The latest
Events list dropped through the letter box a couple of days ago with three
invitations to attend. They all look
interesting and might be worth the effort.
These are LSE events and can be found on the web site, but here are the outlines.
Quote:
Change is on
the way.
Since the
start of the new century, the world has started to change - and radically. The
collision of four global forces means we are now living in an era of near
constant discontinuity. Competitors can burst upon the scene in a blink of an
eye.
Businesses
that were protected by large and deep moats find that their defences are easily
breached. Vast new markets are conjured seemingly from nothing. Five years is
an eternity.
In a new book,
"No Ordinary Disruption", the three leaders of the McKinsey Global
Institute, McKinsey's business and economics research arm, argue that the world
is now roughly in the middle of a dramatic transition as a result of four
fundamental disruptive trends: growth and urbanisation in emerging markets,
technological disruption, increasing connectivity, and the ageing of
populations.
None of these
disruptions, on its own, is a surprise. The unique challenge is that they are
happening at the same time - and on a huge scale, creating second-, third-, and
even fourth-order effects that are scarcely possible to anticipate.
As they
collide, they will produce change so significant that much of the management
intuition that has served us in the past will become irrelevant, causing
us to reset our collective intuition.
How we behave
in economics.
Richard Thaler
has spent his career studying the radical notion that the central agents in the
economy are humans—predictable, error-prone individuals. Traditional economics
assumes rational actors. Early in his research, Thaler realized these
Spock-like automatons were nothing like real people.
Whether buying
an alarm clock, selling football tickets, or applying for a mortgage, we all
succumb to biases and make decisions that deviate from the standards of
rationality assumed by economists. In other words, we misbehave.
Dismissed at
first by economists as an amusing sideshow, the study of human miscalculations
and their effects on markets now drives efforts to make better decisions in our
lives, our businesses, and our governments.
Speaking about
his latest book Misbehaving: The
Making of Behavioural Economics, Richard
Thaler will couple recent discoveries in human psychology with a
practical understanding of incentives and market behaviour.
Thaler will
explain how to make smarter decisions in an increasingly mystifying world,
revealing how behavioural economic analysis opens up new ways to look at
everything.
Freakonomics
for all:
When Freakonomics was first published, Steven D Levitt and Stephen J
Dubner started a blog—and they’ve kept it up, tallying more than 8,000 blog
posts on Freakonomics.com and pulling in 12 million page views per year.
The best are now published in When to Rob a Bank. At this event, Stephen Dubner
shares the Freakonomic secrets to making economic ideas fresh and entertaining
through their blog and podcast (which has been downloaded 150 million times).
You’ll discover what people lie about, and why; why it might be time for
a sex tax (if not a fat tax); and, yes, when to rob a bank. (Short answer:
never; the ROI is terrible.)
Unquote.
In the last, "When To Rob A Bank", discovering what people lie
about. This might be required reading
for our pollsters and politicians.
"Thaler will explain how to make smarter decisions in an increasingly mystifying world,"
ReplyDeleteIt's an interesting problem, how do we know if paying attention to this guy is the smart thing to do? Or anyone else for that matter?
Do your own research. There is no substitute.