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Machiavelli and the Economic Crisis
Come on baby, don’t fear the reaper.
-Blue Oyster Cult
I wish one of our economic leaders had been a political
science major.
George Bush has an MBA from Harvard. Henry Paulson has an MBA from Harvard. Ben
Bernanke graduated from Harvard before he became a Princeton
professor.
The crisis is not boding well for the Ivy League.
I used to wish the economic leaders had gone to state schools and owned a corner
grocery store. I felt they were out of
touch with average Americans.
The problem is simpler than that. None of them understand
political philosophy or crowd psychology.
Every aspiring political science student has read, The Prince by Machiavelli. One
lesson from the book has stuck with me.
Always give bad news in one dose.
The worst thing a leader can do is dribble out bad news a
little at a time. Like the crew in Washington
is doing now.
When the $700 billion Wall Street bailout plan was proposed,
someone called into a radio talk show and asked me what would happen to the Dow
Jones average if the bill did not pass.
I said it would drop 50% in one day. Then we would start over again
If the Washington
crew had read Machiavelli, maybe it would have happened that way. .
Instead, Congress passed the bailout bill. The markets continue to decline day by day.
Now people are really scared. I can’t blame them. Each day, there is bad news followed by bad
news. No one
knows when it will stop.
People need certainty.
Even if the news is terrible. It
is easier to come back from one big disaster than a series of little ones.
We spent $700 billion and it didn’t give us certainty. I’m not really sure what it gave us.
I’d love to have the
money back.
I wish Bush, Paulson and Bernanke had spent less time reading about market theory and
more time on philosophy and psychology.
We are past the point where market theory has anything to do
with the economic crisis. Decisions are driven by fear and human
behaviors.
The kind of behaviors that Machiavelli figured out 500 years ago.
I wish more of our business leaders understood history and
philosophy. Too few do.
When you see the current economic crisis, you need to look
at world history to get some answers.
Once you do that, you come to the same conclusion as Harry
Truman, “the only thing new in the world is the history you don’t know.”
This is not the first, or the last, economic crisis that the
world will face. There have been worse. No one
is starving or rioting. At least not
yet.
We need to draw upon the
knowledge of the ages
Machiavelli gave us the first answer. Let bad news happen in one swoop.
The gang in Washington
screwed that up. So now what do we do?
Listen to Machiavelli again. Stop trying the “fix of the day.” Let some
companies that are “too big to fail,” go ahead and fail.
Get the garbage out of the system at once rather than let things keep
sliding.
The government should
completely protect savers, home
owners and insurance policyholders. No
one else.
Wall Street CEO’s, with their million dollar bonuses, would
be out of luck.
People were horrified when I first suggested that we let
things bottom out. People said, “the Dow
Jones will drop 5000 points in a day.”
I would have rather have had it drop 5000 in a day than 5000, in gradual steps, like it did.
Once the markets hit bottom,
smart investors, like the Warren Buffett’s of the world, will come back
and start buying. We will be back on
the way up.
If we had done it my way, we would have still had $700
billion in the till when that happened.
Not learning the
lesson of Machiavelli has been a root cause of the crisis. Politicians never want to give bad news.
People can handle bad news.
Especially when it comes at one time.
I learned early in my business career that people want you
to lead with the worst news first.
If I have to fire
someone, I always start the conversation with that fact. I don’t dribble it out over an hour.
I’ve remained friends with most of the people I have fired.
Once the shock wore off, the
former employees appreciated my candor.
History tells us that we can survive any kind of disaster.
The key is to get the disaster completely on the table so we can deal with it.
Which is the lesson Machiavelli taught us 500 years ago.
Don McNay
is the Chairman of the Board for McNay Settlement Group in Richmond Kentucky. You can read his award winning, syndicated
column at www.donmcnay.com or write to him at
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. McNay is Treasurer of the National Society of
Newspaper Columnists.
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