Time is Money and Does it Pencil Out

In 2014, Doug Ducey  a former CEO won the Governor’s race in Arizona with the slogan “government at the spreed of business.” Slogans rarely illuminate a problem,but this one hit the nail on the head. Before the 16th century, government and commerce moved at somewhat the same pace, glacially slow. Since then the private world has been gaining speed much like a bolder rolling down hill. Government has failed miserably to keep pace. This widening gap is causing great friction slowing our progress to “More”. In the real economy “time is money”. Wasted time hits right in the profits. Indeed, improper time management can and does lead to business failure. The Japanese kicked American butts using just in time inventory control and manufacturing to lower costs and gain flexibility, until we adopted better practices. Americans needed to remember time and motion study began here with combining the time studies of Frederick Winslow Taylor with the motion work of Frank and Lilian Gilbreth (the couple best remembered  by their children’s Frank B. Gilbreth, Jr., and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey’s 1950 book “Cheaper by the Dozen” and the very successful movie based on it. We recommend both for the whole family). This recognition of time value unfortunately fails to rule in the world of most governments.

How can we bring something close to the time discipline of the marketplace to the government rule makers?  First we have realize governments and their bureaucracies have totally different incentives. The greater the perceived work load the the larger the bureaucratic fiefdom. Quick action on whatever is before a bureaucracy actually works against their interest. Consider a government entity with ten projects before it. Five new projects per month are received on average. Let’s say one agency clears 5 per month and another clears just one. In the first instance there is no reason to add resources. In the second the work load demands expansion. The inefficient are rewarded, the exact opposite of private industry. How else can you explain the great growth of governments across the globe while they actually are completing less work per capita? Ideas are needed to bring this bureaucratic bloat under control. We’d like to present some ideas and invite any others that might help.

How can we speed the approval of proposed projects without taking undo risks? If a project is presented to the authorities, it might expire while waiting for approvals. How many horror stories have we heard about proposals endlessly bouncing between bureaucracies until they just give up. Even if  they finally get approved it comes at a high cost. Large Established businesses have the staffs, experience,relationships and lobbying to navigate the bureaucratic maze. This gives them an unfair advantage over new innovative enterprises. The more bureaucratic an entity is, the greater the space for crony capitalism. Let’s say you want to start an internet retail business requiring a warehouse to store and ship product. According to the World Bank, it takes half the time to form the business and a quarter the time to obtain the permits for the warehouse in Singapore as opposed to the US. Obviously some of our locales are better than others,but if you run up against a special interest such as environmental, animal rights or Native Americans all bets are off. No wonder since 2009 we have gone from the top ten business friendly countries to falling out of the top top 20 according to the Forbes 2015 Annual list.  More than 150 new major regulations have been added since 2009 at a cost of $70 billion, according to the Heritage Foundation. How can we regain our competitive edge while keeping reasonable protective rules?

On the battle field or in a disaster, multiple injuries must be processed as quickly and efficiently. Life and limb literately hang in the balance. In order to process each case expeditiously a triage nurse determines who gets the patient first. Even with multiple maladies the most needed specialty controls. You might think that’s all well and good in life and death situations but what has that to do in the process of say permitting projects? Everyday a multitude of projects show up at permitting authorities often needing numerous agencies to sign off. Someone with a project is faced with where to start first and are often ping ponged back and forth between them. As the days roll into weeks then months and even years, the project might get the final go ahead but at a unacceptable price. Often they just give up and the project dies. Would you direct multiple disaster victims to a hospital with no triage setup? Of course not.They need to be speedily assigned or there would be dire consequences. We don’t want worthy projects to die or be crippled with extra costs either. If we could make process easier and rational we’re bound to have better outcomes. Not every project deserves to be OK’d but they all deserve expeditious handling. Let’s put the triage principle to work.

Let’s say you have a project that needs federal, state and local permitting. Instead of applying to each and everyone, only an application would be made to a triage authority and entered on a public internet register. Upon examination the triage would assign the project to the agency most affected and/or the needed expertise. There a project manager would named. He or she would notify the other agencies involved. Those agencies would be given a short time to report to the project manager the time needed or what additional info would be needed for their part of the permitting. The manager upon having all the needed information,could give the project a timetable for completion of permitting. If an agency asks for an inordinate amount of time, the permitting could be reassigned to a more nimble one.  Checking the register, interested public parties would be able to contact and make their case to the appropriate agency. Instead of dealing with multiple confusing agencies the project would deal with only one person. Under this circumstance they could make a rational decision whether to go forward or not.

