Economists
focus on what can be easily measured: sales, profits, prices, tax
revenues, etc. Since the decay and failure of institutions isn't
easily quantified, this decay doesn't register in the realm of
economics. Since it isn't measured, it doesn't exist.
But
institutional decay and failure is all too real, and it begs the
question: how can a society and economy thrive if its core
institutions fail? The short answer is they cannot thrive, as
institutions are the foundations of the social and economic orders.
As I explain in my new book, Global
Crisis, National Renewal,
the conventional view has a naive faith that "great leaders"
can reverse institutional rot. This faith overlooks the systemic
sources of institutional decay and failure which are outlined in the
graphic below, The Lifecycle of Bureaucracy, a.k.a. institutions.
Leaders are constrained by the nature of centralized
organizations and the incentive structure that slowly shifts from
rewarding efforts to further the institution's core mission to
self-service and protecting an ossified, failing institution from
outside scrutiny and reform.
As Samo Burja explains in his
insightful essay, Why
Civilizations Collapse,
those inside institutions are by design so compartmentalized that few
(if any) even recognize the institution is failing. As long as
everything is glued together in each little compartment, no one
grasps the entire institution has lost its way. And since no one
recognizes it, no one attempts to save it.
Institutions end
up advancing caretaker managers who excel at the political game of
rising to the top of a sprawling institution. When the decay (or
budget cuts) finally trigger a crisis, the institution has been
stripped of visionaries with a bold grasp of what's needed to restore
the focus on the core mission and institute new incentives. The bold
leaders quit in disgust or were sent to bureaucratic Siberia as
potential threats to the status quo.
The problem is
institutions fail by the very nature of their centralized design. The
organization is centralized so directives flow down the chain of
command, and every branch is compartmentalized to limit the power of
each department and employee to disrupt the orderly flow of top-down
directives.
Within this compartmentalized, top-down
structure, the incentives are to follow procedures rather than get
results. The rewards go to those who dutifully follow procedures
rather than to those who raise the alarm about the loss of
transparency, effectiveness and focus on fulfilling the mission.
The path of least resistance is to protect the existing
structure and add more compartments, i.e. "mission creep."
Rather than focus on the dissipation of resources and the decline of
the core mission, leaders add "feel good" missions and PR
promotions of phony reforms and initiatives that bleed more resources
from the core mission.
Consider the institution of democracy,
which has been corrupted into an invitation-only auction of state
favors and rentier skims. Democracies have another fatal flaw:
politicians win re-election by promising virtually everyone something
for nothing: more benefits and entitlements and lower taxes. The gap
between higher costs and declining revenues will be filled by
government borrowing.
All this additional borrowing will
supposedly be paid by the magic of "growth", which will
expand tax revenues at a rate that exceeds the cost of borrowing.
But demographics, resource depletion and the diminishing
returns of a consumer economy fueled by rapidly expanding public and
private debt have sapped "growth" in fundamental ways.
Ironically, borrowing and spending more to spur "growth"
only hastens the diminishing returns of increasing debt to fund
consumption today.
Democracies are thus optimized for rapid
"growth" and are ill-suited to transition to DeGrowth, i.e.
less of everything for the vast majority of the citizenry as
resources become scarce and debt eats the economy alive. (DeGrowth
could work to everyone's benefit, which is the point of Global
Crisis, National Renewal.)
Central banking is another failing
institution. When faced with fiscal crises, central states/banks
inevitably succumb to the temptation to print/borrow currency in
whatever sums are needed to fill the shortfall of the moment, i.e.
political expediency. This profligate creation of currency seems to
be magic at first; everyone accepts the "new money" at the
current value. But eventually gravity takes hold and the currency's
purchasing power declines, as the real economy (the production of
goods and services) grows at rates far below the expansion of credit
and currency.
Even the greatest empires in human history have
been unable to resist the "easy" solution of devaluing
currency as the means of fulfilling all the promises that were made
in more prosperous times.
The progression of centralized
power slowly but surely replaces the self-organizing, resilient,
decentralized structures of civil society with tightly bound
hierarchical centralized structures that are increasingly
ineffective, increasingly costly and increasingly fragile, i.e.
increasingly prone to failure or collapse.
The irony of
institutional decay and failure is everyone inside is so busy
following procedures that nobody notices the decay until the whole
worm-eaten structure collapses. Look no farther than financialized
asset bubbles, healthcare and education for examples of institutions
in run-to-failure decline.
We are in effect so busy arranging
the beach umbrellas per our instructions that we don't notice the
approaching tsunami. Can a nation prosper as its institutions decay
and collapse? Only in the fantasies and magical thinking of the
delusional.
By Charles Hugh Smith in his Blog at OfTwoMinds.com on 01 February 2022
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