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The Long Wave
Or why Asian economies are collapsing and the Democrats are cutting welfare By Donella H. Meadows (Whole Earth Summer 1998 [ Buy This Issue ]
)

Dozens
of people are eager to explain the collapse of the Asian Tiger economies. Few
of them predicted it. Other economic implosions, from the 1995 failure of
Britain's venerable Barings Bank to the 1987 dive in the US stock market, have
been explained primarily after the fact.
Similarly,
the 1994 rise to Congressional power of the US right was not predicted, nor
convincingly accounted for afterward as a rebellion of white male voters. The
conservative shift is not a male, American, or sudden phenomenon. For almost
two decades there has been an unrelenting worldwide pressure pushing right.
Unpredicted.
Poorly explained even afterward. In the 1980s in addition to Ronald Reagan and
Margaret Thatcher there were conservative swings throughout Europe. Even
Canada, the Netherlands, and Denmark questioned their long-entrenched welfare
states. At the fascist edge arose anti-government militias in the United
States, neo-Nazis in Germany, and anti-Semitic Jean Marie Le Pen in France.
Vladimir Zhirinovsky preached genocide in Russia. Serbian soldiers practiced it
in Bosnia. Why? Why now?
"Unpredicted
and poorly explained" holds for financial volatility too, which also is
not a recent matter and not confined to one part of the world. Barings Bank was
one of many casualties of the razor-edge sensitivity of the global capital
market. Other examples were the demise of US savings and loan banks in the
1980s, the collapse of the junk bond empire, the burst of real estate bubbles
in Japan, the bankruptcy of Orange County, California from overzealous
investment in derivatives, and the New Era Fund Ponzi scheme that took in some
of the most level-headed portfolio managers in the nonprofit world.
The
political economy seems to have wandered into strange territory. All the
business indicators were up on the day when the Dow crashed 508 points. The US
GNP is rising, but not the income of the average worker. Companies make record
profits by firing people. Tax breaks for the rich produce not investment in
productive capacity, but speculation in financial instruments untied to real
assets. And policies that were considered mainstream twenty-five years ago
(invest in roads and schools and research, shore up the poor, be generous with
foreign aid, preserve endangered species, strengthen environmental regulations,
forbid racial discrimination, tax the rich more heavily than anyone else) are
now under attack or simply undiscussable. Why? Why now?
Few
if any explanations for these phenomena postulate any connection between the
rightward political slide and the edgy financial markets. I know of only one
group that has not only connected them and explained them, but predicted them.
Kondratieff,
Schumpeter, and Speeches from the Throne
Twenty
years ago, a scattered, committed, largely ridiculed group of "long
wave" scholars told us to start watching for:
Stagnation in the real economy and volatility in the money economy
Social distrust, selfishness, isolationism, scapegoating
Deflation of real asset values
Retreat to "basic values" and yearning for the strict imposition of
law and order
Cutthroat economic competition globally, erosion of social compassion locally.
This
social and economic pattern has occurred before, they said. It happens every
fifty to sixty years. The last time was in the 1920s and 1930s, before that in
the 1880s and 1890s, before that in the 1830s. Financial crashes and political
conservatism are characteristic of the long wave downturn.
The
long wave is also called the Kondratieff wave, after Nicolai Kondratieff, a
Russian economist who spent the 1920s studying long-term patterns of industrial
output in the United States, France, Germany, and England. What he saw at first
glance was the century-and-a-half-long expansion of the industrial revolution.
Then he removed the underlying growth trend from the data and
discovered—cycling above and below the central upward tendency—a
wobbly cycle, decades long, especially in the production of basic industrial
commodities such as iron and coal.
The
cycle Kondratieff saw was not absolutely regular, like the swinging of a
pendulum, but its peaks and troughs repeated roughly every fifty to sixty
years. When he wrote, the last trough had been in the 1880s and 1890s. It was
accompanied by financial panics and failed banks, including Baring Brothers,
which expired in 1890 and was reconstituted by the British government. The next
downturn was due in the 1930s, he said. He said that in 1926.
No
one took him seriously. Most Western economists still don't take him seriously.
Kondratieff
lived through only part of the depression he had foreseen. In 1930, he was
jailed by Stalin for protesting the collectivization of Soviet agriculture. He
died in prison in 1938. It took the advent of glasnost in the 1980s for the
Soviet Supreme Court, at the request of Kondratieff's descendants, to declare
that he had been not a criminal against the Soviet state, but a notable and
prescient economist.
