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dysphemistic treadmill's avatar

"The flywheel of abundance"

Do you do this because you just hate engineers?

Like, you fully understand that you are misusing "flywheel," but you enjoy seeing engineers wince in pain?

Okay, I'll go over this once again: a flywheel does not accelerate the system around it. Instead, it acts against changes in velocity. It's just a big disc of concentrated inertia; it doesn't want to slow down, and it doesn't want to speed up. It does not want to speed up! It resists acceleration!!

If you want a system to enjoy positive feedback, so that inputs build on each other constructively and produce acceleration, then do not -- do not! -- put a flywheel into that system. It'll only slow you down.

I don’t object to metaphorical uses of language. If you want to say that, I don’t know, the Fed’s counter-cyclic policies act as a flywheel on the economy, then that will be accurate and illuminating: the Fed’s policies will smooth out the quick lurches and lags in the economy; they will tend to slow the economy down if it speeds up, and speed it up if it slows down. That’s what a flywheel does; its inertia smooths out the curve of velocity.

But flywheels are simply not a metaphor for positive feedback systems. You might as well step inside from a snowstorm and say, "it's as cold as a raging inferno out there!" You would only say that if you were completely ignorant of what raging infernos really are. And you would only think that flywheels are positive feedback mechanisms if you were completely ignorant of what a flywheel really is. Please, find a phrase that makes even minimal sense to the minimally well-informed. Please, don't torture engineers.

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InMD's avatar

I agree with the piece and the policy prescriptions regarding growth. However I think it's helpful to look outside the US where we can (hopefully) be a bit more dispassionate.

Think about the situation in Sweden, where anti immigration sentiment has broadly been on the rise and changed their politics in important ways. It isn't hard to figure out the reason if you do a little digging. Since they have resettled huge numbers of people from Africa and the Middle East they have been experiencing hundreds of grenade and other explosive device attacks, linked to these communities. While not America, there has also been an increase in high profile homicides involving firearms (I know, in Europe where guns don't even exist!). They are still not remotely on American levels of criminal violence or homicide, but they've never experienced anything like it in modern times. Do we really have to wonder why this registers with people, perhaps more than technocratic arguments about growing prosperity, built on population growth? Even where those arguments are basically right? I don't think so.

What it says to me, is that in order for those technocratic arguments to prevail, the perception of immigration needs to be that it is orderly, and involves both assimilation and immigrants who are themselves very ready and willing to assimilate.

Our issues in the US are of course far less acute than Sweden, in the sense that we are not bringing in people from war zones with religious beliefs and customs that may be fundamentally incompatible with secular modernity. However, our immigrants do bring central American gangs and associated problems with them. And they do overwhelm immigration infrastructure in highly visible ways, to say nothing of the violation of peoples' fundamental sense of fairness when immigrants are allowed to enter and work illegally. Even a perfect immigration system will have opposition and there will be some xenophobia. But, as Matt is fond of reminding us, there are cross pressured voters and people can switch their preferences based on how issues of public policy are managed and presented.

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