Economists dominate policy making for now, but there might be a way around them

One thing that gets my goat is the way economic thinking – with its stupid ideas about the way people work (maximizers) and the way companies work (increasing marginal costs) and the way nations work (banks lend other people’s money) – pervades policy making. Most politicians seem to have swallowed economics 101. I made it my personal crusade to find ways to get around this disingenuous bunch. I might have found something. Read on.
I understand the appeal. It all comes down to money anyway, why not just manage a nation based on money – as long as it looks like all is under control why worry? But as I point out in my Real Capital Blog, things you want to keep functioning – health, forests, railways, water cycles, metal access – get downgraded to a point where they might collapse.
The alternative is complicated. Say you are a scientist that sees that a city has got 3 years left of groundwater. Your report will probably end up nowhere. The machinery, to get from warning through the engineering, through the companies pumping, through the city administration, through the planning, through the political leadership is so complicated and you would need specialist knowledge in every layer to be taken seriously. Just finding out who is actually responsible for what is months of work. And as a scientist you won’t have a workable alternative.
Or, it USED to be that way. You can now get AI to do all the heavy lifting. I tried it with the Real Capital Framework. Get this: there is nothing new with Real Capital, in all its components, the ideas have been around a while (read accessible to AI). The only trick to getting AI to do the work is to point it in the right direction.
This is where AI prompts come in. If you just get the prompts right, in the right order AI will sail through the spaghetti of causes, responsibilities, effects, etc to produce clear, policy decision basis reporting synthesising dozens of professional domains.
This is what economics should be, and AI can prise the role from the sweaty grasp of economists.
Soon, AI will do system dynamics Ravel simulations for you so you can show your work.
I am testing AI prompts just now, and the results are encouraging.
Subscribe to my Patreon to keep up to date.
Continue reading “Economists dominate policy making for now, but there might be a way around them”