How would this actually work in the real world. Let’s take an extreme case. XYZ corp, a foreign or domestic company, wants to build a hyper-loop to move people between LA and NY City. Obviously, a multitude of agencies at the federal, state and local levels would  be involved. XYZ’s proposal would be filed with the triage agency. The agency  would  be put the proposal on the public internet registry and assign a lead agency. Maybe the Interstate  Commerce Commission (or some other), but the one selected would appoint a project manager and he or she would notify all affected agencies requesting their timetables. The manager could consolidate similar agencies under one lead. For instance, all the affected state EPA’s and the National EPA could have hearings dragging  on forever. In that case the manager could order the National EPA to consolidate hearings under their control and timetable to eliminate duplicate hearings. Greenpeace, Sierra Club, Chamber of Commerce, the company itself and all other interested parties would have to make only one presentation. Additional information or clarification requests would be consolidated and coordinated by the lead agency and the project manager. With all the information in on timely fashion, the project manager render a decision. With problems resolved the manager issues all permits. If serious problems remain unresolved the project is rejected. If an agency or anyone else has remaining objections not considered germane by the project manager, they could sue but only on their own money and pay all costs if they lose. We have no idea if a Hyper Loop would pass or not, but they’d deserve a timely decision. An entity wanting “More” must be business friendly enough to respect possible investment with timely professionalism.

What about agency rules either proposed or already in place businesses consider uneconomic? Congress has said  agencies must give assurance that any rule is in fact cost effective. Good theory but in practice agencies either don’t have the capability or desire to do real cost/benefit analysis. They just can put down anything to justify their rule. If congress is really serious about this and they should be, they have the right place to do the job right under their jurisdiction, the Congressional Budget Office. When there is a sharp difference of opinion of the cost/benefit of a regulation, the agency and those adversely affected would simply send  their analysis to the CBO for review. The one who presents the most persuasive argument in in the CBO’s  judgement rules. While the CBO won’t always be right, the non-partisan body crunches numbers for a living. Who better to be counted on to look at two sets of numbers and judge who is closer to the truth. The CBO budget might have to be increased, but that’s a small price to pay if we can eliminate rules with adverse cost/benefit. Compliance costs are enormous. The competitive Enterprise Institute ‘s report Ten Thousand Commandments 2015 estimated that it costs consumers and businesses almost &1.9 trillion-more than  11%of our current GDP-to comply with current federal regulations. That amounts to a hidden tax of nearly $15,000per household each year. It would be nice to know if all these rules pencil out or are we placing uneconomic anchors on our quest for “More”.  Knowing they face rigorous review, agencies would have no choice but to do realistic analysis in the first place. Just as important, congress would’ve asserted control in  this area. Good rules should be able to pass CBO scrutiny, but we simply can’t afford the uneconomic ones.

These are a couple of our ideas to arrest our descent from the top group of business friendly countries to also ran.  We hope they bring forth even better ideas. Whether it’s a foreign company choosing a location to expand or a domestic one deciding to to stay or move abroad, if they decide to go elsewhere no Americans are hired.

 

On the Move

Humanity has always had a great migratory dimension. If it didn’t we’d still huddled in Africa.  Whether it was out of necessity, to seek economic betterment or curiosity or some combination, we have always been on the move. Yet today the idea of people changing their national location is under fire from one end of the globe to the other. Even the great melting pot, the United States, finds immigration both legal and illegal  under fire. The European Union is grappling with both internal and external migrations. Some nations such as Japan have never favored immigration. What a great time to determine what migratory policies are more likely to lead to “More”.

