts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyranny of experts. Show all posts

July 02, 2016

But why do some, like Gillian Tett, insist on trusting some totally failed experts?

Sir, Gillian Tett writes on “Why we no longer trust the experts” July 2.

But one could also ask: “Why do some keep trusting totally failed expert?” or “Why are not experts questioned more?”

Those responsible for Basel I and II regulations, they allowed banks to leverage equity especially much with those assets perceived ex ante as safe, precisely those assets to which bank could create excessive exposures; and which could result very dangerous if ex post, as indeed happened, these assets turned out to be very risky, like the AAA rated securities and sovereigns like Greece.

And by imposing higher capital requirements on what was perceived as risky, like SMEs and entrepreneurs, they made it even harder than usual for these extremely important economic agents to access bank credit.

And yet, basically the same experts, using basically the same although much more complicated script, are allowed to keep on regulating with Basel III.

That would never happen in Hollywood or Bollywood after a major box-office flop.

Here is an aide memoire on the egregious mistakes of current bank regulations.

So why is it so hard for FT that so proudly announces a motto of “Without fear and without favour”, to shame the failed regulators, as they should be shamed. There is nothing o dangerous as experts not duly sanctioned. Frankly, from the looks of it, we should not trust many expert journalists either.

PS. I believe it is much more important to make sure our banks are regulated by adequate persons than picking a good restaurant… but perhaps some would disagree.

@PerKurowski ©

July 26, 2014

Globally concentrating on the knowledge of the knowledgeable, renouncing to knowledge diversity, represents a huge systemic risk.

Sir, I refer to Gillian Tett “Chess in cyberspace: a smart move?” July 26. I am not a chess player, and I have not really been impacted by Fischer and Spassky playing chess on TV, or by “Deep Blue” beating Kasparov... and so I might be out on a limb here.

I agree with Tett that it is sad that globalization of competition has dramatically reduced the possibilities like singing Queen’s “We are the Champions” with true emotion, as clearly “We are the local champions” does not have the same ring to it.

But, it is when Gillian Tett describes how “parents are tapping the most brilliant brains in places such as India, Bulgaria or Moscow, to deliver online tutorials for their offspring via Skype”, that I get most concerned, because it is another example of a global concentration on the knowledge of the knowledgeable, which could in the end lead us to miss out on some really important knowledge diversity.

And frankly let us look at what has happened in the area of bank regulations since someone (not me), decided we should concentrate the most brilliant regulatory brains in the Basel Committee, and these most brilliant brains with too much hubris decided they could act as risk managers for the world, and on top of that decided to delegate much of that role into some few brilliant brains of some few credit rating agencies. As had to be expected, catastrophe ensued!

And now our banks are becoming riskier by the day, as their balances become more packed up with fewer and fewer assets deemed as absolutely safe, and without them being allowed the benefits of diversifying among the risky.

A decade ago, I told my colleague Executive Directors at the World Bank that if, by lottery, they would substitute for one of us with a plumber or a registered nurse, also picked by lottery we would be a much wiser Board. Of course that, in a mutual admiration club, was not too well received… but I still hold it to be true… even to become truer by the day.

June 17, 2014

How much safe sound private money can we really have before it really becomes just too dangerous?

Sir, Paul McCulley writes “The crisis of the past decade was a reminder of the instability inherent in private money”, as if public money is inherently stable, “Make shadow banks safe and private money sound” June 17.

Also, as I see it, the number one reason private money turned unstable, was precisely the efforts of regulators to make it safe… as they concocted those senseless capital requirements for banks based on perceived risks, and which only guaranteed that when a bank crisis resulted from excessive exposures to what was perceived as absolutely safe, as all bank crisis do, the banks would then be standing there with their defenses, their capital, at a very low.

No Mr. McCulley, you at Pimco might have a vested interest in it, but I guarantee you that we, the rest, have no wish for Easterly’s tyrant experts to make our private money too safe… that is just too dangerous.

June 16, 2014

FT Do you suggest we leave it all in hands of an Easterly type tyranny of “experts” in thinking machines morality?

Sir, so you want some morality experts to begin thinking about “the morality of thinking machines”? June 16.

The same type of experts that came up with those utterly immoral (and stupid) capital requirements for banks based on perceived risks which discriminate against those already discriminated and favors those already favored?

The same morality possessed by those willing to finance any human rights violator around the world, as long as the risk premium is right?

No thanks the way it looks some of us might prefer betting on artificial intelligence coming up with its own morality… because at least it would most probably not be so dumb so as to think that bank crises arise from excessive much exposures to the ex ante risky.

At least I would not like to leave this in the hands of an Easterly type tyranny, of experts in thinking machines morality.

PS. Is it moral for FT to cover up the stupidity of experts?

May 28, 2014

What can an insignificant ego like mine, even if absolutely right, do against significant egos, even when these are absolutely wrong?

