Tom Waits Writes Moving Tribute to Hal Willner, Lamb and Black Sheep, Lover of the Afflicted and the Blessed – Variety

It was just a matter of time before the iconic and eccentric singer-songwriter Tom Waits paid tribute to his friend Hal Willner, who died on April 7with symptoms consistent with coronavirus.Willner was renowned as a multi-talented producer of albums by Lou Reed, Marianne Faithfull, Lucinda Williams as well as elaborate multi-artist tribute compilations (featuring Waits) to Charles Mingus, Kurt Weil and others, not to mention the producer of nearly 40 years of music for Saturday Night Live sketches.

Waits did not disappoint. His moving tribute written, like many of his songs, in collaboration with his wife, Kathleen Brennan appears in full below

Hal. Dear Hal. Brother. Uncle. Father. Son. Husband. Godfather. Friend. Wise and reckless. Lamb and black sheep. Lover of the afflicted and the blessed. More than kin and more than kind, more than friend and more than fiendish in his daunting and devoted pursuit of the lost and the buried, long may his coattails run and long may we now ride, and those that follow us continue to ride upon them.

Hal was the wry and soulful and mysterious historical rememberer. He specialized in staging strange musical bedfellows like Betty Carter and the Replacements or The Residents backing up Conway Twitty. Oh, the wild seeds of Impresario Hal. He was drawn equally to the danger of a fiasco and the magical power of illumination that his legendary productions held. Many years ago he bought Jimmy Durantes piano along with Bela Lugosis wristwatch and a headscarf worn by Karen Carpenter. Some say he also owned Sarah Bernhardts wooden leg. He had a variety of hand and string puppets, dummies, busts of Laurel and Hardy, duck whistles and scary Jerry Mahoney dolls and a free ranging collection of vinyl and rare books. These were his talismans and his vestments because his heart was a reliquary. Hal spoke regularly in asides and mumbling footnotes no doubt to dense tomes no one had heard about or read. Every story he told was followed by several inaudible and impossible to decipher remarks, (as if he was heckling himself), that were only intended for him. He frequently kvetched. He could conjure up the past like a crystal ball or Ouija board. He reminded us of a bumblebee crawling out of a calla lily He was a furtive and clandestine and crafty treasure seeker and archeologist of forgotten islands in popular culture.

His laugh. Well, it was an inside pocket and an impish rumpelstiltskin delight dance of laughter that offered refuge to those suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune or the slights of a critics pen. He encouraged mayhem and folly and celebrated all things genuinely weird and spooky from Soupy Sales to Ella Fitzgerald singing Sunshine of your Love.

I (Tom) met him after one of my shows in 1974. He was 18 and I was 24 and he looked like he was already retired. He wanted to show me around the town and get me into some of the clubs. Hal applauded riptides and deviants of musical, literary and human behavior. And, of course, he loved the exceptions to every rule. He loved to pull back the curtain of artifice and sayta-dahlook at this pageant of crumbling beauty and human disasterthis is the heart that is truly beating. To Hal, Vaudeville was Valhallaand his bottomless knowledge was a great spreading tree.

How did Hal get poets, actors, musicians, performers, directors, magicians, puppeteers, madmen, politicians, pundits, tv, radio and film studios from every era and pocket of the world to accompany him? We cant tell you.

Hal wasnt what you would call a smooth talker or a hustler, but one night we followed him to a street corner in Chinatown at 3 am where together we witnessed a homeless man singing a passionate one-word aria to Bacteria. BAC-Ter-I-A ..Bac Ter- I A with a heartbreaking tenor voice that equaled anyone we had heard at the Met, it was unforgettable.

If you took a cross section of Hals heart you would see the rings of a wise old tree. Above all, lets remember that Hal loved music and from all appearances it seems very much to have loved him right back big time. We share our love and sympathy, as do our children, with his wife Sheila and his son Arlo and Hals extended family and all the many friends and colluders who loved him.

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Tom Waits Writes Moving Tribute to Hal Willner, Lamb and Black Sheep, Lover of the Afflicted and the Blessed - Variety

Living Through History: Thinking about the meaning of time | – theberkshireedge.com

Jarice Hanson is, among other things, Professor Emerita from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where she was a member of the Department of Communication.

On the very first day of Massachusetts Stay At Home Order, the band on my watch broke. My old EMS watch with the light-up dial wasnt an expensive one but when I couldnt wear it on my wrist anymore, I missed it. I put the functioning part of the watch in my pocket and for the next few days I felt a comfort knowing it was there. I found myself tapping my pocket, just to reassure me that my need to know what time it was was still within my reach.

As the days passed, I realized that my sense of time was out of whack. It wasnt just that we were on spring break at the University of Massachusetts where I teach, or that I didnt have my watch, but everything around me was changing. My equilibrium was off. In the first few days of the Stay At Home Order I checked all of my other devices multiple times a day, whereas I would normally check them twice at the most, usually because of work. My friends kept recommending streaming services that would keep me amused, keep me tied to my computer or cell phone, and made me a passive recipient of streams of news, information, and diversion that sometimes frightened me, sometimes appalled me, and most often, made my mind race with questions such as how long?; how bad?; when will it end?; when will there be a vaccine? and I realized that all my most important questions had to do with the existential question of time. Because my University closed and shifted to remote teaching/learning for the rest of the semester, I had to focus on converting the course I teach called Digital Communication and Society to an online format. The first topic on the syllabus listed for the return after spring break and the shift to online teaching? The role of the concept of time in history.