Throughout history a welcoming attitude towards “Strangers” seems to be associated an entity’s vibrancy and prosperity. Cross pollination of people benefited all. On the other hand those that cut themselves in self-contained entities remained stagnant backwaters. China and Japan limited contact with “barbarians” and lost their place in the upward march of mankind. Only when their leaders realized their own survival depended on a radical change of attitude did they crack open the door. Japan got the message looking down the cannon barrels of American  “black ships” and the Chinese communist party when they saw what happened to their communist brethren in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Opening up to the world while still not welcoming large numbers of “strangers” among them and without institutional changes that would attract them, they used lower wages initially and copying of other People’s innovations to gain “More” for their peoples. The jury is still out whether their restrictive policies can sustain them in the future. If history is our guide the future may be dim without greater opening.

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Free Capital to Finance “More”

A great idea without the capital to make  it happen remains just another missed opportunity. Tune in the TV show”Shark Tank” and you get a good idea of the important interplay between ideas and the where with-all to implement them. So what is this lubricant to ease us into a better future? Capital is deferred consumption. Early on someone realized that eating all the grain they found left no seed to plant and surely none to increase the acreage under cultivation. To have more meant setting aside “seed corn”. Put off eating the sheep and you can get more sheep and warmth while you wait. If we have more grain, wool or meat than we can presently use we can trade it for other stuff. In a nutshell, we have “More”.

The problem arose when trades were inconvenient because of time, place or both. Entity A has fish to trade for wine, entity B has wine but doesn’t need fish at the moment. Entity C needs fish and has pretty rocks from which metal could be extracted to trade. Now A finds  it could trade C’s pretty metal for B’s wine. More importantly, where wine and especially fish could spoil and were bulky to store, the shiny metal could be shaped for easy storage or trade and it never spoiled. With these attributes it performed a further function, a store of value.

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THE FREE FLOW OF IDEAS

Educated in what? To impart knowledge, we have to gain it first. Knowledge begins with ideas. Many times ideas compete. To follow an idea to knowledge we have to allow the widest range of exchange and never impede ideas from being propagated. Let the ideas fight it out in public and let the best add to our store of knowledge. You might say everyone agrees to that. You would be wrong! The world is a free place to present and discuss ideas so long as they’re the “right” ones.In what part of the globe can you post any idea on the internet or other media without fear of retribution? Russia? China? Turkey? Cuba? We know espousing the wrong thoughts could land you in a world of  trouble. A poem on TV in Germany can find you in legal problems. Just ask comedian Jan Böhmermann. He will soon find himself in court for a sastirical poem mocking the President of Turkey. But the U.S. is different, you say. An energy company discussing its business with shareholders and others can find itself threatened by hordes of State Attorney Generals with a blizzard of litigation. Just ask Exxon. In fact anyone not towing the line on Climate Change, could find themselves in trouble. Talk about an area where there are all sorts of ideas and questions in play, it’s climate change. Even if you agree with the premise the world is warming, there are loads of things to discuss. Should the Government stop subsidizing flood insurance in coastal or low-lying areas if the seas are rising? Should we encourage heat and drought resistant GMOs to safeguard the food supply? What actions make the most economic sense? Is warming actually better overall for mankind? Try to get a dime of Government funding for research for any these and you’ll be disappointed. Private sector funding is dying from fear of  what Exxon is facing or worse. Even if you could get funding, what University would support it?  In fact the very Universities that should be oasis for the free exchange of thought are in fact just the opposite. How many people can freely express unpopular (at least on campus) ideas at your local U?

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Education

While we have seen Education  alone isn’t the path to “More”(It’s an Elephant 1/25/16), it is a very important building block. Our present Educational system suffers from the twin blemishes of being ineffective while being ridiculously expensive. At the K12 level the whole format is hopelessly out of date. In this wonderful interconnected world somehow we are using a basically 19th century Prussian teaching model adapted at that time in the U.S. by Horace Mann. While a rigid system of lecture, drill and exams working your way up yearly grades may have worked centuries ago, it is evident we could so much better adapting to modern educational opportunities. For instance look at the worldwide success of the online Khan Academy. Kids learn online, combine the online and classroom or the home. Seemingly endless learning variations, but isn’t that the point. Each child learns differently, but all have a natural curiosity. With the ability to customize the learning experience to the needs of each child to a degree never even contemplated in the nineteenth century, why are we stuck with this antique system? Continue reading