Substack

Monday, January 19, 2026

The rule of law and predictability underpins effective markets

The US invasion of Venezuela and capture of Nicolas Maduro is the signature intervention under the emerging Donroe Doctrine. However, Venezuela’s oil reserves, precisely the reason the US intervened, may end up complicating matters. For a start, despite the President’s exhortation to US oil majors to line up and invest in the country, they appear to bereluctant

Ricardo Hausman hits the nail on the head with this brilliant articulation of the paradox - the manner in which the whole thing has been executed undermines the credibility of the objective itself.

Capitalism is not simply private ownership. It is voluntary exchange under predictable rules — rules that bind the powerful as well as the weak, and that survive electoral transitions. Those rules are what make long-horizon investment possible. Predation is what happens when power writes the rules opportunistically, then demands they be treated as law. That distinction matters most when it comes to oil. Reviving Venezuela’s energy sector would require large, frontloaded capital spending to repair and expand infrastructure. Those expenses would have to be followed by many years of positive cash flows to repay sunk costs and earn a return. 

Oil is the opposite of a quick-turn business. Its economics hinge on whether rights will be respected long enough to recover the initial outlays. These rights do not emanate from threats. They come from a legitimate state: a government that can claim consent; a legislature that can authorise commitments; regulators and courts that can enforce them; and a political system that investors believe will honour yesterday’s deal tomorrow. Unpredictability may occasionally be an asset in international affairs, but trust is the real strategic currency. And trust is precisely what a coercive interim arrangement cannot supply. Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela’s interim president, has no electoral mandate and inherits institutions whose legitimacy is contested. Contracts signed now — especially if shaped under foreign pressure — will be politically and legally fragile. A future democratic government would have reasons to revisit them, if not repudiate them outright. In anticipation, US oil majors will not invest. 

Investors can price commodity risk. They can hedge operational risk. What they cannot hedge is foundational illegitimacy: the risk that the very basis of a contract will later be judged void because it did not emanate from an authorised government. If Washington’s message is that legality follows power rather than constraining it, capital will rationally assume that every deal is hostage to the next shift in power, whether in Caracas or Washington. The political sequencing is also backwards. It is not prosperity that creates legitimate government; it is legitimate government — namely, democracy and the rule of law — that empowers people to create prosperity. With these foundations, markets can do what they do best: decentralise initiative, mobilise investment and reward productive effort rather than proximity to power.

This is brilliant and has resonance elsewhere. Two markets in particular come to mind: infrastructure and technology. 

Predictability arising from the sanctity of the rule of law is the most important requirement for the functioning of private markets. It is this confidence that allows investors to invest their money, and just as importantly, entrepreneurs to put their efforts. Predictability extends not only to business creation and ease of doing business, but also to retaining control of their businesses. The latter is important given trends in industries like emerging technologies and infrastructure, where a dominant industry leader swoops in to forcibly take over a promising emerging firm. 

Ambitious entrepreneurs are driven by their belief in scaling their businesses and leading their industries. And in many sectors, especially but not only infrastructure, these are also long-drawn journeys spanning decades. In other words, building one enduring and dominant business is an endeavour of a lifetime. 

In this backdrop, any threat of being forcibly ousted and taken over can be a serious, if not prohibitive, deterrent to entrepreneurship. Why would an ambitious entrepreneur put in his sweat and toil to build a business if he runs the imminent threat of being forced out by a dominant rival precisely at the time his business starts to show promise and reaches the scaling pathway? Similarly, why should investors put their money in such risky and long-drawn projects when they know that they run the risk of seeing the entrepreneurs they backed being ousted and their upside being capped? 

Thanks to network effects and resultant market structures, the commanding heights of the digital technology industries are oligopolies or monopolies. Therefore, in the technology industry, once a promising startup comes up with a new or disruptive idea in any of the frontier areas like AI, chip design, or robotics, they run the risk of being harried and bullied into being absorbed by the Big Tech firms. Apart from snuffing out any potential competitor, Big Tech firms want to deepen their moats by capturing all innovations in their ecosystem. These pressures and threats are triggered through multiple channels - product development ecosystem, market access, investors, legal notices, and so on. 