Kondratieff
was not the only person of his era who saw cycles. In 1939, the great economist
Joseph Schumpeter hypothesized that technology runs in fifty-year waves. Not
waves of invention—human creativity seems to perk along at a fairly
constant pace—but waves of adoption, building innovation into the
operating hardware of an economy. There seem to be distinct periods when
industrial transformations completely change economic
production—mechanized textile-making in the 1780s, railroads and steel in
the 1840s, electricity in the 1890s, electronics and computers in the 1950s.
Between these periods, technologies in practice are elaborated and perfected,
but not displaced.
Schumpeter
noticed that bursts of technical transformation coincide with upturns in
economic activity. He assumed that they were the cause of that
activity—that new technology spurred economic growth. Present-day
long-wave theory sees the connection as two-way. Innovation causes growth, but
growth opens the opportunity for innovation to penetrate the economy.
Kondratieff
found cycles in industrial production, Schumpeter found them in technical
application, and, quite independently, social scientists discovered them in
politics. Over the past half-century political scientists have developed
"content analysis," a method of classifying political tracts
according to the key words they embody. Applying content analysis to documents
such as Republican and Democratic party platforms, or the British monarch's
annual "Speech from the Throne" (much like the US president's State
of the Union address), several studies in the 1970s and 80s revealed fifty-year
political cycles.
Periods
of retrenchment, militarism, obsession with the accumulation of wealth, the
enforcement of order, and the undoing of social reforms occurred in the 1920s,
1880s, 1830s, 1790s. For example, a Speech from the Throne in 1830 sounds
strangely familiar today: "It will be satisfactory to you to learn that
His Majesty will be enabled to propose a considerable reduction in the amount
of the public expenditure, without impairing the efficiency of our naval or
military establishments."
Liberal
swings are obvious around 1800, 1850, 1900, 1960. Here is part of a Speech from
the Throne in 1907, busy with do-good ideas: "You will also be invited to
consider proposals for the establishment of a Court of Criminal Appeal, for
regulating the hours of labour in mines, for the amendment to the patent laws,
for improving the law related to the valuation of property in England and
Wales, for enabling women to serve on local bodies, and for the better housing
of the people."
Modeling
the Economy
So
economic upswings, political liberalism, and technical change tend to occur
together. Economic downswings correlate with political conservatism and
technical burrowing-in. For decades, those observations were just statistical
curiosities, with no theory behind them.
Why
cycles?
Why
should politics, technology, and the economy oscillate together? Without a
theory, long-wave believers could be dismissed as a bunch of sun spot watchers.
Then
in the 1970s Jay Forrester and his team of computer modelers at the Sloan
School of Management at MIT came up with a persuasive long wave theory—all
the more persuasive because they weren't looking for one.
Forrester
was trying to understand how the economy works. He was especially interested in
the short-term (four-to-seven-year) business cycle, the most obvious dynamic
characteristic of market economies. Forrester is an engineer, not an economist
or historian. At the time he began his economic modeling, he had never heard of
Kondratieff or Schumpeter's technical waves or Speeches from the Throne.
He
and his team put together a model that was divided into two sectors. The first
sector makes
Consumer
Goods and Services
,
such as refrigerators, shoes, cars, health insurance. The second makes
Capital
Goods
—the
metals, machines, chemicals, concrete, motors, computers, buildings that
industry needs in order to turn out refrigerators, shoes, cars, and insurance.
To
a dynamic modeler, the distinction between consumer and capital sectors is
necessary not only because of their supply hierarchy, but also because of the
different time scales on which they operate. The output of the consumer goods
sector lasts from days or weeks (food, paper, haircuts) to years or decades
(clothing, refrigerators, cars). The output of the capital goods sector lasts
from decades (machines, boilers, trucks, power plants) to centuries (buildings,
roads, ports). The two sectors face different inventory costs, market
fluctuations, technical change rates, decision rules, and response times. They
have to be modeled separately. So that's how the MIT team modeled them.
When
they did, a short-term business cycle appeared. That cycle came out of the
model; it wasn't put in. In Forrester's type of modeling, one doesn't throw in
a driving cyclic function to make a cycle come out. Rather, one keeps track of
the stocks and flows of the system (factories, inventories, cash flow, orders,
sales, etc.), puts in their multiple interactions, and sets them loose to
behave in the computer the way they behave in the world—or so the modeler
hopes.
