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Can science reinvent the economy?

As we pick over the rubble of the world's markets, ideas from physics, engineering and biology could help to build new, more robust financial systems
As we pick over the rubble of the world's markets, ideas from physics, engineering and biology could help to build new, more robust financial systems
As we pick over the rubble of the world’s markets, ideas from physics, engineering and biology could help to build new, more robust financial systems
(Image: Julien Pacaud)

We have created a monster. Financial markets have grown so complex that neither intuition nor standard economic models can get to grips with them. So what’s to be done to avoid a repeat of the financial disasters of the past couple of years?

In the following pages, Mark Buchanan looks at some of the creative ideas being explored to tame the markets, not just by economists, but by physicists, engineers, biologists and others. What does science have to say – and will anyone listen?

“Estimated global credit write-down 2009-10 $4 trillion”

“US government debt 2010 (est.) $ 9.9 trillion”

Bubble math

The human factor

Network solutions

Predicting the big one

An economy in a computer

Out of kilter

Will it be enough?

Recession bites
A global affair

The madness of crowds

All speculative bubbles have one thing in common: a belief that a particular company or commodity will be worth more in the future than it is today. The objects of desire through the ages have been many and varied.

Tulip mania

1636-37 The Netherlands

Contracts for the most prized varieties of tulip exchanged hands for exorbitant prices that increased 20-fold in three months – and then collapsed before a single bulb changed hands. The is that the whole Dutch economy took a huge hit as a result, although has suggested the effects were more limited.

South Sea bubble

1720 Great Britain

The South Sea Company held exclusive rights to trade principally slaves with the Spanish colonies of South America. In anticipation of huge future profits its share price rose 10-fold between January and June 1720, then collapsed again. Isaac Newton was one of the luminaries who were burned, losing £20,000.

Railway mania

1840s UK

Following the opening of the world’s first intercity railway, the Liverpool and Manchester, in 1830, new speculative schemes attracted huge amounts of capital. Many of them never materialised and investors’ money disappeared with them.

Roaring twenties

1920s US

Post-war prosperity, the rise of mass consumerism and easy credit combined to create the jazz age. By 1929, though, the money was running out. Wall Street crashed, dragging the world into the Great Depression.

The Dotcom bubble

Late 1990s Global

Boundless optimism about the prospects of the internet business model created a generation of aggressive, free-spending, “get big fast” companies. The NASDAQ new technology index doubled in value in 1999-2000 – and rapidly crashed again as the promised profits failed to arrive.

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