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Orientating the economically disorientated : Comments
By Cameron Leckie, published 25/8/2011'Observe, orient, decide and act' is a winning mantra for fighter pilots, and could be for economists as well.
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Yet another commentator seeing the GFC through the prism of their own bias and prejudice. And true to form, not a single word of a) how it could have been avoided or b) what to do now that it has happened.
Economists cannot forecast the future any better than astrologers or journalists. The very best they can do is to shed a little light on the past - but even then, they cannot resist pushing their own particular barrow a little further along its path. The rationale in this article is on a par with Southern Baptists describing AIDS as God's punishment for sinful behaviour, or Ron Paul blaming the Federal Reserve for all the economic disruption in the US.
The basic analysis is sound, in that the three levels of activity - primary, secondary and tertiary as described by John Michael Greer - can operate independently of each other. What he fails to do however is to connect the dots: while they exist independently, there are also levels of interdependency between them that cannot be ignored, or discounted. While "you can’t eat money" is a handy sound-bite, as with most such trite truisms it serves to obscure, rather than clarify.
We, collectively, allowed the GFC to happen, by living under the illusion that there is no tomorrow, when borrowings from the tertiary economy need to be repaid. To blame this on the tertiary economy itself is to abrogate all responsibility for our own actions. It's like saying "it wasn't me who murdered Colonel Mustard, it was the gun".
While we all know that the blame-someone-else game is the mainstay of the US legal system - without it, there would be a third the number of lawyers there, for a start - it is not a solution, but merely a symptom of the problem.
Similarly, to offer "reducing dependence on the tertiary (or money) economy" as a solution, as the article's author does, is like saying that the secret to long life is to keep breathing.