I invite you to upgrade to a paid subscription. Paid subscribers have told me they have appreciated my thoughts & ideas in the past & would like to see more of them in the future. In addition, paid subscribers form their own community of folks investing in improving software design—theirs, their colleagues, & their profession. Why can’t tree-huggers & forest destroyers get along? I lived in the wilds of southern Oregon for 17 years. I enjoyed many things about life in the forest. One of the things I loved most was watching the politics. Our community was polarized before polarization was cool. Loggers versus environmentalists, sure, but also weird alliances. Open-carry fisherman cozying up to tree huggers to save the salmon & steelhead. Rugged loggers cozying up to (relatively) soft townies with money. My roots went deep in the area, one set of grandparents having moved there in 1943. The other grandparents (that grandfather was a former mayor & city councilor) moved there in 1933. I felt connected & invested, even if I didn’t usually stick my ideas out there. GridlockThe one time I did put my 2 cents in (this is back when we had cents) was when I tried to resolve the absolute hatred between environmentalists & loggers using what I was studying about incentive structures. I think the system I came up with was cool but it quickly disappeared, so now I want to put it in public permanently here. Here’s the setup:
The result was a complete impasse. Forests burning. Mills closing. Crime & drugs up. Anybody with any ambition leaving. Nobody was getting what they wanted—loggers, environmentalists, workers. (Or at least what they said they wanted—there seemed to be a bunch of psychodramas playing out.) IncentivesI recast the forest tinning situation as an incentives problem (I was intensively studying incentives at the time). Once the loggers finally got permission to harvest a tract of second-growth, they were incentivized to take out every stick of wood with economic value, leaving further growth stunted, encouraging the growth of flammable underbrush. Because environmentalists saw the loggers’ incentives, they were ever more incentivized to block all logging & put onerous restrictions on any activity that managed to sneak through. In Influence Diagram terms, more logging leads to more money & more damage, but more damage leads to more resistance leads to less logging. Classic inhibiting loop. More logging leads to less logging. (We could go on & on mapping this system, but this will do to illustrate my pr of the many interventions we can make in a system is to speed or slow feedback. What if, instead of getting paid for this harvest, the loggers got paid for the next harvest. Today they’d thin the forest, with any valuable material going to be turned into products, but it wasn’t until 10 years later that they would be paid the proceeds of the next forest thinning. You would get paid more if the forest thrived over the next 10 years, less if it grew less. (I think I kind of made up the notation for delay.) Now we have a reinforcing loop. More logging. Less damage (because the loggers get paid in a decade). Less resistance. More logging (in the form of forest thinning.) Priming the PumpThat first logger, how do they get paid? They are paying for diesel, salaries, depreciation today & won’t get money for 10 years. The right to be paid in 10 years can be turned into a financial instrument to be sold today (remember those soft townies with money?) Now you have monied interests who also care about the forest’s health. And who is best suited to evaluate the health of the forest for future gain (and avoiding future loss from pests or fire)? Well, those environmentalists who care so about the forest are well positioned to act as consultants & auditors. Mill workers would be back at work. Local capital would have another way to extract rents. Environmentalists would have healthier forests. Loggers would have trees to cut. Chickening OutI wrote the above up as a letter to the editor of the local newspaper. That got me invited to a “summit” of conservationists & logg |