Ask
a system dynamics modeler
why
the Forrester model produces a business cycle, and the shortest answer you are
likely to get is: delays in the consumer goods sector. Press for a longer
answer and you will be told: 1) the consumer goods sector is sufficient in
itself to generate the cycle, without help from the capital sector, 2) the
four-to-seven-year cycle is an intrinsic harmonic of that sector—like a
spring, if you nudge it with almost any input, it responds with its own
built-in oscillation—and 3) the reason the oscillation is four to seven
years is because of the length of response delays in that sector, especially in
building up and selling off inventories of consumer goods.
Hang
a Slinky—one of those long plastic springs kids play with—uncoiled
from your hand, move your hand up and down, and the Slinky will bounce up and
down. No surprise: you're driving its cycle with your hand. Let the Slinky come
to a stop and give your hand just one jerk. The Slinky will bounce with its own
frequency, in a damped oscillation that eventually stops. Give the Slinky
occasional random jerks and it will bounce in messy, imperfect cycles, always
tending toward its own periodicity.
According
to Forrester, random jerks come constantly from the events of the
world—storms, strikes, elections, holidays, accidents, rumors—and the
economy responds like a Slinky. It does so because it can't respond instantly.
In the real economy of physical stuff, things take time. If you've overproduced
you can't sell your stacked-up inventory overnight. If you're underproducing,
you can't hire workers, order materials, and gear up a factory overnight. These
delays compound one another in causal circles called feedback loops. As
business tries to adapt to changing sales, it hires or unhires people, and
that, after a while, affects consumer income, and that, after some more time,
affects the very sales to which business is trying to adapt. Trying to catch
up, always having to make decisions that can't come to fruition for months or
maybe years, managers overshoot and undershoot and overshoot and undershoot.
Much
as we like to blame economic downs and ups on presidents or heads of the
Federal Reserve System, normal recessions and recoveries are created by
business chasing its own tail. The tail is never caught, the market never
equilibrates, because in the physical world (as opposed to the world of
economic theory) materials, products, people, prices, credit, perceptions, and
policies can't change quickly. The four-to-seven-year periodicity of the
business cycle comes from the consumer goods sector's one-to-three-year delays
in perceiving and believing economic news, in gearing up or down, in dispersing
or rebuilding inventories, and in consequent changes in employment and consumer
disposable income.
That's
why Forrester's model produced business cycles. To his surprise, however, when
he ran his simulation out over decades, a longer cycle also appeared; a
fifty-sixty-year fluctuation.
He
thought it was a mistake. He tried to make the long cycle go away.
It
wouldn't.
So
he looked more closely to figure out why the model was doing that long
oscillation. He discovered that it came from a complex of interconnected
feedbacks, the most important of which ran between the consumer goods sector
and the capital sector. Meanwhile, his students were searching in the
literature for evidence of a long cycle. They came up with Kondratieff and
Schumpeter and, in 1981, Robert Philip Weber's newly published content analysis
of Speeches from the Throne.
Why
There is a Long Wave
To
explain how the long wave works, let's start at the bottom, in the mid-1940s,
for instance. Because of the depression and the war, consumers' stocks of
refrigerators, houses, cars, and just about everything else are low and old.
Families have deferred purchases, nursed along old clunkers, gone without.
Finally, the time of troubles is over. Jobs, cash, credit, and confidence are
coming back. People flock to showrooms, place orders, deplete inventories.
Makers of consumer goods gear up, hire workers, and those additional jobs
create even more demand. Car makers and house builders order tools, trucks,
lumber, concrete, steel, oil, electricity.
So
far, that's just a set-up for a normal business cycle upturn. But this is a
long-depressed economy, which has shut down or written off much of its
productive capacity. It doesn't take long for the makers of refrigerators and
shoes and cars to start running their factories full out. What they need is
more factories. That creates a flurry of orders to the capital sector.
Before
long the capital sector is also running at full capacity. Steel mills and
machine tool shops are working overtime, but unfilled orders from the consumer
goods makers are still piling up.
Before
it can fill them, the capital sector has to make steel and machines and tools
to expand itself
.
That necessity is the central cause of the long wave. Forrester calls it
Capital
Self-Ordering
.
