Monday, December 9, 2013

The Great Inversion

This is a fantastic observation on our current economy as well as an appeal for 21st century innovation...

America’s Economy Is Officially Inside-Out


This is the first generation of Americans in modern history expected to enjoy lower living standards than their forebears. It is the first generation in modern history whose life expectancy is dwindling. It is the first generation of modern Americans whose educational attainment is declining. It is the first generation of modern Americans who face less opportunity than their parents.

Shorter, nastier, dumber, harder, bleaker. That’s the future for not only Americans, but for many in the world’s richest countries.

Let me be clear why this is so remarkable. It’s not that the great wheel of prosperity is merely decelerating. It is that it actually seems to be turning backwards. The great wheel of progress already ground to a halt—several decades ago, if measured in terms of average incomes. And the real danger now? That it may be beginning to spin—in reverse.

Perhaps it’s just a blip. Perhaps it’s a temporary malfunction. Perhaps I’m overreacting — after all, the economy’s growing, right?

Yes… it is. And that’s precisely the problem.

For that is what tells us we are in truly uncharted water. The economy is indeed “growing.” But the top 1 percent have taken 95 percent of the gains in this so-called “recovery.”  The plain fact is that the average household is poorer in the “recovery” than during the “recession.”

We cannot suggest that an economy is perfectly fine—nay, even healthy—just because a tiny number are growing richer while the lives of the vast majority are literally growing shorter, nastier, dumber, harder, and bleaker.

I can think of many other examples of progress slowing. Of prosperity decelerating. The great wheel’s motion is never even; there are bumps in the road of human progress — sometimes the great wheel spins furiously, sometimes, it hums along gently, and sometimes, it sputters and strains.

But.

I can think of almost no other example in the history of modern democracies of progress actually becoming regress. Short of war or cataclysm, it is literally unprecedented. And that’s not the half of it. It’s unprecedented…because it should be impossible. If the rich get richer, it should be precisely because they create goods of real value to people, which elevate their living standards. In a working economy, “growth” should reflect real prosperity multiplying.

But when growth rises and living standards fall? That begins to hint that there is something wrong—very wrong, perhaps terribly wrong—with the way things are.  It suggest that what is happening to this society is not merely a simple, passing, self-healing ailment; but a chronic, possibly permanent, definitely debilitating condition. Not a flu—but a cancer.

Economics has no language—no word—to describe this condition: one in which the economy is “growing” but human progress is reversing. It’s not a depression—for that’s a situation where growth flatlines. It’s not a recession—for that’s just a temporary setback in growth. A “dark age” would signify both a decline in growth and a decline in living standards.

We have no words for this condition because economics has no concepts with which to fully grapple with—let alone understand—it. And economics has no concepts with which to understand this condition because economics believes, more or less, that it simply isn’t possible. Progress cannot go backwards when an economy is “growing”; because growth, as I’ve noted, is believed by the acolytes of the cult of economics to be the alpha and omega of human prosperity.

What, then, do we call it?

For we must give it a name, this secret hidden in plain sight. The secret that, if it were to be mentioned, would—and should—instantly discredit our leaders. Would and should silently condemn our institutions.
Given that the growth rises even as life expectancy, mobility, and educational attainment fall — that GDP expands even as the lives of the vast majority contract from shrinking health, intelligence, income, wealth, relationships, stability, security, meaning, and purpose — I suggest we call it a Great Inversion.
In this post-recession twilight zone, our economy is upside-down and inside-out.

I won’t pretend to smile, pat you on the back, and offer you bullet-pointed “solutions.” Because to a phenomenon this great, this unprecedented, this historic? I don’t believe there are any.

But I do believe that maybe, just maybe, if we have the wisdom to think through the above, the empathy to feel the tremendous suffering the future already surely holds, and the courage to see what is right in front of us—well, then, maybe, just maybe we can reach another turning point.

Not one in which human progress goes into reverse. But in which it goes into overdrive. In which the great wheel hits the redline and we all surge forward.

That’s the real challenge of the 21st century. Not just more tired, piecemeal incrementalism; not more excuses for a broken status quo; not more apologists and yes-men for leaders barely worthy of the term; not more dead ideologies and empty dogmas—the very ones that led to a Great Inversion. But revolutions. Millions of them. In every mind; in every undreamt dream; in every skyward eye. In every life.

