Climate, political economy challenges

There were many superb questions called at the Sustainability UnConference. I will be detailing more later on the whole event. The circles I hosted were about the (un)success or not of social/political movements and what questions or change theories of the political economy were there.

 

My brief notes are: 

 

-XR is different to anti-slavery, LGBQT+, suffragettes, and minority/black rights because the “ask” is less clear (cf. Ban slavery, a clear ask]

-[Open] Does a protest movement need an ask?

-Policy(Overton) window (and influenced on corporates) may have moved, and that would be a success

-While energised some young, it has antagonised other population segments

-Degrowth not considered by majority of economists/policy makers as viable

-XR opens doors for change makers to influence corporates, policy

-cf. Outrage and Stonewall, (LGBTQ+)

-XR  negative - is ZR now chipping out change makers and entrenching incumbents.

 

(Novel) are “leaders” emergent properties of complex systems. (eg a Greta would have emerged somehow in any case)

 

Cf. CFCs/Ozone, Nuclear.

 

Note how green party in Germany is now mainstream

 

Four theories/frameworks to note:

-Overton Window

-Swing Voter

-Median Voter

-Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem

 

And two challenging economic realities:

Economic growth will be needed to lift the poor (intra and inter-country) our of poverty

Decarbonisation across all areas of human life (Land/Food, Industry, Power, Building, Transport etc.) needed and low-carbon growth is not (yet) reality in most sectors.

 

Mainstream Economic Policy:

Carbon tax/price solves 80% of problem (eg Jasion Furman view)

(Vast) Innovation needed (subsidy helpful for early stage tech)

Standards can help raise the bar

 

Challenging political realities:

Poor/Middle class don’t want to pay (maybe no one wants to pay)

Poor countries don’t want to pay vs rich countries

[Open] Swing voter unlikely converting soon

[Open] Median voter moving slowly

 

[Open] Arrow suggests a plurality needs to be an answer.

 

Median voter might suggest that education, activism in converting population may work. May push both window and policy in more green directions.

 

Swing voter might suggest that this is not possible as swing voter not being converted on climate matters. Geography of the swing voter also important.

 

(It did not occur to me so clearly until this conversation that the tactics for converting “swing” voters are likely different to the “median” voter strategy)

 

Alternative strategy: ignore/bypass voters

Carbon pricing/tax not viable to majority of swing and current median voters. (This does not ignore voters but essential complies with both views here)

Utilise “Industrial Strategy” policy for the major sectors that can slip by voters 

eg raise standards, subsidise and go super large on innovation investment (but can govt do this? And what about health, education etc)

May be slow, but might be a political economy solution ?? (One that elites and technocrat always use and so at risk of backlash)

 

[Aside] Importance of weak social ties or social network [cf. VC cf. UK COVID vaccine strategy]

Does XR/activist movement have a policy strategy?

Can economists propose anything better than carbon price?

Must it be techno-optimism that saves us?

 

 

[Open] Limits to markets

[Open] Do we need strong political vision


Speed of technological progress in some areas

Top of mind recently is how fast some parts of technology are going. I think the general reader has glimpses of the splashy news items such as the Space trips by Bezos and Branson, but there are many technology problems which have made huge progress.

I am thinking biological protein folding and what looks like setting up to be another strong decade for biological knowledge. The breakthrough work of Deepmind here is going to herald a step change in how we think about making proteins.

I think developments from the world of blockchain will be surprising. I don’t view anything as standout yet, but maybe smart brains and a lot of money are working in these areas and we have glimpses of possibilities with NFTs and “smart contract” protocols. And the backlash against regulation (see below) is notable.

The vast computing power now available to us when applied to hard problems mixed with machine learning algorithms is going to unleash a whole new way of creating software and software-interactions. And, I think we are on the verge of where a smart mind with no coding knowledge will soon be able to partner with tools to create code and ideas which before only coders of several years experience could do. We have a glimpse of that with GPT-3, and we have an iteration of that with the Deep Mind models for protein folding (noted above) but this recent video from OpenAI about the possibilities of what coding AI can produce based on very simple inputs suggests to me the world is going to change again in the digital space very rapidly.

The interface with the physical world is still behind, although certain parts eg automation and robots are advancing.

I think the general population is also behind and so is the humanities thinking, the social contracts and constructs behind it. While we have eg AI ethics, the people involved with them are narrow, so I hope it does all work out.

Meanwhile, we have all sorts of catastrophes, at a glance:

-Haiti earthquakes
-Afghanistan fighting
-Ethiopian civil war, and likely atrocities
-Rohinyga refugees
-A crisis in South Sudan coming out of a civil war
-Torture and execution from the recent Bolivia government
-the list goes on...and of course, COVID...

A few links from above:
Sudan: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/09/world/africa/deadly-clashes-threaten-south-sudans-shaky-peace-deal.html
Bolivia:  https://apnews.com/article/caribbean-bolivia-454d1102672f6fbc1e47dab7eca66714
Deepmind: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-02025-4
OpenAI Demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGUCcjHTmGY&ab_channel=OpenAI
And challenge and details: https://openai.com/blog/openai-codex/