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World News See other World News Articles Title: Why Nassim Taleb Thinks Leaders Make Poor Decisions Why do experts, CEOs, politicians, and other apparently highly capable people make such terrible decisions so often? Is because theyre ill-intentioned? Or because, despite appearances, theyre actually stupid? Nassim Nicholas Taleb, philosopher, businessman, perpetual troublemaker, and author of, among other works, the groundbreaking Fooled by Randomness, says its neither. Its because these authorities face the wrong incentives. They are rewarded according to whether they look good to their superiors, not according to whether they are effective. They have no skin in the game. Seasoned readers of Taleb will be pleased to see the so-called experts problem pop up in living color in Skin in the Game: Hidden Asymmetries in Daily Life, Talebs latest collection of essays on risk, rationality, and randomness. According to Taleb, dentists, pilots, plumbers, structural engineers, and scholars of Portuguese irregular verbs are real experts; sociologists, policy analysts, management theorist[s], publishing executive[s], and macroeconomist[s] are not. The difference is that, when people from the first list are wrong about something, its obvious from the results and they suffer; they have skin in the game. Bad teeth, crashed planes, and leaky pipes are bad for business. People from the second list rationalize by substituting a different theory. They were not really wrong but just early, and, if theyre lucky, which is to say skillful at apple-polishing, earn promotion after promotion by not failing utterly. (Financial advisors can argue that the fiduciary standard is the most powerful tool for putting them in the first list.) Skin in the Game is full of insights like this, some recycled from his earlier work but many of them new. It is well worth the relatively quick read. Despite the many good qualities of Skin in the Game, Talebs work, including the present volume, is often infuriating. He is too sure of himself, too unkind to his enemies, too full of bluster and obscure humor. Acting on his belief that some kinds of experts are worthless, he has populated the books dust jacket with anonymous tweets instead of celebrity testimonials. Heres the first tweet: The problem with Taleb is not that hes an ass (spelled out in full on the jacket). He is an ass. The problem with Taleb is that he is right. I agree. Asymmetry, or why we are ruled by the most easily offended In chapter two of Skin in the Game, entitled The Most Intolerant Wins, Taleb asks why we seem to be governed by the most easily offended. You have to refrain from smoking in the non-smoking section, but you dont have to smoke (that is, refrain from not smoking) in the smoking section, which, by the way, is much smaller. Few people really care whether you say Merry Christmas or Happy Holidays, but the latter has become de rigueur in some circles. Almost all soft drinks are kosher. The reason, Taleb explains, is that, for any given issue, there are a few people who care deeply about it and a great many people who do not. Those who care are spurred to action, even violent action in the case of religious or political passions. The rest of us, wishing to be left alone, rarely fight back with equal vigor. The results of this process include the increasing domination of Talebs beloved, multi-religious Lebanon by Muslims, for whom conversion to Islam is irreversible. Conversion away from Islam is at least theoretically punishable by death; Christians and Jews dont much care if you leave the faith. In ancient Roman times, Taleb explains, Christians were the intolerant minority that pushed their views on the Roman majority. Thats how Christianity eventually became the official religion of the empire in 323 A.D. Times and players change but the principles of human nature remain the same. Almost all soft drinks are kosher because its relatively easy to make a drink kosher. So manufacturers put forth this small effort rather than have two kinds of each drink, one for observant Jews a fraction of a percent of the total population and one for everybody else. If this argument sounds familiar, its recycled in much more general form from Frédéric Bastiat, the great 19th century French economist. Bastiat wrote that, for any given government action, such as a tax levied to subsidize some activity, there are a few people who will benefit greatly by it and they will work day and night to see it enacted. The great many who stand to lose will typically only lose a few pennies and will put forth little or no effort to prevent it. Thus the number of rules, regulations, taxes, handouts, and special favors granted by government grows exponentially with very little acting to restrain the growth. These are just a few of the asymmetries of daily life to which Talebs subtitle refers. Once you understand the principle, youll see it in everything. Waiter, theres a fly in my soup The New York deli called Lindys is famous for its clientele of Broadway actors and comedians, and for having food so bad that it has inspired a bevy of jokes including the one that starts with, Waiter, theres a fly in my soup. But, Taleb tells us, it is also well-known among mathematicians and other scholars as the place where the Lindy effect was first observed. This is the idea that the age of an inanimate object is a good indicator of its future longevity: Broadway shows that lasted for, say, one hundred days, had a future life expectancy of a hundred more. For those that lasted two hundred days, two hundred more. The heuristic became known as the Lindy effect. Likewise, Judaism, 3,500 years old, will probably last another 3,500; Scientology will be lucky to get another 60. Shakespeare will last longer than Stephen King. Even living things that do not age on a particular schedule, like trees, tend to follow this rule. It could be because the old ones, having survived, are anti-fragile, a concept from Talebs earlier book by that