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Umair Haque is Director of Havas Media Labs and author of Betterness: Economics for Humans and The New Capitalist Manifesto: Building a Disruptively Better Business. He is ranked one of the world's most influential management thinkers by Thinkers50. Follow him on twitter @umairh.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

The Wixii™ Project: Trish Thomas

Trish Thomas 

Name:  Trish Thomas 
Location:  Colorado
CompanyTrish Thomas: Boldly Smart Solutions

Professional Industry:  Consulting

Job Title:  Business Owner
 WIXII-ISM™ FROM TRISH THOMAS: 
“That is always my primary goal in consulting and in life… helping people find what they love, grow into masters, and pursue perfection (and profits) with abandon.”

“My daughter, Lydia, has also said many times that watching me work hard for what I want and engage in a job I truly love has been healthier than having a miserable stay-at-home mom (which I would surely have been!).” 

TRISH’S MINDSET AND WORK-LIFE MIX:
I am an eternal optimist but very pragmatic along the way.  Negativity and worry are pointless.  Even when bad things do happen you can seldom fix anything by fretting about it, and in fact often bring bad things on yourself through self-sabotage.  But as much as I keep a sunny outlook, I’m also ruthless about productivity and results.  In business, if something doesn’t make money it doesn’t make sense.  And money comes from smart, productive people engaging 100% in work they love.  That is always my primary goal in consulting and in life… helping people find what they love, grow into masters, and pursue perfection (and profits) with abandon.
I’m lucky to have a mellow, Hawaiian husband to balance out my long hours and sometimes frenetic energy. We have definitely worked together to cover parenting and household duties, so I believe that partnership and/or community is key to managing life’s inevitable craziness.  Work-life balance is an elusive dream, and I truly think every turn we take in life does represent a choice… and we lose some things when we achieve others.  I’ve worked a lot while Lydia was growing up, but when we are together we have fun, share deeply, and I am fully present.  I know many friends who say they are with their families a lot, but because they never stop texts, emails, social media and calls they are distracted and no value is there.  Lydia has also said many times that watching me work hard for what I want and engage in a job I truly love has been healthier than having a miserable stay-at-home mom (which I would surely have been!).  Now she works with me in my business a few hours each week and comes with me on business trips, allowing her to see the world.  Making time for myself is probably the biggest challenge, but I am so happy, loved and blessed that 20 extra pounds is a small cross to bear.

Describe a “day in your life” from waketime to bedtime:
I wake up around 6 am and have a few hours to relax with Will before hitting work.  This is my time to water my garden, drink some tea, read, etc.  I’m typically in meetings or working on projects 10 hours a day, but honestly meeting with many of my clients is more like play with old friends at this point – work may be a misnomer some days!  My biggest personal challenge is not eating and drinking my way through each day from one meeting or happy hour to the next.  I serve on 5 non-profit boards at this time and will be chairing the Denver/Boulder BBB Board and the Women’s Council at CU next year.  So board meetings and committees do fill up a lot of time, but I love giving back to causes and the community.  Weekends are usually quiet at home or spent with friends outdoors, at concerts, at ballgames, etc.  I’m a simple person and have a very contented life.

How does your current mindset/attitude empower and/or frustrate your ability to thrive in your work-life mix?  How has your mindset/attitude toward life changed over time?
I tend to get aggressive about making more money in spurts.  So there is certainly negative impact on my rest and fun in waves, but I don’t immerse myself in work for months on end with no relief.  I’ve learned over the years that I’m a project person and do best when I give 110% for a short time and then recharge.  I’m sure I could make more money if I was willing to be a road-warrior or take on any project, but that’s not me.  I work only with clients I like on projects that get my juices flowing.  And I’ll always be an entrepreneur at heart, pursuing an occasional side project of my own (currently it’s partnership in a healthcare software company, ONE Healthcare Systems).

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Things We Don't Do Anymore Because of Technology

Great infographic sharing all the things we don't do anymore because of technology:
50 Things We Don't Do Anymore Due to Technology