What is perceived as risky never constitutes much real risk. What most drives a financial doomsday machine is what is perceived as absolutely safe; which is why risk-weighted capital requirements for banks based on perceived risks, which favors bank lending to “the infallible” is so absolutely dumb.

But unfortunately that seems too difficult to comprehend, for instance by Martin Wolf.

When he now begs for to “Disarm our doomsday machine” May 28, Wolf still shows no sign of having understood how dangerous the pillar of our current bank regulations really is. Why do I say so?

Wolf quotes Timothy Geithner saying “The safer the visible financial system is made, the greater the danger that the fragility will emerge somewhere less visible”, and connects that to the need of “preventing such obvious absurdities as the build-up of huge off-balance sheet positions in vital institutions. And though that might have some truth to it, the real fact is that currently it is the visible financial system that has been made dangerous, by trying to make it safe. For instance look at hedge funds and you will see that they never ever can achieve leverages similar to those authorized banks to have by regulators, if keeping to the “absolutely safe”.

No the best way to “disarm our doomsday machine” is to get rid of the distortions produced by risk-weighting, and to follow the simple rule of not procrastinating, meaning solving the problems while they are still small.

In May 2003, as an Executive Director of the World Bank I told bank regulators gathered to discuss Basel II “A regulation that regulates less, but is more active and trigger-happy, and treats a bank failure as something normal, as it should be, could be a much more effective regulation. The avoidance of a crisis, by any means, might strangely lead us to the one and only bank, therefore setting us up for the mother of all moral hazards—just to proceed later to the mother of all bank crises. Knowing that “the larger they are, the harder they fall,” if I were regulator, I would be thinking about a progressive tax on size. But, then again, I am not a regulator, I am just a developer.”

And though I am still not a regulator I still stand by that.

Mr. Martin Wolf. Currently we still have regulations which guarantee banks holding especially little capital when what is especially dangerous, one of “the infallible”, blows up. Disarm that AAA-bomb! Capisce?

The fact is that big egos can be just as dangerous as the tyranny of William Easterly’s experts.

PS. Sir, just to let you know, I am not copying Martin Wolf with this, as he has asked me not to send him any more comments related to the capital requirements for banks, as he understands it all… at least so he thinks.

April 10, 2014

When restructuring the World Bank you might want to start even higher than its presidency.

Sir, I refer to your editorial “Restructuring hell at the World Bank”, April 10.

You end it stating “If there is a silver lining to the bank’s turmoil, it is this: the Bretton Woods Institutions belong to the world. From now on, they must be headed by the best people available”

Not so fast! When presenting my book Voice and Noise, May 2006, in which I reflected on my experiences as an Executive Director of the World Bank, 2002-2004 this is what I said:

“Although we proudly name ourselves the World Bank, the fact is that we are more of a “Pieces of the World Bank”, with 24 Executive Director representing parochial interests. As a consequence I sadly had to conclude in that the World itself, call it Mother earth if you want, in these times of globalization, is in fact the Bank’s most underrepresented constituency.

This needs to be fixed, urgently, as we need to be able to stimulate a profoundly shared ownership for the long-term needs of our planet; that is if we want to survive as a truly civilized society worthy of the term civilization. As I see it, adding a couple of truly independent seven-year-term Executive Directors, whose role would be to think about the world of our grandchildren, way beyond the 2015 of the Millennium Development Goals—could be what the World Bank most needs now.”

And Sir, I still stand by that. 

The way the World Bank’s Executive Directors are nominated by ministries, does not guarantee the existence of sufficient intellectual and independent diversity at the Board. And that is the number one condition that needs to be satisfied in order for any international finance institution, to become something more than a well intended mutual admiration club, run by an also well intended management in natural pursuit of their own and perhaps even more parochial objectives.

PS. I have been asked by a representative of the civil society, whatever that now means, to add some additional straight to the point explanations of what I mean, and so here it is:

1. I guarantee that if one Joe the Plumber or one Nancy the Nurse, selected through lottery from 25 plumbers or 25 nurses, substituted for one of the 25 current executive directors, chosen also by lottery, we would have a 75% chance of ending up with a more commonsense and wise Board of Executive Directors at the World Bank, and less than a 1% chance to end up with something meaningfully worse.

2. If the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision (or perhaps the IMF) had counted with one biologist or an expert in the contagion of diseases, they would never ever have introduced something as dumb as the risk-weighted capital requirements for banks which, besides distorting the allocation of bank credit, amplify dramatically the consequences of any insufficient or any excessive ex ante perception of risk. And the world would have been saved from the current crisis. The ongoing intellectual incest is so bad that even 7 years after the outburst of the crisis they still do not realize what they have done.

3. With reference to William Easterly’s 'The tyranny of experts', the real nightmare is to be in the hands of a group of similar experts on the same subject.

4. One of the best ways to control for the dangers of group-think, is to subject the group to the authority of some who is guaranteed not to belong to the group, and has no reason for wanting to belong to the group.

PS. Whenever you click on to social media, say this little prayer: “Please God, save me from becoming a victim of intellectual incest