title; they are not just robust, but gain further robustness from exposure to stresses. Or maybe, like Shakespeare, theyre just better. This principle is very powerful and Taleb applies it to many topics, with the Lindy theme running through the whole book. Academia, for example, sometimes resembles an athletic contest in which the hardest-working or most aggressive participants appear to win. It should not. The winner is the one who finishes last, said the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein; that is, the academic whose theories are least easily overturned, most enduring, had the best theories. Investors would do well to understand the application of the Lindy principle to their enterprise. Indexing as a concept is about 75 years old; value investing is even older. These great ideas are unlikely to be overturned any time soon. Instead, improvements around the edges are the best we can expect. The latest idea for earning alpha, whatever it is at the moment, will almost certainly turn out to be a flash in the pan, easily arbitraged away by the time it can be widely implemented. Why are there so many employees? To illustrate how the principle of skin in the game applies to labor contracting, Taleb compares the behavior of two private jet pilots. Bob is a freelance contract pilot who is sometimes useful to your little airline but is at other times too busy hauling Saudi princes to fancy resorts to do the work you need done. The result, an occasional stranded planeload of people, is disastrous for your business. The other, a pilot-employee Ill call him Bill does more or less what you want, including working overtime in a pinch. Why the difference? Taleb writes, People you find in employment love the regularity of the payroll, with that special envelope on their desk the last day of the month, and without which they would act as a baby deprived of mothers milk
[H]ad Bob been an employee rather than something that appeared to be cheaper, that contractor thing, then you wouldnt be having so much trouble. Economics dictates that employment is just one of many ways to contract for labor, and a particularly inflexible one that requires you to pay the employee whether you can keep them busy or not. Youve probably considered replacing employees with contractors in whatever business you operate or work. Yet there are a lot of employees! Talebs tale provides a clue to why: Every organization wants a certain number of people associated with it to be deprived of a certain share of their freedom. Employment is the only legal way to achieve that sort of dependent relationship. Whats the connection to skin in the game? We tend to think of freelancers and entrepreneurs, such as Bob the pilot-contractor, as risk takers, skin-in-the- game players. And they are. But, as Taleb reminds us, skin in the game is not [about] incentives, but disincentives. You dont want the employee to do what is best for himself in the short run thats what contractors do so you set up an alignment of interest between his long-run welfare and yours. As an employee with a family and a mortgage, and considerable costs if he has to get another job and relocate, he has skin in your game. Thats why we have so many employees. Two very different kinds of risk Since investing is applied philosophy, Talebs whole book is relevant to investors, but the most directly applicable part is Chapter 19, The Logic of Risk Taking. He draws the distinction, fundamental but rarely fully understood, between ensemble probability and time probability. (Like double-entry bookkeeping, this is one of those wonderful ideas thats obvious once youve heard it; less so in advance.) Ensemble probability involves a risk faced by a population at a given point in time, such as that of a hundred people visiting a casino once, where each person can make a one-time, double-or-nothing bet involving his or her entire fortune. In that single visit, about half of them will be ruined. The other half, having doubled their money, will be perfectly fine. Time probability, in contrast, involves an ongoing risk faced by an individual over time. Consider someone visiting a casino 100 times in succession, also making a double-or-nothing bet involving his entire fortune. In 100 visits, that person will be ruined; usually ruin will occur after just a few visits. No one who behaves this way will ever be fine. With ensemble probability, then, as Taleb explains, the ruin of one does not affect the ruin of others. With time probability its the opposite: once you get a sufficiently bad outcome, the game is over and you cannot become un- ruined. This distinction is relevant to investing because the risks investors face involve time probability, not ensemble probability. In most aspects of life, we are accustomed to thinking about risk in the ensemble sense: a football team has a 2-in-3 chance of winning a game, a disease has a 10% mortality rate. So we are familiar with that kind of risk, and comfortable extending the concept to other aspects of life. But, in investing, the state of a persons wealth at any point in time is contingent on her wealth at the previous point in time; returns are cumulative; investing exposes us to time risk, cumulative risk. We are not typically able to do the mental approximations needed to think about that if the risk of getting in a car accident on the way to work is one in 10,000, what is the risk of driving to work 10,000 times? (Its not 100%, nor is it insignificant; its 64%. You should go to work anyway.) Thus, we need to be very careful when relying on intuition to tell us about investment risk. Investing involves more risk than you think. We also need to be wary of extrapolating from the past (and avoid the temptation that comes from the fact that its so readily accessible). Paul Samuelson famously said that we have only one sample of the past, meaning that far more things could have happened than did happen; theres only so much you can learn from studying history. But its just as important that we will get only one sample