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Competitive Intelligence & Perceptions Management
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Tuesday, 30 June 2009

“The economic model of the latter

half of the last Century is likely dead”

 

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John Robb continua pouco optimista e muito empenhado em soluções inovadoras. Face ao que define como “Networked tribes, systems disruption, and the emerging bazaar of violence”, o tech-guru avança na definição das respostas de “Resilient Communities, decentralized platforms, and self-organizing futures”, teorizando em tempo real em Global Guerrillas.

No dia em que o ministro das Finanças e outras fontes salientam o fim à vista da crise (a tal que a dra Ferreira Leite considerou, com um revirar de olhos, apenas uma espécie de pequeno  “terramotozinho”...) e no dia em que Mário Soares avisa que o País pode estar a tornar-se “ingovernável” (embora eu prefira dizer que é o sistema político-eleitoral actual que se mostra incapaz de governar e que o país está inocente...), num tal dia vale a pena ler a visão desassombrada de Robb:

Resilience Judo

There are growing signs -- from a black swan in savings/debt reduction to massive debt loads to quarterly trillion dollar losses in personal wealth to stagnant/falling consumer purchases to persistently low consumer confidence -- that the parasite ridden American "consumer" is finally dead.   If this is true, the economic model of the latter half of the last Century is likely dead too, and that will mean wrenching change.  It's my belief that the dominant solution is to prepare for a local future to ride out this storm.  Here are some of my random (more random than I would like) thoughts on what you should do to prepare:

  • Ruthlessly reduce debt. Nothing on credit. Pay off every loan. Strategically walk away from underwater assets (like homes that are worth less than the mortgage).  This will allow you to stay one step ahead of the death throes of the old economy.
  • Turn your hollow home into a productive asset.  Most homes are devoid of any productive capacity.  Adding energy, food, etc production to them turns them into real, productive assets.  Get your assets out of financial derivatives (stocks, bonds, etc.) as fast as you can and put them into productive assets (not commodities) you can touch.
  • Make everything you can yourself.  Grow your own food.  Produce your own energy.  Make/repair your own clothes.  Turn costs into savings.  Reskill to do this.  The new "fashionable trend" isn't what you can buy, it's what you can make.  Anyone that buys "designer or branded" anything is a fool.
  • Work online.  Convert your skills into something that can be sold electronically (most of my complex work is done this way).   Develop the skills necessary to work as part of a virtual team.  Telecommute whenever possible (and push to do this, even if it means less money), reduce the number of cars/dress clothes/etc you own in synch with this conversion (and move to a less expensive locale when possible!).   Always have two jobs going at the same time.
  • Build a local business.  Own assets that produce and sell that production locally.  Even if it is small, it will help down the line via contact networks/experience (a new spin on modern "networking").  Develop the niche skills that sell locally. Group/tribe up when possible to tackle larger opportunities.
  • Barter.  Cashless trades.  Convert what you have to what you need.  Skill set bartering is amazingly effective.  Become part of a local barter network (the backchannel).
  • Bring your family home.  Grow your home to accommodate more people.  Bring back parents and grown kids (with their families).  This will allow you to pool incomes and radically reduce workload/costs.  It's also beneficial for security.  NOTE:  I've found that consideration/compromise is the best way to handle an expansive family home environment.  
  • Suggestions welcome!! 

This change doesn't require cute and crunchy notions about "lifestyle" environmentalism.  It's all about mitigation of stresses in the short to medium term as living conditions deteriorate, while at the same time preparing to ride the resilient community wave to rapid and sustained long term success/wealth.

José Mateus Cavaco Silva at June 30, 2009 22:26 | link | comments
Tags: insegurança







Um blog não é um jornal, nem é um fórum. É um local de confronto de ideias. Debate das ideias que o autor do blog submete aos leitores. Convém, por isso, que por mail ou directamente nos "comments", os leitores se exprimam. Troquem ideias. Não só com o autor do blog como também entre si. Para o debate, todos são bem vindos. Da discussão…

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