Infrastructure sectors, being deeply enmeshed in the political economy and where the dominant incumbents formulate the rules of the game, are rife with crony capitalism and regulatory capture. Therefore, in the infrastructure industry, once a firm builds up a good portfolio of projects after several years of hard work and persistence, they run the risk of the dominant market leader swooping in and taking over by ousting the management. 

The new entrants are vulnerable to being coerced off their assets, even without a fair return or compensation, and often with the active support of the governments. In addition, in the context of Indian states, it is not uncommon to find the ownership of prime infrastructure assets changing hands (or shareholding patterns shifting) from the contractors preferred by the previous government to those favourable to the incoming government. 

All these act as significant deterrents for investors and entrepreneurs. Sectors like infrastructure and information and communications technology (ICT) are critical drivers of economic growth, and incentive distortions that discourage investors and entrepreneurs can be binding constraints on economic growth. 

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Weekend reading links

1. Municipal bond issuance in India hit a record with nine issuances in FY26 till December, comapred with three and one in the previous two years.  
The total municipal bonds outstanding as on 31st December 2025 was Rs 3,783.9 Cr, with Rs 1000 Cr issued in 2025. 
First-time issuers in 2025 included Agra Nagar Nigam, Prayagraj Nagar Nigam, Varanasi Nagar Nigam and Bhavnagar Municipal Corporation, alongside repeat issuers such as Greater Chennai Corporation and Nashik Municipal Corporation. Market participants said the fiscal support under the Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation 2.0 (Amrut 2.0) was a key factor behind the rise in municipal bond issuances. Unlike earlier reform phases, where incentives were indirect or uncertain, the current framework provides quantified incentives that lower the cost of borrowing. First-time issuers are eligible for incentives of ₹13 crore per ₹100 crore of bonds issued, subject to caps, which reduce interest costs over long tenors. For repeat issuers, incentives are linked to green bonds, providing predictability while aligning with environmental, social, and governance (ESG) objectives. This has made bond issuance a viable funding option for urban local bodies (ULBs).

2. Ruchir Sharma says that India must stop exporting human capital and increase its imports of financial capital.  

3. India's oil import sources.

The good malls are doing better than ever. The bad malls are more challenged than ever,” says John O’Connor, head of acquisitions & development at O’Connor Capital Partners, a property owner. Annual sales per square foot at so-called class C malls are often below $400, while premier class A malls — the hosts of the Apple Store and Louis Vuitton — can bring in more than $1,000, according to Green Street, a real estate research group. The top 100 of America’s roughly 900 shopping malls represent about half of the sector’s asset value, according to Vince Tibone, Green Street’s mall research sector head. The bottom 350 account for just 10 per cent... Per person, mall square footage is more than 12 times higher in the US than in the UK, France or Germany, according to Moody’s Ratings.

5. India is at the lower-end of the ladder among developing countries in the adoption of electric vehicles.

6. China's rising trade surplus, amidst declining exports to the US points to diversion to other countries.

7. India's rice stocks stood at 58 mt in December 2025, and incurs an annual carrying cost of $2 billion.

China now controls more than 80 per cent of production for each key stage of solar panel manufacturing, from polysilicon ingots to wafers, cells and modules... research, technical knowhow and equipment spread from the west to China during the 1980s to 2000s. During this period US and European companies regularly sold production lines or other equipment to China and licensed or shared their technology in exchange for access to the Chinese market...