While the capital sector is rebuilding itself, unfilled orders from consumer
goods makers pile up still further. There seems to be no end to the economy's
need for productive capacity. The capital sector raises its expansion plans
even higher. The result is a long, long boom, the most recent of which took
place in the 1950s and 1960s.
The
problem for the capital sector, and to a lesser extent for the consumer goods
sector, is that it can't distinguish between orders that signify a permanent
rise in the scale of the economy and orders that come from a temporary need to
fill deficiencies in inventory or infrastructure. Most business planners, faced
with month after month of inability to meet rising orders, will expand with
increasing urgency. Furthermore, each firm hopes to increase its market share,
so it expands a bit beyond what it actually expects to need.
Unemployment
is falling and wages are rising, so labor is being replaced by capital, which
further increases capital-sector orders. Because orders for goods are straining
the capacity to make them, prices rise. The resulting inflation makes real
interest rates low or even negative—so it's easy to borrow for expansion.
There is a general mood of optimism. Risk is minimal, success is occurring all
around, everyone scrambles for a piece of the action.
The
result, inevitably, is overbuilding. The inevitability is important to
understand. If you're trying to fill a half-empty bathtub with an open drain
(an economy with its consumer goods stock regularly wearing out), you have to
turn the input faucet
higher
than the rate of outflow until the tub is filled. Then, to keep it just full,
you have to turn the inflow
back
down
to equal the long-term outflow. When an economy is making up a capital
shortage, it must place orders for steel and machine-tools at a higher rate
than it will need in the long term. Then, when it catches up, its orders must
decrease. There's no way around that, and it's just about impossible for
investors to take it into account. They see the orders and sales in their
particular businesses. They sense the prevailing mood and make the best
decisions they can. Toward the end of the rising phase of the long wave, those
decisions are
systematically
too optimistic.
As
the wave approaches its crest, unemployment is as low as it can get, incomes
are high, consumers have finally acquired most of the refrigerators and cars
they want. Inventories begin piling up. Factories under construction keep
coming into production, though now they are no longer needed. (In 1993, as six
General Motors plants and two Volvo plants closed and more shutdowns were being
planned, enough new plants were still coming on line to build 1.7 million more
cars per year. Said the president of Volvo, "The significant overcapacity
in the industry in the United States, Europe, and Japan will continue for a
very long time.")
At
this point competition gets fierce. Cost-cutting becomes mandatory.
Manufacturers "downsize" their labor force and pay less to the
workers they keep, thereby decreasing consumer demand and making the problem
worse. With way more capacity than they need to supply domestic markets, firms
cast desperate eyes on foreign markets. Governments, sensing the economic
stress, kick in with tax cuts, lower interest rates, deregulation, more social
or defense spending, export subsidies, anything that might encourage investment
and economic growth. But investment is precisely what is not needed. Capacity
is already too high. Government incentives just permit the overbuilding to get
worse.
Finally
the weakest competitors falter and with them their employees, suppliers, and
lenders. The capital sector gets hit first and hardest. Steel mills and machine
shops shut down, people lose their jobs. They stop buying cars, houses, and
refrigerators. Those inventories pile up, more factories shut down, more
unemployed folks reduce their spending. The virtuous cycles that sustained the
boom become vicious cycles feeding the downward slide.
The
slide will go on until enough capital plant is abandoned to bring productive
capacity in balance with demand
.
Then it will go on still longer.
Just
as the economy inevitably overshoots in the upturn, it undershoots in the
downturn, for the same reasons. Managers still don't know where equilibrium
demand will be, and this time they guess too low. Confidence is shaken. The
mood turns sour. Both lenders and borrowers get conservative, credit dries up,
"downsizing" makes even those who are still employed nervous about
big purchases. Times get hard and can stay that way for years, until it finally
becomes clear that there are too few operating plants to satisfy even the
remaining minimal demand. That shortage sets up the conditions for the next
upturn.
How
can investors so badly over- and then under-estimate the needs of the economy?
Conventional economics, which has a religious belief in the acumen of
investors, says they can't. That's one reason why few conventional economists
believe in the long wave. (There's a joke in which economists explain why there
are cycles, if the economy is supposed to be always in equilibrium.
"Workers have cyclical preferences for leisure.") But real players in
the market have no way of measuring equilibrium demand, knowing what other
investors are doing, guessing correctly their own future market share, or, as a
system dynamicist would put it, managing a complex system with nonlinear
feedback loops and tricky delays. They are very attentive, however, to each
others' moods and expectations and very impressed by their own recent
experience. So, taking their cues from each other, they overdo it, both on the
upturn and the downturn.
