Learning to love volatility
Rule 5: Decision makers must have skin in the game.
At no time in the history of humankind have more positions of power been assigned to people who don’t take personal risks. But the idea of incentive in capitalism demands some comparable form of disincentive. In the business world, the solution is simple: Bonuses that go to managers whose firms subsequently fail should be clawed back, and there should be additional financial penalties for those who hide risks under the rug. This has an excellent precedent in the practices of the ancients. The Romans forced engineers to sleep under a bridge once it was completed.
Because our current system is so complex, it lacks elementary clarity: No regulator will know more about the hidden risks of an enterprise than the engineer who can hide exposures to rare events and be unharmed by their consequences. This rule would have saved us from the banking crisis, when bankers who loaded their balance sheets with exposures to small probability events collected bonuses during the quiet years and then transferred the harm to the taxpayer, keeping their own compensation.









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So, what you’re saying is… Cut the bailouts and the crap about the “American Auto Industry” and let corporations succeed or fail on their own merit?
Who’d ah thunk it?
Atlas on November 20, 2012 at 11:36 PM
This is a great article, with all the discussion of risk, resilience, smaller government, learning from mistakes, decentralization, and debt – Taleb makes some fundamentally conservative ideas sound really engaging (not to mention right)… the whole thing deserves a read.
flush_explorer on November 20, 2012 at 11:59 PM
this is a good article. Rs would be smart (ha, ha) to read this carefully, with their advisers and some help from someone who has run a business. Then they should memorize parts of it (maybe use flash cards)
then practice talking about the points…and when some jerk-moron journo asks you about Evolution…answer by sliding into a discussion of Taleb.
r keller on November 21, 2012 at 12:11 AM