Posts Tagged ‘the crowd’

Who Leads the Economy?

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

The US economy is made up of two fundamental events which are expanding and contracting credit. While an economy is expanding credit typically it is a time of prosperity. When an economy is contracting usually it is a labeled a recession. The economic cycle of expansion and contraction describes an economy as a whole.

To best visualize this cycle you should imagine a wave. As you go up the wave credit is expanding which typically means more spending; when you go down the wave credit is contracting which leads to less spending. Since US consumer makes up about 70% of GDP, it is logical to imagine the consumer is the water that makes up the wave. As the old saying goes, “Life is full of ups and downs”. People are typically either going up or down the wave.


The world is made up of cycles. The sun comes up and then is goes down and seasons change. Peoples clothing and surroundings may change but history usually repeats itself.
Individuals have short and long cycles. Groups of people also share cycles. These groups could include 2 individuals to millions or even the entire world’s population.

Gustav Le Bon in his book “The Crowd” cited that individuals are smarter than the crowd. With this assumption one could argue that the larger the group included in a cycle the slower the cycles is to repeat itself since it will take the crowd longer to move to the next part of the cycle than an individual.

Individual’s private finances most of the time go through periods of expansion and contraction just like the economy as a whole. Actually if you believe that individuals are smarter than the crowd, then you should also believe that individual’s finances lead the broader economy, since they are more efficient at moving to the next part of the cycle.

With the current economic crisis the price of real estate skyrocketed to a point where more and more individuals no longer saw value and stopped buying. With less buyer and more sellers, real estate prices started to plummet. Once the first domino falls, the rest eventually do. Since the housing bubble was so widespread and included so many people, both in the USA and abroad, the cycle should take that much longer to progress.

The Dangers of the Mob Mentality

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

We as the people of the United States are at a historic impasse where we can either band together to get through these hard time or fight and create a hostile environment where recovery is more difficult and prolonged.


When viewing an economic crisis over history many economists strictly view the flow of money, whether it is spending, lending or monetary. My view is somewhat more of the psychological viewpoint of the masses. If we strip out the dollars and cents of a crisis what we are left with is the acceptance of a failed endeavor.

We as individuals are able to handle extremely difficult stresses in life by going through stages of acceptance to finally moving on. As pointed out by Gustave Le Bon in The Crowd the individual is typically smarter than the crowd. As an individual we cope much faster with a crisis then the masses. Since this crisis is affecting so many people it makes it harder as an individual to go against the irrational actions of the crowd and move toward the somewhat obvious solution.


So instead of acting out of anger, we need to think as individuals and act rationally. If everyone thinks as an individual rather than part of the mob we would make more progress toward the resolution of this difficult time.

Unfortunately, if history is any indication of the future, people will jump on the bandwagon and the resolution will be prolonged and full of irrational behavior. Interesting that it is not the economic factors that determine the outcome, it is the human action.