Germany was a prolific exporter of solar production equipment to China... Similarly Poly Engineering, an Italian maker of polysilicon — the key ingredient in solar panels — transferred key production knowhow to China’s Daqo New Energy in 2008, helping China break the grip on polysilicon supply held by the US, Europe and Japan. That same year, Goldwind, now the world’s largest turbine manufacturer, bought a 70 per cent stake in Vensys, a German pioneer of gearless wind turbines. Goldwind had licensed Vensys’s technology for manufacture in China five years earlier. In the early days of the solar industry in the 1980s, there was “very little caution . . . No one had the fantasy to believe China would compete on an equal footing in 15 years’ time,” says Rasmus Lema, an expert on the spread of green technology at the University of Johannesburg in South Africa...A turning point came towards the end of the 2000s, as China’s rapid development of factories, encouraged by the crucial development of its own polysilicon industry, helped push the industry into overcapacity. 
9. Semiconductor chip prices are being squeezed upwards.
At the centre of the squeeze is DRAM, the memory used in smartphones, laptops and servers. Advanced AI processors, such as those made by Nvidia, depend on a specialised variant known as high-bandwidth memory (HBM), which stacks chips vertically to increase speed while reducing power use. The rapid construction of data-centres has sent demand for HBM soaring. Producing it is resource-intensive: HBM requires three to four times as many silicon wafers as standard DRAM. Supply is highly concentrated. Just three firms—SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics of South Korea, and Micron of America—rake in more than 90% of global DRAM revenue. All three are switching capacity to HBM, which will account for half of global DRAM revenue by the end of the decade, up from 8% in 2023, reckons Bloomberg Intelligence, a research group. HBM typically yields operating margins of 50% or more, compared with 35% for standard memory. Investors have rewarded the strategy... But the flip side is that more basic memory chips, which account for 15-40% of the cost of smartphones and PCs, are becoming scarcer and costlier. The price for the DRAM found in most consumer electronics, known as DDR4, has risen by 1,360% since April 2025 (see chart 2).

10. India's affordable housing market facts.

The recent data from Knight Frank and the National Real Estate Development Council (Naredco) underline the severity of the problem. Across India’s top eight cities, the supply-to-demand ratio for homes priced below ₹50 lakh went down to 0.36 in the first half of 2025 from 1.05 in 2019. Meanwhile, the share of affordable housing in new supply has hit 17 per cent, plunging from over 50 per cent in 2018, signalling a structural retreat by real-estate developers from the segment. The shortage in urban affordable housing is estimated at 9.4 million units, with cumulative demand from economically weaker sections (EWS), lower-income groups (LIGs), and middle-income households projected to reach 30 million units by 2030.

11. Tracxn data on startup funding in India.

India’s top 20 startups by valuation accounted for over half of the combined valuation of $69.3 billion of the top 100 startups in calendar year 2025 (CY25), according to an analysis of Tracxn data. The valuation of the top 20 startups stood at $35.7 billion in CY25... Also, the average fundraise for the top 20 startups stood at $195 million in CY25. The top five — Zepto, GreenLine, Uniphore, Infra Market, and Access Healthcare — together raised $1.26 billion last year, accounting for over 11 per cent of the total startup funding in CY25. Other startups in the top 20 list included Meril ($200 million), Spinny ($129 million), Jumbotail, and Raise ($100 million), among others... Total startup funding declined 12.5 per cent to $11.2 billion in CY25, from $12.6 billion in CY24. In CY23, the total startup funding stood at $11.1 billion... 

The top five startups by valuation now account for more than a third (34 per cent) of the total valuation of the top 100 startups and as much as 66 per cent of the top 20’s valuation. These companies, including Zepto, CRED, and Zetwerk, together command a valuation of $23.6 billion. Other startups in the top 20 by valuation include Udaan ($1.8 billion), Uniphore ($2.5 billion), Spinny ($1.0 billion), Jumbotail ($1.0 billion), and Raise ($1.2 billion), among others.

12. Eswar Prasad argues, rightly, that the rising Chinese trade surpluses are a bigger problem than the Trump tariffs. While the latter will possibly end when Trump leaves, the former will continue until addressed systemically. 

13. Edward Luce writes that Ireland may be Ground Zero for MAGA to ignite right-wing populism in Europe, as Steve Bannon pursues an Irish Trump. 

