Our Brave New World Author:Charles Gave, Anatole Kaletsky, Louis-Vincent Gave This book is now out of print, anyone who interested can download the electronic version for free on www.gavekal.com. — For over ten years now, a wide majority of economists have drawn on historical parallels to warn us that the expansion of the past decade in US consumption was unsustainable and likely to end in tears. So far, and despite the st... more »rength of the above thought process and the numerous historical parallels, the dreaded meltdown has completely failed to materialize. So what is the next step?
When a thought process fails, i.e.: when History fails to rhyme, analysts can typically respond in one of four ways:
1- Shut up and crawl under the carpet. This is usually an expensive proposition.
2- Pretend that the numbers are wrong and that, despite all the signs, they are right.
3- Hope that one is simply "early" and that ones scenario is about to unfold.
4- Admit that one has been wrong, and try to find out where the mistakes lie. This is the most intellectually honest stance to take and the one that we wish to adopt.
The reason so many analysts drag their feat in admitting that History has failed to rhyme this time around is that it would lead one to the dreaded conclusion that "things are different this time". And yet, this is exactly what we do in our latest effort entitled Our Brave New World. Over twenty chapters, we describe how companies today are more efficient with their use of capital and labor then they have ever been in the past. Today, companies no longer operate on the business models used one generation ago. Relationships between countries have evolved. Social structures are transforming themselves at a rapid pace.
And all this is having an impact on financial markets... The world has changed. So shouldnt our way of analyzing it evolve as well?« less