A piece looking at how markets could target sustained nuclear peace. For more about Nuclear Peace Bonds see here. (It took the Bulletin of Atomic Scientist less than 24 hours to reject this piece intended for publication in their journal.)
Eighty-five seconds to catastrophe: can markets save us?
Our political systems are failing us. They are
incapable of thinking more than a few years ahead, at a time when we need them
to have at least a decades-long vision. As well, the gap between politicians
and the people they are supposed to represent, is widening. The result is that
some of the most important determinants of our future are happening by default.
The outstanding example is the drift toward nuclear conflict.
Governments are preoccupied by the short term. They
make, or don’t make decisions that collectively have led us to the 85 seconds to midnight
scenario of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. It’s safe to say that the vast
majority of the planet’s 8 billion people don’t want to see a nuclear conflict.
We need to find a way of connecting our wishes with sustained nuclear peace.
Outcomes and efficiency
Our best chance might be to bypass today’s
self-interested, short-sighted policymakers and instead target nuclear peace
ourselves, making sure that we reward the people who achieve it most
efficiently, whoever they are and however they do so. This essay envisages a Nuclear Peace Fund into which
everyone can contribute including: non-governmental organisations, ordinary people,
philanthropists and corporations. The Fund would be used to reward the
successful achievement of sustained nuclear peace. In economic theory, and on
all the evidence, markets are the best way of allocating society’s scarce
resources to achieve targeted goals, so ideally, we’d inject market incentives
into the achievement of our goal.
A single company?
In a free market economy people choose goods and
services from a range supplied by individual companies, competing to meet their
demand. Could that model be applied model to a universally desired good, that
of nuclear peace? This company would have as its sole aim the sustained absence
of nuclear conflict and it would be paid only at the end of a defined period –
perhaps 30 years – of peace. The Fund would be kept in escrow, and would be
paid out to the company only when that goal had been achieved. The company would
issue shares, the value of which would rise and fall with progress toward or
away from the targeted goal. Directors could be paid bonuses linked to the share
price and hence to perceived progress toward the nuclear peace goal. Shareholders
would be passive investors, and all decisions as to how to allocate funds for
goal achievement would be made by the directors of the single company. At the
end of the targeted period of nuclear peace, shareholders would be paid out
from the funds in escrow and the company wound up. (Another company could be,
or could have been, set up to ensure continuing nuclear peace into the future.)
The weakness is that the directors would be making all
the decisions as to where to allocate funding for the various projects and
their decisions would be too far removed from market incentives. As well, the
identity of the directors themselves would not be immediately responsive to the
dictates of the market. For a goal as vast and consequential as nuclear peace,
we are going to need a huge array of projects, with a correspondingly huge need
for constant oversight. We need diverse, adaptive projects, the monitoring of
which would be beyond the scope of any single set of directors. So the creative
destruction of failing or inefficient projects wouldn’t occur; neither, because
of the necessarily large size of the company, would creative destruction
operate to subject the company through the possibility of takeover. Of course,
the company might fail completely– but that would do nothing to achieve the
goal of nuclear peace.
On the plus side, the market prices of the shares, on
flotation and beyond, would supply useful information as to how much progress
is being made.
Social Impact Bonds
Social
Impact Bonds (SIBs) (also known as pay-for-success
bonds etc) are a contract to achieve a specified outcome with payouts linked to
efficiency. They are currently deployed in about 30 countries and are a means
of rewarding people who work to achieve a defined outcome.
A quick look at some of the goals SIBs target reveals
their major limitation: investors must hold them from issue to redemption. So
they are inherently short or medium term in nature, which is why they have been
restricted to very narrow objectives, such as targeting local rates of
redivision or homelessness. For such goals, monitoring costs tend to be high
proportion of total outlay and, with their narrow scope, there are few opportunities
to shift resources between different activities. Most bondholders will want
payback within a decade or less. While there is the scope to innovate, new
techniques will inevitably be drawn from an existing array of approaches,
rather than a result of research or experimentation.