Ireland is rare among European democracies in not having a significant hard right party. Perhaps some of that oxygen is sucked up by Sinn Féin, Ireland’s leftwing nationalist party... Trump’s national security strategy highlighted Britain and Ireland as countries to which America was “sentimentally attached”. The US now officially wants to help these two “restore their former greatness”. Given Britain and Ireland’s fraught bilateral history, this is an eccentric twin ambition to announce. Ireland lacks its own Nigel Farage to play that country’s part in fighting what the document calls the west’s “civilisational erasure”. As the Irish writer and essayist Fintan O’Toole observed, “the catastrophic decline of Irish Catholicism is Exhibit A in this apocalyptic narrative”. If you add that Ireland is increasingly depicted as an antisemitic country by pro-Israel lobby groups, and the Irish economy’s heavy dependence on US corporate tax revenue, particularly from Big Tech, the country could be in for a stormy passage. Ireland would be taking a risk bigger than any of its EU partners in championing the bloc’s digital privacy and service laws.

14. Thomas Edsall has a fascinating psychoanalytical explanation of Donald Trump's actions. 

It is possible to become addicted to power — particularly for certain character structures. Individuals with pronounced narcissistic, paranoid or psychopathic tendencies are especially vulnerable. For them, power does not merely enable action; it regulates inner states that would otherwise feel unmanageable.

Donald Trump is an extreme illustration of this dynamic. From a psychoanalytic perspective, his narcissism is malignant in the sense that it is organized around a profound inner emptiness.

Malignant narcissism is a combination of narcissism and psychopathology. Because there is little internal capacity for self-soothing or self-valuation, he requires continuous external affirmation to feel real and intact. Power supplies that affirmation. Visibility, dominance and constant stimulation temporarily fill the void.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

The coming electro-tech revolution

This post tries to document in brief and graphically the emerging electro-industrial stack that has the potential to transform the physical world just as digital technologies have done elsewhere. 

This post draws mainly from four sources - Noah Smith’s introduction to the Electric Age, a succinct primer on the electro-industrial stack by Ryan McEntush on a16z, a brilliant 40,000-word comprehensive essay by Packy McCormick and Sam D’Amico, and an excellent graphical distillation of the electrotech revolution by Ember. 

McEntush describes these technologies as the “bridge between software and the physical world… enabling machines to behave like software: minerals and metals processed into advanced components, energy stored in batteries, electrons channeled by power electronics, force delivered by motors and actuators, all orchestrated by software running on high-performance compute.”

Noah Smith has a good summary of what’s driving the electrotech revolution:

Basically, these three things allow electric motors to replace combustion engines (and steam boilers) over a wide variety of applications. Batteries make it possible to store and transport electrical energy very compactly and extract that energy very quickly. Rare-earth motors make it possible to use electrical energy to create very strong torques — for example, the torque that turns the axles of a Tesla. And power electronics make it possible to exert fine control over large amounts of electric power — stopping and starting it, rerouting it, repurposing it for different uses, and so on. With these three technologies, combustion’s main advantages vanish in many domains. Whether it’s cars, drones, robots, or household appliances, electric technology now has both the power and the portability that only combustion technology used to enjoy.

Thanks to low-cost, high-energy density batteries, we can now store, move, modulate, and deliver electricity efficiently, powering everything from data centers to drones. There are four parts to what McCormick and D’Amico call the electrotech stack - batteries, power electronics, motors and actuators, and a compute layer. McEntush describes the importance of power electronics.

Power electronics are the hidden nervous system of modern machines. At their core are power semiconductors which, unlike logic chips that process information, manage energy itself — converting, inverting, and regulating flows between sources and loads. Historically, power systems relied on slow silicon switches, steel-core transformers, and bulky analog controls. At high voltage and frequency those approaches are at their limits. Wide-bandgap devices — like silicon carbide (SiC) and gallium nitride (GaN) — switch faster, withstand higher temperatures, and enable precise digital control. This software-driven, solid-state (no moving parts) foundation stitches together the electro-industrial stack… Scaling WBG power electronics is also critical to easing the grid’s growing infrastructure bottlenecks… the way forward is solid-state transformers built with domestically produced WBG power electronics… Future systems will require vast amounts of precisely managed power; delivering it will depend on solid-state electronics under digital control.

