2009-Nov-09, Monday

paperwork

2009-Nov-09, Monday 11:25 am
mellowtigger: (Default)
I think I might be ill with a flu or something.  Hard to tell, though, because I don't have a fever.  I spent the weekend alternately awake and then sleeping for about 5-6 hours at a time.  I didn't set foot outside of the house from Friday after work until Sunday after dark.  I still feel odd.  I have that tingling sensation in my upper chest that should mean congestion and coughing... except that I have no trouble breathing and no fever.  Progression of the neuropathy, or temporary flu virus?  I can't tell.

Back to the today's topic, though... I oversimplify my finances each year.  I fill out the "EZ" national tax form whenever possible.  I itemize nothing, and in return I get improved peace of mind that I don't have to muddle through more paperwork.  When I had the car accident, I got swamped with mailings from various places.  Somewhere among the letters was (apparently) a notice that my driver's license was expiring on my birthday (November 3rd).  I'm guessing it ended up in the "junk mail" pile.  Oops.

Accomplishment #1:  I walked to the county office this morning and filled out the paperwork to renew my license.

I'm also still dealing with car accident forms.  The other insurance company (Farmer's) disliked the paperwork that I sent them regarding my rental car from the Avis company.  Farmer's said that they would pay only for 3 weeks of car rental, but the bill covered more time than that.  I went back to Avis and got them to print out a page for what a 3-week rental of the car would have been. 

Accomplishment #2:  I drove to Kinko's this morning and faxed that paperwork to Farmer's.

I hope that I'm finally done with all of that nonsense.  If I get a check for reimbursement of the rental car, then I'll finally get my credit card paid off and be out of debt.

The next item on my list is getting on Minnesota Care health insurance.  I filled out the forms late Sunday evening.  That was easy enough.  But then I reached the "required proofs" page.  They need the following (which I don't have right now):
  • U.S. passport (incorrect address) -OR- state driver's license (see above for expired info) and U.S. birth certificate (don't have)
  • pay stubs for the last 30 days (which I usually don't keep)
  • bank statement showing current balance (which I also don't keep)
I despise paperwork.  Even when I'm not scatterbrained and tired (and maybe ill), I despise paperwork.
mellowtigger: (hypercube)
There was a time when Newton's and Kepler's laws of motion reigned supreme. The universe was a perfectly explainable place, with every body following particular rules of motion that could be calculated and predicted. The only problem? They were wrong.
As the 19th century dawned, it seemed that Newton’s Theory of Gravitation had won the day. All sorts of motion could be described by the equations that we have looked at (all based on F = ma and F = GM1M2/d2). However, it soon became clear that the planet Mercury was not obeying Newton’s Laws. At this point, scientists can do one of two things: either reject the theory and replace it with a better one, or find some subtlety that had been missed in examining the problem the first time.
- http://www.physast.uga.edu/~loris/astr1110h/RelativityI.htm
Astronomers tried to find a small planet inside Mercury's orbit that would explain the deviation. They found none. They faced a significant problem. Their wonder-formula was failing, but they couldn't explain why. It wasn't until the arrival of Einstein and his theories of relativity that an answer finally appeared. Mercury is deep inside our sun's gravity well, and time dilation effects were changing its orbit. Not only does the quantum (small-scale) reality differ from our own, but so does the astronomic (large-scale) reality.

Just as physics requires a frame of reference to make its equations applicable, could it be that economics also requires a frame of reference?

While exploring "Post-Autistic Economics" topics, I have read the call to remove macro- and micro-economics from introductory economics classes. The claim is that these theories have proven to be utterly wrong because of their profound, worldwide, and expensive failure to account for and predict our current economic mess. At first, I agreed wholeheartedly. Now, though, I think the problem might be a matter of scale.

I've been insisting on the end of exponential economics. I've called for an end to fiat money and a return to "money" that is measured by actual physical objects (gold, beer, lima beans, whatever). What if such material valuations are a means of enforcing "local scale" where traditional economic theories can still apply?  In other words, suppose traditional economic theories really do work, but only when material is kept within 1 or 2 steps from producer to consumer? What if our transition to fiat money and stocks and derivatives (and other arcana of money markets) has removed the "reality check" that's needed to keep transactions faithful to their real-world value?

Traditional economics claims that rational self-interest will succeed at regulating a market more effectively than any form of imposed regulation. "Post-Autistic Economics" claims that this old theory is not only wrong but also harmful. The real world has now witnessed the results of traditional thinking; the prediction failed. People are not rational actors within their systems. Or, phrased more generously, people are not rational actors within their systems when viewed within a lengthy timeframe that can account for ecologically sustainable and morally acceptable activity.

Perhaps at very large scales of activity where individual people are far removed from the actual material produced, imposed regulation may be necessary to create sustainable activity. Small-scale endeavors may require altogether different (more traditional) kinds of economic measurements (and laws) than large-scale endeavors. The scale of economic activity might influence the equations that can be used to predict (and laws that influence) its behavior.

Instinct would claim that economic theories should apply at all scales of operation. Instinct, though, would also claim that moving clocks always tick at the same pace as stationary clocks.  In the real universe, though, moving clocks tick more slowly.
The question is, is this crazy world really our world? In other words, do experiments bear out these effects? The answer is yes. All experiments done to date confirm that these effects really work out as the equations of Special Relativity dictate.
What if economics also operates under different rules depending on the "scale" (proximity to material produce) and timeframe?  What if "adjustments" (laws) are necessary to force large-scale operations (and exponential money nonsense) back down to face the appropriate real-world limitations?

As astronomers faced a dilemma when viewing Mercury's orbit, perhaps now economists face the same dilemma when viewing recent economic failures.  Either the entire theory on which it was based is false (which seems unlikely), or it's time to accept that the theories are situational.  It could be the case that barely regulated markets are enormously effective within small scales and timeframes, yet intense regulation is necessary for large scales and timeframes.

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