In
Forrester's model the long wave period is fifty to sixty years because of the
combined delays of capital build-up and depreciation in both the consumer-goods
and capital sectors, with the added delay of capital self-ordering. The linked
economy is a complex, ponderous Slinky.
Technology
Waves, Financial Panics, Political Upheavals
Forrester's
is not the only long wave theory in circulation. Many of the others suppose, as
Schumpeter's technology theory does, that the long wave is driven by some other
cycle, which itself then has to be explained. What is most interesting about
Forrester's theory is that it doesn't require another cycle to drive it. In
fact, it explains those other cycles.
Technology
gets implemented in cycles, says Forrester, because there is a window of
opportunity at the beginning of each upturn. You don't build new car factories
that use lightweight, crash-resistant, unrustable plastics when you're
struggling to keep your existing metal-stamping plants running. You don't build
combined-cycle gas power plants if you have coal-burners standing idle. You
wait until the upswing demands a burst of new capital. Then you can build in
new technologies. If they are cheaper and more effective than the old ones,
they will enhance the upswing.
As
the economy gets built back up, the window for major retooling closes. In a
nation with a functioning, efficient rail network, entrepreneurs won't find it
easy to start up an incompatible mode of transport. Thus, the Wright Brothers
flew in 1903, but significant commercial air transport started with the DC-3 in
1935, after the depression had wiped out many railroads. The airline industry
was only fully capitalized in the 1950s and 1960s (then overcapitalized in the
1970s and 1980s). During the long upswing, economic growth builds upon
established technologies. New ideas get tested in small companies, many of
which go broke, until the next upwave, when the best of those ideas can be
literally cast into concrete or plastic or
silicon
chips.
The
seeds of technical revolution are planted during long wave troughs and bloom
during upturns. Super-volatility in investment and banking is characteristic of
peaks and downturns. The economy must shed excess capacity. It needs little new
investment, compared to its voracious appetite during the upturn. But there is
an enormous pool of pension funds, endowments, private savings, and financial
game-players eager to multiply money. With few real investment opportunities,
the financial markets, with stunning creativity, think up unreal ones. They
have to be newly invented at each long wave downturn, because most of the
inventions of fifty years before have been outlawed.
In
the 1920s, there were leveraged brokerage accounts, fictitious gold and oil
stocks, Florida land booms, and trusts whose only assets were stock in other
trusts. In the 1980s, there were junk bonds, derivatives, and leveraged
buyouts. (If you can't expand in real terms, you can pretend to expand by
buying other companies.) Both downturns saw speculative excess in real estate,
art, and other assets. The more these bubbles were allowed to blow themselves
up, the bigger the pop when it became obvious that money value far exceeded
real value. Many pops have occurred in the past twenty years. There are
probably more ahead.
In
the long wave trough, asset values finally depreciate to their real worth. Then
they depreciate even more. After a time for everyone to sober up, it becomes
clear that some assets are undervalued. The economy turns slowly into the next
upturn, with so many sound investments to make that few in-vestors will be
attracted to unsound ones.
So
much for technical cycles and financial cycles. Now why political cycles?
During the long wave expansion, wages are rising, investments are paying off,
material expectations are being met faster than people expect. There's enough
satisfaction to be generous and enough optimism to consider all problems
solvable, whether it's putting a man on the moon or extending civil rights to
long-oppressed minorities or rebuilding war-torn Europe. The up-turn is a time
for progressive politics.
As
the wave continues upward, and domestic production begins to catch up with
domestic demand, businesses, followed closely by politicians, begin to look
beyond national borders. Trade expands, as companies scramble to find new
markets. Competition gets cutthroat, because capacity is beginning to outstrip
demand worldwide. Content analyst Robert Weber calls this the
"cosmopolitan" phase. It can be characterized not only by great
interest in trade and foreign policy, but also by adventurism, imperialism, and
conflict. In the early part of this century nations trying to make the world
"safe" for their dominance set up the pressures that exploded in
World War I. Fifty years later Cold War tensions drove dozens of smaller
conflicts in Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.
During
the downturn, the most outmoded plants begin to shut down. People lose jobs or
worry about losing jobs. Real wages fall, banks wobble, tax revenues drop,
generosity dries up. The political agenda has less space for foreign adventure
or domestic idealism. Faltering businesses and banks plead for deregulation.