And that of motors and actuators

Motors and actuators convert electrical energy into mechanical motion, like in a drone motor or an industrial robot arm. Today’s performance leader is the brushless permanent-magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) using NdFeB magnets, prized for torque density, efficiency, and compactness. But that advantage comes with a strategic cost: dependence on rare earths. Alternatives for motion systems span both motor design and actuation type, each with trade-offs… Actuation choices are also evolving. Flight surfaces, reclining seats, missile fins, landing gear, and industrial end-effectors are shifting from old-school hydraulics to electromechanical systems for lower weight, higher reliability, and precise digital control… The market is testing these across applications… Small gains in motor and actuator efficiency compound across the stack, and as general-purpose robotics scale, this industrial “muscle” will move larger fractions of GDP.

Finally, the compute layer is no less demanding.

The compute layer converts electrical energy into intelligence, controlling everything from autonomous vehicles to advanced weapon systems and industrial robots. Today’s performance leader is 2 to 4 nm-class logic — most often, GPUs designed by Nvidia and fabricated by TSMC… Compute extends beyond the GPU alone; advanced packaging now sets performance limits as much as transistor scaling. System design has expanded from single chips to whole machines, like co-optimizing die, memory, and interconnects alongside rack-level power delivery and cooling. Just as important, software frameworks, compilers, kernels, and drivers map models onto this topology, manage communication and memory, and orchestrate performance across infrastructure. Chinese firms lead in scale for mature nodes and low-cost packaging; the West leads in EDA, lithography, and software ecosystems, but still lacks true leading-edge manufacturing capacity outside Taiwan.

This graphic captures the composition and evolution of the four parts of the electro-tech stack.

The revolution in electrotechnologies has been driven by innovations that have dramatically increased performance outcomes… 

… while also equally dramatically lowering costs…

… and become competitive enough with existing technologies. 

The result of all this is that electricity has become the largest source of energy…

… across sectors…

… and is becoming the major share of incremental demand.

These technologies build on the foundations of an emerging category of critical minerals, which have unique properties, have limited substitutes, and have fragile supply chains, and are “becoming as strategically contested as oil was in the 20th century”. This is a good graphic.

China dominates the midstream of these minerals - the chemistry, metallurgy, and finishing that creates chemicals, alloys, foils, laminations, and powders. It involves the highly specialised and high margin operations of chemical processing (where raw concentrates — from ore, brine, or slurry — are refined into high-purity compounds and metals) and manufacturing of advanced materials with high purity, unique chemical, structural, and magnetic properties (battery precursors and active materials, magnets, and specialty alloys), that feed directly into end-use industries. Manufacturing is more sophisticated and challenging to master.

This isn’t assembly-line work, but precision materials engineering. Processes like heat treatment, doping, sintering, and nanostructuring push performance limits. Minor deviations in particle size or crystal structure can affect battery cycle life or magnet strength. Specs are tight, recipes proprietary, and tolerances unforgiving. Manufacturing follows a different logic than mining or refining: it prioritizes consistency, qualification, and yield over sheer volume. This is especially true for defense-critical components like high-temperature magnets — strategically vital but smaller markets with strict regulatory regimes, long product cycles, and little tolerance for disruption. OEMs tend to value reliability and traceability over novelty. Incumbents like Umicore (cathodes) and Vacuumschmelze (magnets) have spent decades mastering complex processes and earning deep customer trust. Their edge in materials science, process control, and compliance makes it difficult for new entrants to compete.

This is a great summary by McCormick and D’Amico on how the West gifted its leadership in all four parts of the electrotech stack to China.

The four key Electric Stack technologies were invented at various points between the 1960s and 1990s in America, Japan, and the UK, and reached critical maturity around the same time in the 1990s. Then, in many cases, we sold the future. GM sold its neo magnets division, Magnequench, to China for $70 million. A123 Systems, which invented the Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) battery, went bankrupt and sold to Wanxiang for $257 million in 2013… By controlling these four technologies, China has become the world leader in everything from EVs to drones to electric bikes to robots.

