Sunday, February 26, 2023

Economics: Did The-Commerce Boom Come To An End? What We Can Learn From The UK


 

(Drivebycuriosity) - Not long ago e-commerce was booming, thanks to Covid 19. The pandemic induced many people to stay at home and to shop online. Amazon, Shopify, Wayfair and other online sellers reported burgeoning sales and their shares rocketed. 

But things have changed. Many people seem to ignore the virus and behave like they did before the pandemic. Recently, when Amazon, Shopify, Wayfair and Co. presented their numbers from Q4 2022, the holiday season quarter, they reported sharply lower growth rates and their stocks fell down to earth (images below). Did the Covid induced e-commerce boom come to an end?


Amazon:

Spotify:

 


 Wayfair:


 

source


Unfortunately there are no official data for the US. The Americans publish data about baseball, football and other sport but not about Internet usage. Fortunately the British government publishes monthly numbers for "Internet sales as a percentage of total retail sales
" (Chart on top of this post gov.uk). The UK numbers could be used as an indication for US and global trends. 

As you can see there was an upwards trend. From December 2006 till December 2019 the market share of internet sales climbed from about 3% to around 21%.  E-commerce gained annually about 1.4 percent points on average. The pandemic accelerated the e-commerce growth and created something like a camels hump on the chart.

 




The image above this paragraph shows a shorter period. Apparently e-commerce advanced about 6 percent points since January 2020, shortly before Covid 19 spread around the world. That`s an annual market share gain of about 2%. It looks like the pandemic had an enduring effect and lifted the trend on a higher level - at least in the UK. 

 


 

I don´t see a reason why American and continental European shoppers should behave very different. Walmart`s Q4 numbers, which include already January 2023, show a slight re-acceleration ( cnbc). I think the meltdown of the e-commerce stocks is an overreaction.


Friday, February 24, 2023

Contemporary Art: Naked City @ Eric Firestone Gallery New York



(Drivebycuriosity) - Artists ain´t prudish. The history of art is spiced with nudity. At Eric Firestone Gallery in Manhattan I spotted an exhibition with paintings by Martha Edelheit (Great Jones Street ericfirestone ). The show is called "Naked City, Paintings from 1965-80".

 




 

Not every model was pretty, but judge for yourself

 

 

 


To be continued.

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

Science Fiction: Why I Have Problems With Kim Stanley Robinson`s Aurora


 
(Drivebycuriosity) - Can humans leave our solar system and find a new home elsewhere? Kim Stanley Robinson, an award crowned science fiction writer, famous for his Mars trilogy, presents his own view in the novel "Aurora" (published 2015 amazon).

 

 

                     Spoiler Allart

 

This is usually a spoiler free blog. But in order to criticize the novel I have to give away the basic idea.

 

 

The plot follows a group of people who had traveled on a multi-generational starship to Tau Ceti, 11.9 light years from earth, a journey lasting 159 years and 119 days. The plot follows people belonging to generation six or so who finally arrived there. They try to settle on a moon of a fictional planet, which they name "Aurora". 

Unfortunately the moon is too dangerous, so a part of space travelers decides to call it quits and to fly back to earth, then hibernating till they arrive back on earth. The plot follows only those who went back and ignores those who decided to stay in the Tau Ceti system.

Apparently the novel is a vehicle for the author`s message: There is no alternative to earth, humans can not settle elsewhere, all other places are too far away and too dangerous, even the Mars cannot be terraformed (don`t tell Elon Musk). 

I think the author is too defeatist and his novel is too dark. It is like a Robinson Crusoe who - shortly after arriving on his island - carves as canoe and paddles back. 

What does the author know about future technologies and the planets in our universe? It is ok to express an opinion, but to blow up this opinion into a book over more than 400 pages is cocky - and unfair to the readers. And the title "Aurora" is misleading because the story is not about the fictional place.

The novel is saturated with too much information: Cosmology, engineering, quantum mechanics, chemistry, biology, evolution, psychology with references to mathematics, philosophy & even linguistics. I generally appreciate science in a science fiction novel, but the novel reads partly like a school book, teaching the pupils the value of our planet and the dangers of the alternatives. It is not surprising that the story ends in an idyllic hippie colony on the beach. 

Some of the information are unbelievable. The spaceship contains every ecological climate zone on earth, including tropical rain forests, taigas, steppes, temperate farmland. There are mountains, valleys, lakes & glaciers populated with all kind of animals. This is way too much mass for a vehicle which has to get accelerated to 10% of the speed of light and then decelerated to almost zero speed again.

I did not like characters either. The plot focuses on a very wilful & cranky person who becomes later in the book the leader of the back home crowd. What does her qualify for that?

Aurora is no fun to read.

Thursday, February 16, 2023

Economics: Is Global Aging Really A Problem?


 (Drivebycuriosity) - There is a lot talk about global aging. People are getting older, thanks to better medical systems and nutrition, and birthrates are falling in all developed countries. In China & Japan the population is already shrinking, Europe and even the US may follow. If we believe the Cassandras the world is doomed. 

The pessimists say that even if the population doesn't shrink, "aging harms a country’s living standards by increasing the old-age dependency ratio — that is, the ratio of people over 64 to people aged 15-64" ( noahpinion). 