SIBs can allow sub‑contracting, collaboration, or
replacement of providers over time, which can open space for additional or new
providers. But there is limited scope to do this as, once the contract has been
awarded, it is up to the lead bondholder (one body, or a consortium) to decide
whether to subcontract and to whom. The identity of the lead bondholders is
fixed at the outset and though they, like subcontractors, can bid for these
contracts, neither would be subject to market discipline during the lifetime of
the contract.
If we are going to reward the achievement of remote outcomes
then, we need to reward people along the path to goal achievement, so that they
can exit, with profits, before that point.
It's important also not to take today's institutional structures, including
that of existing public- or private-sector bodies, as a given. Our goals should
shape our institutions; not the reverse.
Social Policy Bonds
This author suggests that
Social Impact Bonds targeting nuclear peace be made tradeable. Tradeability
would allow investors to profit from holding the bonds for periods shorter than
the time between floating the bonds and redemption. Investors could buy the
bonds, do what they can to raise the bond price, then sell their bonds to
others who would take the next steps toward achieving nuclear peace. Ideally,
they’d benefit from an increase in the value of their bonds. This means that we
could realistically target the goal of nuclear peace sustained for 30 years.
Nuclear Peace Bonds be
issued on the open market; investors would compete with eac other to buy them.
The bonds’ redemption Fund, made up of contributions from private- and
public-sector bodies, and ordinary people would be held in escrow. It could be
swelled by additional contributions during the lifetime of the bonds. Each bond
would entitle the holder to a share of the payout once the goal has been
achieved. The bonds would be tradeable at any time until redemption.
Bondholders would benefit either by being passive investors, hoping for
progress toward achievement of the goal, or they would be motivated to become,
or to sell their bonds to, active investors, who would work to increase the
probability of early achievement of the goal, and so benefit from a rise in the
value of their bonds. Some sort of tacit or explicit co-ordination between
bondholders and, possibly, aggregation of the bonds into a few hands, could
lead to the creation of a new sort of organisation; one of ever-changing
composition and structure with the sole aim of achieving the targeted goal
quickly. Anybody or any entity, public- or private-sector could hold the bonds.
This body and all its decisions would be wholly devoted to minimising the risk
of nuclear conflict.
Incentives would cascade down from bondholders to
those working to achieve the goal; the linkage might be direct, in that
bondholders themselves would be working for nuclear peace, or indirect, in that
they’d subcontract achievement to other bodies, which could be rewarded
according to their perceived success in their operation, or according to any
change in the bond price.
It’s possible that, despite the efforts of bondholders
and their subcontractors, there could be movement away from achievement
of the goal, so that the operator’s bonds fall in value. From the operator’s
view, that would be unfortunate, but from society’s view it’s positive, in that
the bigger the gap between the bond’s price and its redemption value, the
greater the incentive for other investors to buy the bonds and work toward
achieving the goal. It’s possible that at the lower levels of the
subcontracting pyramid, operators would be paid for their time, rather than
their performance. The risk of underperformance would be borne by those higher
up the pyramid, who stand to gain most when the goal is achieved.
The market for the bonds would reveal information
about how likely people thought nuclear conflict were possible. If the likelihood
of nuclear conflict is seen as quite high at the time of issue the bonds would
fetch very little on the open market. The size of the Fund and the number of
bonds issued would determine the initial price of the bonds; they should be
pitched such that that price is high enough to allow for a fall in value that
would motivate investors to be active, rather than passive, holders.
But what if nothing works, and the bonds fall to a
very low level despite the best efforts of investors? That could happen if
events outside any bondholder’s control occur: a rise in tension between two
nuclear-armed powers, for example. The goal would remain unlikely; the funds
would remain in escrow. Backers of the bonds could increase the motivation to
achieve the goal in two possible ways:
· Boost
the funds in the escrow account and increasing the redemption value of each
bond in circulation correspondingly; or
· Boost
the funds in the escrow account but issue more bonds with redemption terms
identical to those currently in circulation.
Either would work, but the second option is better: if
bondholders anticipated that there might be a swelling of the redemption funds,
they might refrain from actively trying to achieve the goal, waiting instead for
the larger payout.
Bondholders and operators can maximise their gains not
only by holding bonds that appreciate in value, but by: