The pressures of the COVID-19 pandemic are forcing an overdue reckoning
about our world’s ability to manage systemic hazards. Driven by increasing
fragility in our political, social, economic, and financial orders—all
dependent on a natural environment nearing the brink—these apparent bolts
from the blue will keep striking. With all systems simultaneously in flux,
the 21st century is set to experience massive disruptions that pose serious
and possibly existential threats to society.
Coping with such problems will require major changes to how we make and
carry out decisions. For decades, humanity has tried to run economies,
indeed whole societies, as though they were complicated machines that just
needed tinkering and control of a few key levers to obtain optimum
performance. But lately, we have begun to see the error of such thinking.
The myopic behavior and narrow focus on efficiency and shareholder
financial returns that have dominated political and economic
decision-making for decades have yielded somewhat efficient but largely
fragile systems stripped of resilience.
Political economy thinking has long expanded the technocratic view of
governance to encompass the importance of political power and vested
interests in shaping rules, incentive structures, and resource allocation.
Now, to address the complexity of a much larger population interacting ever
more intensively, with much greater social and environmental impacts, our
understanding of political economy must extend further. Instead of putting
efficiency first, policies must ensure societies’ resilience to the full
range of threats, including pandemic diseases, climate volatility, and
economic and financial stress.
Political turmoil
Political systems today often reflect the preferences of their elites and
struggle to serve the needs of the broader public. Until the pandemic hit,
mass protests were erupting around the world, from Chile to Hong Kong SAR,
often spurred by sparks of discontent that triggered firestorms of anger.
The rise of national populism and political polarization in many parts of
the world, including leading democracies, reflects a breakdown of trust in
institutions and in fellow citizens—undermining the social trust on which governance depends. And at the global level, the post–World War II formal
international order that underpinned stability and prosperity for a large
share of humanity is currently rudderless and possibly disintegrating.
The pandemic has exposed, not caused, these weaknesses, and societal
responses offer clues about how to build more resilient polities based on
renewed social trust. Much of the biomedical science community has
jettisoned competition for prestigious publications and grants to share
research. Foundations and informal networks, from alumni associations to
coders to entrepreneurs, have organized volunteers and mobilized supplies,
first for Wuhan and now around the world. Most important, growing
recognition of the social value of inadequately compensated service
workers, from health aides to meatpackers to teachers, may foster political
momentum to redress the inequalities that have polarized societies and
undermined social trust.
Economic and financial fragilities
Policy responses to the 2008 financial crisis staved off imminent collapse
but failed to put us on a path toward sustainable and inclusive growth.
Politically constrained fiscal policy did not fully rise to the task.
Monetary policy, traditional and novel, tried to fill the gaps but now
seems exhausted and ineffective. Asset prices recovered after the crisis,
but private and public debt have continued to grow, and wealth inequality
within many countries has soared. Global demand remains deficient, and
inflation rates refuse to rise to the targets set by many central banks.
The response to the coronavirus pandemic has effectively put the global
economy in a temporary coma, exacerbating the difficulty of tackling the
ongoing challenges: inadequate health and social security systems; high
debt among financial and nonfinancial institutions, households, and
governments; income inequality; deficiencies in corporate governance; weak
government oversight and regulation; and destruction of the environment.
These challenges are taking place in economic and financial systems on the
brink of profound change driven by innovations, from blockchain technology
to artificial intelligence.
The 2008 crisis provided a crucial lesson in the need for systemic
approaches to financial stability (see Agur and Sharma 2015 and Arner and others 2019). It demonstrated that traditional micro-prudential rules had focused too much on individual financial actors,
ignoring the inadvertent collective outcomes of market interactions.
Countries responded to the financial crisis by creating macro-prudential regulatory frameworks and agencies to ensure the stability and
resilience of the financial sector. Decision-makers must expand this
systemic thinking to encompass the entire economy and invest in broader
public engagement to enable reform and development of durable solutions.
Planetary upheaval
The scale of the environmental crisis finally seems to be hitting home
across the world. Battered oceans, collapsing ecosystems, species
extinctions, and extreme weather are generating refugee flows, undermining
agriculture, and threatening global supply chains. Without dramatic action,
within decades rising seas will swamp cities from Shanghai to Miami, and
temperatures may soar beyond habitable levels for a large swath of the
planet. But the standard policy tool kit does not adequately support action
at the local level, where the impacts are felt, and is still divided into
unconnected regulatory structures for managing pollution and environmental
destruction as “externalities” rather than elements of an interconnected
system.
The 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change illustrates how a broad common
goal and appropriate institutional structures are a better approach to
managing systemic complexity (Florini and Florini 2017). The Paris
Agreement set a goal of global warming below 2°C and preferably below
1.5°C, but, unlike previous failed efforts, it does not demand agreement on
the solution. Instead, it requires its parties to determine nationally what
actions they want to take, report regularly on their emissions and actions,
and come together every five years to update those national plans as
scientific understanding and technology develop. Crucially, it actively
promotes the engagement of cities and other subnational actors, civil
society, and the private sector, unleashing an abundance of meaningful,
loosely connected multi-stakeholder initiatives that could, if fully
implemented, bring us close to meeting the 2°C target. The Paris approach
combines a centrally shared vision with strong encouragement for
decentralized, flexible execution by multiple actors: an approach well
suited to managing complex systems (Kupers 2020).
Interactions of the spheres
All three spheres that determine human well-being—politics, economics, and
natural systems—are becoming more fragile and harder to manage. And those
fragilities interact.
An economy that produces rising inequality and a physical environment
marked by climate volatility and collapsing ecosystems make it harder for
the average household to fend for itself, leading to more divisive politics
that are then less able to build broad societal resilience to downward
income trends and climate change. Corporate and financial sectors that
focus solely on profits while shirking responsibility for the environment
and society—coupled with weak political and regulatory oversight—are likely
to worsen both inequality and the climate emergency. This in turn will
damage both the corporate and financial sectors as well as the political
system. A climate crisis, coupled with dysfunctional governance, is likely
to lead to an economy that is bad for business and the financial sector, as
firestorms, extreme weather, and rising sea levels disrupt supply chains
and drive workers to unwanted migration.
Now we face the monumental task of rethinking how to govern and manage. If
our existing tools are not working, what should we do instead?
Governing systemic hazards
Our current political systems—governments, legislatures, and
bureaucracies—can do a good job with predictable problems. They apply rules
developed through experience and analyses that draw on historical data.
This approach works for many tasks. But standard government processes
assume predictability, depend on agreement about likely future events, and
divide decision-making into narrow silos. They cannot effectively manage
hazards that cross silos and are inherently unpredictable.
Because we know that pandemics, economic crises, and environmental
instability will hit hard, but cannot predict exactly where or when, we
need to give resilience—society’s ability to absorb and adapt to change and
prevent systemic breakdowns—equal billing with the efficiency concerns that
now dominate. Complex systems involve multilayered interactions across a variety of people, sectors,
institutions, and policies—interactions with a dizzying array of feedback
loops, path dependencies, time lags between cause and effect, and tipping
points.
The reality of systemic hazards—with their complexity, uncertainty, and
ambiguity—calls for decision criteria based on a new set of principles:
Robustness:
Decision-makers should aim for robust, rather than narrowly optimized,
choices that will work in a wide range of future scenarios. These choices
should be flexible enough to take advantage of opportunities for a variety
of future interventions and should not unduly constrain future options.
Multilayered governance:
Complex societies need both integrated and broad perspectives to make good
decisions, requiring a “whole-of-
government” approach and “whole-of-society” solutions. Collaboration
between the public, policymakers, experts, and other stakeholders regarding
knowledge, experience, interpretation, concerns, and perspectives is
critical.
Empowered self-organization
(McChrystal and others 2015): Systemic fragility can manifest in different
ways in different places—for example, as in the case of climate impacts
that require flexible self-organized action by a wide range of societal
actors. Policymakers can do much to inform, empower, and coordinate such
bottom-up responses, which are beyond the capacity of central governments
alone.
Communication:
Communication of societal dynamics to the public is difficult but crucial.
It is hard to agree on a set of policies or structural changes without some
shared understanding of the nature of the complex problems we face. Public
comprehension generates trust and collective ownership of decisions.
“Horizon Scanning” and early action:
Despite the unpredictability of complex systems, such techniques as horizon
scanning and scenario analysis can often detect signs of emerging problems
that could cause systemic disruption. The recent global financial crisis
and the current pandemic have made it clear that systemic disruptions
inflict huge societal costs. Societies must motivate their leaders to focus
on prevention.
The 21st century is less and less the world of our forebears. Technology is
upending the nature of economies and human interaction. Power is flowing
away from traditional governors but not toward any well-structured
institutions that can reliably manage the changing global order. Storms,
heat waves, floods, and droughts are regular and deadly reminders of
shifting climate patterns. Social unrest is rising along with inequality,
and no one is sure where the jobs of the future will come from or what the
social contract will look like.
In this world, there is no way to predict the exact consequences of
systemic fragilities. Our decision-making institutions and processes, which
assume an unrealistic degree of predictability, have yet to adapt to this
reality.
But recent action on the political, economic, and environmental fronts
gives clues about how to proceed and key principles that can guide us
through the transition to a new political economy. People around the planet
are experimenting with ways to implement these principles, from “futures”
departments in national governments, to “circular economy” production
designs that eliminate waste, to multi-stakeholder networks focused on
systemic transformation. The pandemic and its consequences should spur the
scaling up of those experiments to bring about the kind of resilience that
our complex global society so desperately needs.