of the future! The return pattern that we will experience is just one of the infinitely many possible ones, and it will not be the one that we expect statistically; it will be something different, possibly very different. Are you an IYI? I hope not Consistent with his famously combative persona, Taleb takes pot shots frequent and vigorous ones at intellectuals, or, in his acronym, IYI. An intellectual yet idiot (IYI) is someone who is beloved by the public for his or her knowledgeable airs but who is actually full of baloney, having no practical sense. Taleb considers Steven Pinker, author of Enlightenment Now and a current darling, to be an example, and calls him a journalistic professor, not the psychologist and linguist that he obviously is. (Im reviewing Pinkers book, favorably, in an upcoming Advisor Perspectives.) When one gets past the gratuitous insult, however Taleb doesnt think much of journalists or professors he has a point. When a real expert strays from his own field, he is susceptible to making the foolish mistakes of an amateur, except that an amateur is likely to be humbler. Taleb has not convinced me that Pinker is a wandering amateur; maybe its Taleb, not Pinker, who is wandering too far from the core of his knowledge. Intellectuals, whether or not IYI, must, when turning against their kind, be on guard against becoming AIYA: anti-intellectual yet ass. (Pardon my French; Taleb inspires it.) At 16, I fit the description; I do not think Pinker does. Dedicated to the one I love? Book dedications are rarely interesting; they usually feature ones parent, spouse, or teacher. But, in an odd twist that allows us to see (a little) into Nassim Talebs mind, he dedicates Skin in the Game to two well-known people whom I would have praised less lavishly. First, Ron Paul, a Roman among Greeks; second, Ralph Nader, a Greco-Phoenician saint. In a self-referential joke, Talebs comment about Ron Paul reverses the dedication of his earlier book, The Black Swan, to the great mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot, a Greek among Romans. It took me a bit of effort to find out, by searching through Talebs tweets, that he admires the Romans practicality: As I came to realize...[,] the Romans were no-B.S. Fat Tonys; they resented grand theories and favored prudent and progressive tinkering. Much of what they built, from constitution, to Roman law, to bridges, to low income housing, to their literature, to their imperial administration (still around in the structure of the Catholic church), has survived 2000 years. Paul, a doctor and former congressman from Texas, is an honorable man who often stands alone in objecting to his colleagues expedient political follies. Im not sure (and Taleb doesnt say) why that makes him a Roman, but maybe an encomium is deserved; I would not have singled him out. But Ralph Nader a saint? He certainly sacrificed personal income, and subjected himself to harassment, when making the case that U.S. auto companies were making dangerous cars; he had skin in that game. But Nader has a dark side. Despite having taken a poverty vow and very publicly living like a monk, he revealed a personal fortune of $3.8 million in his 2000 presidential election filing not a large fortune but not monkish either. He has also founded nonprofit organizations that do research of dubious quality, and his latest crusade is a meaningless fight against share buybacks (an important mechanism for enabling investors to get cash flow out of their portfolios). Nader is an odd choice for sainthood. Skin in the game everywhere Like many authors whove discovered a principle that they believe applies in many aspects of life, Taleb isnt shy about discussing every aspect he can identify. They include the role of looks in choosing a surgeon: dont choose a dignified, handsome one one who looks more like a butcher had to have much to overcome in terms of perception. Military interventionism? Hes against it, arguing that policy analysts who make war from comfortable offices dont know what its really like on the ground and have no personal stake in the consequences. Religions, at least at first, demand extreme sacrifices from their adherents because their leaders know they can only hold the tribe together if its members can see that fellow members have sacrificed too: The strength of a creed, Taleb writes, did not rest on evidence of the powers of its gods, but evidence of the skin in the game on the part of its worshippers. This campfire-style storytelling makes the book seem, in places, more like a collection of loosely related essays, as I referred to it at the outset, than a coherent book. This approach has an upside and a downside. Its easy to read parts of the book without losing the train of thought, since many of the parts were written as magazine articles and stand well on their own. The downside is that, if you try to read the book as a coherent whole, youll find it too full of interruptions and asides. Conclusion Talebs writing is nothing if not lively. What other philosopher, let alone investment writer, creates characters like Fat Tony, a worldly-wise trader who cares little for book learning; Yevgenia Nikolayevna Krasnova, a neuroscientist with three philosopher ex-husbands who writes a runaway best-seller called A Story of Recursion; and Nero Tulip, a thinly disguised version of Taleb himself? Taleb entertains, educates, and infuriates all at once, a heady combination for readers who score high on curiosity but frustrating for those who are just in a hurry to gather information and get on with it. This is Sunday afternoon, not Monday morning, reading. Mercifully, Skin in the Game is also relatively short, unlike Talebs previous book, Antifragile. It can be consumed effectively by a casual reader and does not require sustained attention. Skin in the Game is not Talebs best book thats Fooled by Randomness but its his most accessible. I highly recommend it. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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