I really like the term "old-age dependency ratio". 

First, I think a smaller population is a big win for the environment and could be the answer to global warming, another favorite subject of the doomsayers.  

Fewer people burn less energy and emit fewer greenhouse gases. Fewer people also eat less therefore the incentive to destroy forests to gain more land for farming becomes weaker. 

A shrinking population also slows down the trend of turning forests & meadows into one-family houses, streets, strip malls, store houses & parking places. When the population is smaller the world becomes greener & cleaner.

A smaller population is also the answer to another doomster alert: 

                     "The robots are coming"

 Automation will destroy our jobs!"  (" thehill). 

Both trends are mostly compensating each other: A shrinking demand for workers (automation) meets a declining supply (aging).

I agree that "science is making exponential advancements in the field of robotics and artificial intelligence" and will churn the economy and the labor markets in the coming decades.  Many jobs will be done by machines driven by software, which is getting more and more sophisticated. The steep rise of ChatGPT and other incarnations of machine learning, known as Artificial Intelligence, accelerate the automation progress. 

 


 (source )

 

But, the automation process has been going on over many centuries. Machines have been replacing labor for a very long time (wind & water mills, weaving looms, steam engines and so on). The ongoing automation process has been raising productivity of labor considerably. 

We need less & less labor to produce things & services. Automation reduces working hours and lifts the living standard for everybody.

People don´t need to work more then 60 hours weekly to make a living. Children aren´t needed to work on farms, at factories & in mines to support their families and to be able to eat.

 

 


 ( source)

 

                      Less Work, More Income

 

Today even farmers are using robots, for instance for harvesting strawberries or milking cows (wikipedia). Drones are being used in warehouses and yards for inventory management. Robots also help restaurants to deal with the scarcity of labor.  

"Domino’s Pizza Inc. is putting in place equipment and technology that reduce the amount of labor that is required to produce our dough balls", reports time.com.  

3D-printers are also replacing workers, even in construction. 

"A 3D printer can build the walls of a house in as little as two days versus weeks or months with traditional construction materials" notices today.com. 

The accelerating automation process is reducing the costs of producing things significantly, making them cheaper and more affordable. A study by economists John G. Fernald and Charles I. Jones from Stanford & the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco claims that "it becomes possible to replace more and more of the labor tasks with capital" (robinhanson ). Fernald & Jones define capital as physical capital (machines including robots & computers), plus human capital (knowledge & skills) plus discovery of new ideas (inventions like computer, internet etc.). According to them "artificial intelligence and machine learning could allow computers and robots to increasingly replace labor in the production function for goods", meaning that the society can produce more things without increasing hours worked or even with a shrinking labor force. As a result the growth rate of income per person and the long-run growth rate (now around 2%) will rise as well: "The possibility that artificial intelligence will allow machines to replace workers to some extent could lead to higher growth in the future".

Naive observers claim that a shrinking population reduces the demand for goods & services and will destroy many markets and businesses (noahpinion). These pessimists ignore that:

 

         Demand is:

         The # of          X         Purchasing                       potential buyers                   power per capita

 

 

 I reckon that technological progress leads to:

 

    - rising salaries (for those still working), 

    - climbing dividend incomes, and

     - stock market gains 

which raise the purchasing power of most people enough to compensate the shrinking number of buyers. 

Even those who don`t invest in the stock market may participate via pension funds and insurance investments. 

For instance, if the population shrinks 1%, but the remaining people consume per capita 5% more, then demand climbs about 4%.

The productivity gains will finally translate into higher tax incomes for the governments. Some day a much greater part of goods & services will be produced by robots and other machines. Then many fewer people may work than today and many things will cost less. Then the time could come for an universal basic income, paid to everybody, and financed by productivity gains delivered with automation (driveby ).
 


Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Contemporary Art: True Alchemy @ Thierry Goldberg, New York


(Drivebycuriosity) - Manhattan`s Lower East Side is slowly degenerating into a party area with myriads of fast food places & other dives. But there are still some art galleries, albeit fewer than some years ago. Thierry Goldberg Gallery on Norfolk Street belongs to the survivors ( thierrygoldberg ).

Recently I saw there an interesting group show called "True Alchemy". I display my favorites here, a very subjective selection as usual. But let the image speak for themselves.

 




 

On top of this post you can see "Living Room n`35" (2022, oil on canvas) by Johanna Mirabel followed by 2 detail shots.

  



Above this paragraph follow to works by Hella Chitsazan: "When she broke up" (2022, oil on canvas) & "Don`t be Scared and Laugh" (2022, oil on canvas).

 

 


Above follow Emma Schwartz`s "get off" (oil, charcoal, and pastel on canvas) & Hella Chitsazan´s "Just careless" (2022, oil on canvas).

 

 



Above you can see 2 works by Kat Lowish: "Finger Food" & "Great Expectations", both 2022, oil on canvas. Then follow Augustina Wang´s "Silk Trap" (2022,pastel on canvas) & Gabriala Rassi`s "Untitled 1" & "Untitled 2" both 2022, mixed media on paper.

 


To be continued