Struggling families want to hear about tax cuts. The underclass, hit hardest,
may explode—leading to calls for law and order. It's a time when
conservative thinking begins to make sense.
Robert
Weber calls the bottom of the trough "parochial." That's a polite
label. A more honest one might be "chaotic," or "panicked"
or even "fascist." After fifteen to twenty years of downsliding,
conservative policies lose their appeal. Tax breaks for the rich lead not to
investment, but to resentment. Less public support throws even middle class
folks onto their own diminished resources. The headlines are full of bank
failures and foreclosures. Rough business competition can degenerate into rough
personal competition; people begin to be out for themselves, uninterested in
the public good. It's easy to lose faith in government, corporations, the rule
of law, the whole society, the future. It's tempting to find someone to blame.
At
this point, any assured voice is attractive, whatever that voice says. That
makes the political situation unpredictable—it depends on what voice is
loudest. In the 1930s, the loudest voice in the US happened to be that of
Franklin Roosevelt, who preached optimism, compassion, mutual belt-tightening,
and government activism in creating jobs and providing basic needs. In Europe,
the loudest voices belonged to Hitler and Mussolini, who offered rigid control,
trains that ran on time, national pride, militarism, and in the case of Hitler,
industrial-scale genocide.
In
the 1990s in America, with Democratic agendas looking like Republican agendas
of the 1950s and Republican agendas edging toward repression, Rush Limbaugh and
Newt Gingrich were the most certain-sounding voices for awhile. They
had—and have—many adherents. But they came a bit too late in the
cycle; facts are debunking their policies. Bill Clinton is unsatisfying, not
because his ideas are wrong for the time (some are appropriate) but because he
sounds so wavery. He's in power mainly because he has been blessed with even
less substantial opponents.
At
this point, in the late '90s, at the trough of the cycle, opportunities for
leadership—even for humane, whole-system, forward-looking
leadership—are wide open.
Why
Liberal Policies Sometimes Work, Conservative Policies Sometimes Work , and
Politicians Never Learn
The
long wave has been operating since the industrial revolution began, but it
hasn't penetrated our understanding. One reason for that is that technical and
social changes over the course of a single cycle ensure that no upturn,
downturn, peak, or trough is exactly like the one before. The downturn of the
1930s was sudden, steep, and imprinted indelibly in memory and history. The
depression of the 1880s and 1890s was undramatic, more like the slow,
discouraging slide we are experiencing a century later. There are too many
sources of variation, there is too much complexity, learning, institutional
change, and social evolution for cycles to repeat themselves exactly.
The
long wave is also hard to perceive because it isn't the only thing that's going
on. Several different dynamics are working simultaneously. There is short-term
noise, caused by the normal socioeconomic hiccups. There are four-to-seven-year
business cycles, eighteen-to-twenty-five-year construction cycles (called
Kuznets cycles), and the fifty-to-sixty-year long wave. Finally there is the
200-year upthrust of the industrial revolution, propelled by population growth,
capital investment, and technical advance, which will continue to raise all
boats until it runs into social or environmental limits.
Consider
for a moment just two of these dynamics, the business cycle superimposed upon
the long wave. During the long wave upturn, recessions tend to be gentle. They
make short interruptions in long, satisfying booms. These are the times when
economists start talking about having recession under control and politicians
begin to think they have mastered economics.
During
downturns, however, the picture reverses. Long, deep recessions alternate with
"weak recoveries," "structural adjustments,"
"recovering profits without job growth." Since we traditionally blame
economic events on politicians, during downturns we begin to think of our
leaders as bozos. This can be a period of rapid shifts in power, as voters
discover that no party knows what to do about the worsening economy.
To
see how hard it is to untangle the signals from the noise, consider the last
fifty years of US unemployment rates.
You
can see the blips of noise in this graph, and the four-to-seven-year business
cycle troughs (unemployment peaks). You might also make out two
twenty-five-year Kuznets cycles (driven mostly by delays in the construction
industry). The long-wave downturn is visible in the three increasingly worse
recessions of the 1970s and 1980s, each one ending in a "recovery"
with a higher unemployment rate than the one before. The way we keep
unemployment statistics (defining the hopeless out of the labor pool, not
distinguishing permanent from temporary jobs or high-paying ones from
low-paying ones) hides much of the evidence for the long wave, however. It
becomes more apparent when you look not at unemployment but at real wages.
A
final reason for non-understanding of the long wave is that a fifty-sixty-year
cycle is incompatible with human learning. Those who might have absorbed the
lessons of one downturn (or upturn) are just about off the scene when the next
one shows up. Those in power at any time formed their professional experience
during the phase of the long wave that least resembles the phase they are
negotiating. So we have people whose learning is out of phase with present
events, trying to cope with a complex system that is undergoing many kinds of
ups and down, some of which offset each other, some of which reinforce each
other.
Let
us pause for a moment of commiseration for the politicians who have to pretend
to control this system, and for the rest of us who have to make a living within
it.
The
complexities of economic dynamics can be eased by pretending that they are
simpler than they are—by cleaving to a liberal or conservative ideology.
Both these ideologies persist because they contain important truths. Each is
particularly applicable to one phase of the long wave. Unfortunately, because
of the bad match between human generations and the timing of the wave, they
tend to get applied with astonishing perversity at exactly the wrong times.
Consider
the upturn. Production capacity can't keep up with rising demand. Stunning new
technologies are coming on line. Capital is urgently needed. This is a time to
damp down consumption and encourage savings and investment. High consumption
taxes and low investment taxes make sense. So does fiscal
conservatism—government shouldn't be running deficits, competing with the
private sector for scarce savings. Jobs are plentiful; anyone who can't find
one probably needs to be given a kick. If there was ever a time to shift the
tax burden away from the rich and onto the consuming masses, a time when the
idea of trickle-down has validity, this is it.
During
the downturn, however, promoting investment is about as effective as pushing on
a wet noodle. There is too much capacity, there can be no recovery until the
economy discards the excess. What needs to be pushed is consumption, to keep up
faltering demand. The long wave trough is the time to ease the lot of the poor,
tax away the uninvestable excess of the rich, and run deficits. It is also the
time to impose strong regulations on businesses, which are sorely tempted under
duress to abuse resources, scrap environmental precautions, beggar their
workers, and engage in risky financial maneuvers.
Especially
during the downturn people instinctively do the opposite of what is called for.
Times are scary, businesses are failing, debts are mounting. It seems logical
to reduce deficits, cut government spending, and try to keep shaky firms afloat
by deregulating. Conditioned by decades of fighting the inflation inherent in
the upturn, we keep money tight, though in the downturn the problem is
deflation.
None
of these policies produce the desired results, but ideologists are
self-absorbed, self-righteous, and self-reinforcing. Faced with failure, they
just add another layer of denial and turn up the volume of rhetoric.
What
to Do About the Long Wave?
Forrester's
model is just a theory. Economics is nothing but a bunch of theories. This
particular one—that a long wave exists and that it is caused by
systematic, self-induced, economy-wide over- and under-investment-is never
going to be popular. If there ís anything people don't want to hear,
it's that they are causing their own pain-or, worse, that they are being tossed
around by the internal dynamics of an amorphous system that is not only
impervious to human will, but that subtly conditions human will.
But
this theory is as deserving of consideration as any other. Its hypothesized
causal links are based on measurable elements of the physical economy. It has
successfully predicted phenomena that have taken other theorists by surprise.
Those of us who have watched its predictions play out for two decades now have
no choice but to take the long wave model seriously, whether we like it or not.
And its implications are not, in fact, so bad. If the long wave really does
manifest from the linkages of a large-scale, complex, and deeply entrenched
system, that does not mean that nothing can be done about it. The MIT analysis
suggests ways to reduce the amplitude of its cycles and to mitigate the danger
of the downturns.
Better
information about the whole economy, collected by government and made available
to all players, would help. Knowing, for example, how much electrical or steel
or car-building capacity was on order economy-wide (which means, for steel and
cars, world-wide) could sober the tendency to over-order as the long wave
swings up, and ease the panic that causes too much downsizing as the wave
swings down. Tracking, insofar as possible, the central long-term tendency of
the economy, and the degree to which productive capacity has deviated from that
tendency, could keep builders, lenders, and speculators from exacerbating the
deviations.
The
government could practice counter-cyclic policy. At the beginning of the
upswing it could damp consumption and encourage investment; as the upswing
threatens to go too far, it could do the opposite. Government could move
against inflation on the rising wave and deflation on the falling wave. It
could stand firm on regulations, especially on the downswing, when companies
are tempted to cut corners and financial markets are tempted to lose prudence.