A giant piece of this is that mastery of this stack applies across domains, allowing market leaders like BYD to make everything from cars, to home energy products, to iPads, to much of the world’s drones. Within the whole sector – the components, software, and expertise largely transfer – meaning mastery of one product of the stack allows success in scaling others. Advantages compound. The result has been China getting the best “LEGO set” in the world, with regards to this stack. 

Three imperatives are driving the electrotech revolution - physics, economics, and geopolitics. Let’s briefly examine each. Electrotech is three times more efficient than fossil fuels in sectors making up two-thirds of fossil fuel demand (electricity, road transport, and low-temperature heat), and is more efficient than other solutions like CCS, biomass or hydrogen.

And it requires over 50 times less material than fossil fuel systems. 

Electrotech has enormous opportunities to innovate and improve efficiencies and drive down costs. 

And it is small and modular, thereby allowing for greater scope and span for experimentation.

Furthermore, unlike fossil fuels, electrotech fuels (such as solar and wind energy) are available globally, thereby increasing energy security.

How, China being the runaway leader on electrotech, brings serious security risks.

Finally, a matrix of policies aimed at the promotion of electrotech technologies. 

Monday, January 12, 2026

Restoring the balance in politics, economics, and beyond

A recurring underlying aspect of many problems that we see today in the economy, polity, and society is that of imbalance in the pursuit of ideas and ideologies. 

In public discourses, we see it in the prioritisation of individual rights over the social and the collective. This manifests in the dominance of liberalism on social issues and free-market principles on economic issues. 

In recent years, especially in the US, woke liberalism has been squeezing out conservative views. The resultant tensions manifest in the political realm on issues like family values, transgender rights, and most prominently in debates on immigration. It has resulted in the near-complete polarisation between the liberal and conservative political camps, with almost no meeting ground. The political centre stands egregiously vacant. 

In economics, it’s about the pursuit of free market and efficiency-maximising ideologies gone too far. I have blogged hereabout 25 economic orthodoxies that conflict with reality. Generally, in Western economies (again, especially the US), it is about consumption marginalising production, and the elevation of virtual innovation (software or digital) over physical innovation. The near deification of AI and the complete neglect of the (perhaps more important) emerging electro-industrial-tech stack is an illustration. 

In international trade, trends like tariff reduction, trade liberalisation, globalisation of value chains, and offshoring have clearly gone too far. The most striking manifestation of this trend is China’s stranglehold on the world economy in manufacturing, and the associated destruction of manufacturing bases and loss of manufacturing jobs across countries.

Nowhere is the loss of balance as salient as in finance. It manifests in the disproportionate and growing importance of private (venture capital and private equity) over public markets (banks and capital markets) in financial intermediation. I have written here about the problems and consequences of financialisation going too far. It is evident even in the preference among youth for liberal arts education over STEM courses in colleges. 

In important areas of global concern like climate change, this imbalance has led to a headlong plunge into renewable energy sources and electric vehicles and wholesale abandoning of fossil fuels and traditional industries. It has swept aside daunting transition challenges like financing sources, sunk costs of legacy systems, unsustainable mitigation and adaptation costs for developing countries, technical problems of integrating energy systems, and so on. 

This imbalance is also stark in our engagement with emerging technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI). The agenda on automation and the application of AI is almost exclusively framed and driven by Big Tech companies. The public narrative is framed in terms of innovation and human progress, the most desirable of all objectives. But the driving force behind the race to adopt these technologies is efficiency maximisation and cost reduction, which enhance business competitiveness and increase profits. Its larger consequences are never a consideration, and adoption is done without any public debate.

On this issue, as I blogged here, Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson have shown how ideas and technologies have deep political significance and how agenda-setting shapes the nature of the “progress” arising from these ideas and technologies. The agenda framing makes certain aspects of the issue salient while obscuring certain others. This process is deeply political. The political power balance determines what’s made salient and what’s obscured.

Another imbalance surrounds the marginalisation of the role and importance of governments and the elevation of the private sector. For example, the ever-expanding use of consultants and outsourcing of services has enfeebled government capabilities and left the state open for capture by vested interests (see this and this). It has amplified the self-fulfilling dynamic of governments are inefficient and therefore should deregulate and exit. There’s a real risk that the new movement of deregulation will add to this enfeeblement without achieving anything substantial in its original objective. 

In development, it is about neglecting plumbing issues, such as state capability, in favour of innovation, management theories, and the application of IT solutions. For example, in school education, the fundamental issue of improving classroom instruction quality (and therefore teacher capabilities, motivation, pedagogical techniques, and teacher-student engagement, among others) is often overshadowed by the pursuit of smart classrooms, digital content, and blended learning, among other initiatives. I have blogged here on ten things in development orthodoxy that deviate from reality. 

The common thread in all these examples is that of an idea or ideology being taken to its extremities, sweeping aside counter-views. The resultant common deficiency is that of balance. Any idea or ideology unrestrained by countervailing views and unmoderated by reason and prudence becomes unbalanced and verges towards fanaticism. 

The Greeks had a word for balance, meson, or the middle. At a philosophical level, the Bhagavad Gita refers to the highest state of balance, or equipoise. In physical and social systems, this balance is achieved in a state of equilibrium (it is a different matter that there might be multiple equilibria). The essence of stability in any system is this balance. 

However, the innate dynamic of ideas and phenomena generates a gravitation or swing to the extreme. This is just as true of social systems as it is of physical systems. Any trend - capitalism, socialism, statism, globalisation, liberalisation, privatisation, deregulation, financialisation, automation, etc - if left to itself, follows a self-reinforcing feedback loop that ends up destroying countervailing forces and spawns its excesses. 

I blogged here about a universal dynamic to how ideas evolve and play out. They trigger interest and get gradually adopted, with their degree of adoption increasing over time. This, in turn, creates distortions that cause a backlash against the idea. The backlash strengthens over time and results in a correction of the excesses that had seeped into the idea. 

A simple framework to explain this is the Hegelian dialectic, wherein as a thesis (idea) evolves, it conflicts with its emerging antithesis to generate a synthesis, often a better state of affairs. As Hegel wrote, thesis begets anti-thesis, both of which undergo a struggle to generate a synthesis, and so on it goes.

In their highly influential book, The Fourth TurningNeil Howe and William Strauss describe a cyclical trend in history. Their century-long cycle encompasses four phases, or turnings as they call it - High, Awakening, Unravelling, and Crisis. Each turning lasts a social generation of about 20-25 years. 

The work of Howe and Strauss has resonance in other similar interpretations of history. In this essay from 1976, Sir John Bagot Glubb, the former Commander of the Arab Legion, describes history in terms of cycles of around 250 years, or 10 generations of 25 years each. Peter Turchin, an expert in cliodynamics, uses maths to model historical changes and find historical cycles.

Be that as it may, this imbalance has inevitably forced backlashes across fields - politics, economic policies, trade, financial markets, public systems, etc. Across them, orthodoxy is on the retreat. Populist politics, anti-immigrant sentiments, protectionism, revival of manufacturing, retreat of globalisation and offshoring, support for fossil fuels, etc., are a result of this backlash. 

In the circumstances, the challenge for us is to identify and acknowledge the imbalance within systems, and then figure out ways to deal with the problem. There’s a need to consciously cultivate or encourage countervailing forces to achieve a dialectical balance. Only open systems can engage meaningfully through such a process to achieve balance. 

In this context, it is also useful to draw from a concept formulated by Aristotle, phronesis, or practical wisdom. It is the ability to exercise good practical judgement, as the highest intellectual virtue. Unlike theoretical knowledge or technical skill, it is about knowing how to act rightly in specific situations by balancing general rules with context, ethics, and experience to achieve good outcomes. Its critical value is underlined by Albert Hirschman, describing the ability to exercise good judgment as the binding constraint in development.

This is important since a related theme associated with the imbalance is the supremacy of expertise and technocracy, and the marginalisation of prudence and politics. This trend must be acknowledged and reversed for any meaningful effort to restore balance in these realms.