In one of his papers he wrote:
To summarize, today’s
dilemma arose from the dramatic successes of modern technology in spreading
knowledge and capital across the globe.
Rich nations built plants and exported both knowledge and aspirations
around the globe, generously enabling poor nations that organized properly to
bootstrap themselves into the restricted capital-rich sector of the global
economy. These same rich nations failed
to recognize that such open exports of capital would weaken their own ability
to produce and retain liquidity. As such
rich nations became dependent on others to provide goods, they first paid with
other valued goods and then increasingly with credit based on trust—credit and
trust that became overextended. But loss
of trust is a two-edged sword affecting both creditor and debtor, for the
creditor also needs liquidity, and liquidity losses due to reductions in local
or national exports propagate across the entire global trust and credit
network. Such losses force both creditors
and debtors to reorganize, and if they must reorganize rapidly the resulting
human displacements can further erode trust in government and self, which are
the fountainheads of trust.
Trust is key to both economic and social
liquidity, for trust alone binds us locally and nationally in both our economic
and social structures. Absent trust,
both are in jeopardy.
At the time I did not fully understand what was being said. Now I believe I do have a better grasp and feel it is worth sharing. You see, for Dave, Trust was what was Quality to Pirsig. Trust was the underlying element of a stable economy. Trust was what created the AD and AS that we see the macroeconomists talking about, the basis of arguments between nations. Trust is engendered by a good leader. Mis-Trust is a bad leader. A growing economy is based on Trusting the leader, or leaders, a collapsing economy is based upon mistrust.
Dave had hist upon a true piece of insight. He was fundamentally and engineer, an engineer in the true sense of the word. He believed in facts, in modelling and demonstrating the results, which is why perhaps my missing what he was saying on Trust was so easy to do, I was looking for the quantitative answer, instead he laid out an existential answer. Now as I have read and watched some of these macroeconomists I have a deepened grasp of what Dave meant. Too bad we could not continue the conversations.