It could strengthen the social safety net when it is most needed, even if that
means deficit spending. It could repay debt and run insulating surpluses during
upturns.
No
government will have the discipline to do any of those things unless it deeply
understands the economic structures that cause both the business cycle and the
long wave. No democratic government will be allowed to do them unless the
people understand as well. That means a massive job of public education,
especially during the scary time of the downturn.
What
is needed in the downturn, above all, is reassurance. The downward slide does
not signal a disintegration of the social order. It is simply a correction for
excess capital, first in the capital-producing heavy industries, later in the
consumer-goods industries. The real wealth of the nation-land, resources,
people, machines, know-howó-is still there. It needs to be reorganized
and restructured. Some businesses and workers can be hurt in the shift, if
there is no social commitment to help them. If there is that commitment-if
solidarity and generosity can be summoned-then not only will the political
rhetoric be uplifting rather than nasty, but the trough will be less deep.
The
good news about a long wave is that what goes down must come back up, at least
as long as there's room on the planet for the exponential growth of the
industrial revolution. (Some of us believe there's little or no room left, but
that's another computer model.) In the coming upturn technical opportunities
will blossom. The IBMs and Xeroxes of the future are forming now around, I
hope, solar energy, nanotechnology, digital information transfer, radical
energy efficiency, fuel cells, hydrogen fuel, zero-emission manufacturing and
total materials recycling all of which would help the limits problem too.
The
most important thing to understand is that downturns are no one's fault. The
hard times are not caused by Republicans, Democrats, Indonesians, South
Koreans, Japanese, immigrants, unwed mothers, overpaid CEOs, environmentalists,
gays, feminists, Russians, Mexicans, investment bankers, Hillary Clinton, Rush
Limbaugh, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, the National Rifle
Association, NAFTA, GATT, the United Nations, El Niño, Comet Hale-Bopp
or any other handy scapegoat. Most of us enjoyed the ride up. We can minimize
the slide down by being compassionate with one another and by stepping back far
enough to understand, accept, and counterbalance intelligently the ups and
downs of the market system.
So
Where Are We Now?
I
started by saying these long-wave folks could predict, but they don't do it
with precise numbers by the week so you can use them to make a killing on the
stock market. They predict important things, but they do it in broad sweeps,
over decades.
Most
of them would say now that we're right at the bottom of the trough, though
perhaps riding high on a short-term business cycle. The US, having shed much of
its capital-producing capital over the past twenty years (one-third of its
steel production, huge chunks of its machine-tool industry), may be about to
turn upward. But we may be delayed by the linked world economy, which still has
significant retracting to do.
According
to William Greider's new book,
One
World, Ready or Not
,
worldwide car-building capacity was twenty-five percent over demand in 1985,
thirty percent over demand in 1995, and is projected to be thirty-six percent
over demand in 2000. The global tire industry in 1994 was operating at seventy
percent of capacity. World steel production exceeds demand by twenty percent.
Commercial aircraft-building capacity is
twice
market demand. Greider quotes an economist at the Chemical Manufacturers
Association: "It seems safe to predict that generally the world supply of
many basic industrial chemicals will trend toward an over-supply situation
during much of the rest of the decade and perhaps beyond." A research head
at Roche pharmaceuticals: "Global prescription sales would need to reach
about $280 billion a year within ten years [more than twice the current sales]
to justify the present levels of investment. The chances of reaching that
figure are more than lowóthey are non-existent." A Sony executive:
"Consumer electronics suffers from overcapacity, but thatís why we
are living in an interesting world." A former IBM strategic planner:
"I've been worried for a long time that there's too much capacity, and as
a result, there are very few people in the computer industry making much money.
It's true in other industries too."
Asia
was probably the main reason why this particular long wave downturn was more
gradual than the last one. Asia provided a great sponge to soak up investment
that had few other places to go. But now significant parts of Asia are
themselves overbuilt. Card-houses are tumbling down. There could yet be a
spectacular implosion, if overvalued financial assets come back down to earth
quickly.
If
no implosion, if we've managed by now to let off most of the steam of the
overpressured economy, relatively unscathed by panic and totalitarianism
(compared to last time, anyway), there ought to be an upturn sometime within
the next ten years. It's an important one. It's the one we get to use to build
the technologies and institutions and attitudes and understandings that will
let us live sustainably within the limits of the planet.
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