The last time my class met in a classroom, we talked about how technologies exhibit characteristics that influence our relationship to time, but social indicators like race, class, gender, and age all exert their own pull toward how humans think about what the concept of time means as the seconds and minutes of this world click by. We debated how tech companies structure our attention and keep us hooked on content, thereby creating what we call an attention economy and how easy it is to find one addicted to the constant streaming presence of personal technologies and social media platforms. We discussed how business and industry incorporate a sense of time for tasks and accountability, and how long it takes our legal system to adjudicate difficult cases like privacy and security in an age of big data and the Internet. The relationship among technology, social values, and human behavior that shift radically in times of disruption was the focus of the course, and now we were experientially living the theoretical framework of the course.

Studies of the importance of a concept of time structured by technology or imprinted upon us by the technologies we use have a long history. Lewis Mumford wrote about the invention of the clock in the fourteenth century and how it structured social behavior of everyone in earshot of the clock chimes, regulating store openings, worship, and social interaction. The telegraph, strung on wires along railroad tracks organized the continental U.S. into four time zones, making commerce and the railroads run on time. Telephones, radio and television all erased a sense of space and structured peoples time by allowing us to interact with voices and see images from far away, in the comfort of our own homes, and digital technologies like computers, cell phones, and smartphones enabled us to move freely about while not having to worry about time. We say that we can multitask and our technologies allow us to be more efficientbut these are convenient excuses for allowing the technologies to control our time.

The current pandemic has pulled the rug out from under us in many ways, but one important feature is to think about how we use the time we now have, and how unsettled we feel when our routines are upended. Many people say its taking longer to get things donewhich may be true, but at the same time, is it just that when time becomes all we have, do we value it differently?

If my class were in session, I would lock eyes with my students and ask them whether they are conscious of their choices. Do they choose to be distracted by technology or is the technology a means to an end to feel the gratification of being with others, even though so many of us are in isolation? I would pose the critical question of time for those heroic first responders who are racing against time as the virus spreads and we flail around with an outdated supply chain that has its own sense of time. I would ask them whether grocery store clerks, personnel at take-out restaurants, or delivery people have a very different experience of time these days. I would prod them to think about what just in time thinking and action means, when weve already harnessed time by creating models of peaks and curves, and race to find supplies to meet the numbers we expect to have to serve.

But perhaps most of all, I would try to reinforce for them, as I do myself, how the one constant weve explored throughout every life, is the same constant of time that our agricultural forebears experienced. Every day the sun comes up. Every evening the sun goes down. And when we come through this snapshot in the history of the world, will we find the balance we need in the constants that are given to us, or in the behaviors we need to let this time pass?

Even though we may choose to fill our time with certain actions or behaviors, what we all share as human beings, is the sense of time that grounds us all when we need it most. Globally a second, a minute, an hourare all the same. When we remember that, we find something a little more stable, a little more reliable, and much more profound when we realize that we are all living through history with the same clock.

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Researchers restore sight in mice by turning skin cells into light-sensing eye cells – National Institutes of Health

News Release

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

NIH-funded study offers new path to modeling eye disease, advancing therapies

Researchers have discovered a technique for directly reprogramming skin cells into light-sensing rod photoreceptors used for vision. The lab-made rods enabled blind mice to detect light after the cells were transplanted into the animals eyes. The work, funded by the National Eye Institute (NEI), published April 15 in Nature. The NEI is part of the National Institutes of Health.

Up until now, researchers have replaced dying photoreceptors in animal models by creating stem cells from skin or blood cells, programming those stem cells to become photoreceptors, which are then transplanted into the back of the eye. In the new study, scientists show that it is possible to skip the stem-cell intermediary step and directly reprogram skins cells into photoreceptors for transplantation into the retina.

This is the first study to show that direct, chemical reprogramming can produce retinal-like cells, which gives us a new and faster strategy for developing therapies for age-related macular degeneration and other retinal disorders caused by the loss of photoreceptors, said Anand Swaroop, Ph.D., senior investigator in the NEI Neurobiology, Neurodegeneration, and Repair Laboratory, which characterized the reprogrammed rod photoreceptor cells by gene expression analysis.

Of immediate benefit will be the ability to quickly develop disease models so we can study mechanisms of disease. The new strategy will also help us design better cell replacement approaches, he said.

Scientists have studied induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells with intense interest over the past decade. IPSCs are developed in a lab from adult cells rather than fetal tissue and can be used to make nearly any type of replacement cell or tissue. But iPS cell reprogramming protocols can take six months before cells or tissues are ready for transplantation. By contrast, the direct reprogramming described in the current study coaxed skin cells into functional photoreceptors ready for transplantation in only 10 days. The researchers demonstrated their technique in mouse eyes, using both mouse- and human-derived skin cells.

Our technique goes directly from skin cell to photoreceptor without the need for stem cells in between, said the studys lead investigator, Sai Chavala, M.D., CEO and president of CIRC Therapeutics and the Center for Retina Innovation. Chavala is also director of retina services at KE Eye Centers of Texas and a professor of surgery at Texas Christian University and University of North Texas Health Science Center (UNTHSC) School of Medicine, Fort Worth.

Direct reprogramming involves bathing the skin cells in a cocktail of five small molecule compounds that together chemically mediate the molecular pathways relevant for rod photoreceptor cell fate. The result are rod photoreceptors that mimic native rods in appearance and function.

The researchers performed gene expression profiling, which showed that the genes expressed by the new cells were similar to those expressed by real rod photoreceptors. At the same time, genes relevant to skin cell function had been downregulated.

The researchers transplanted the cells into mice with retinal degeneration and then tested their pupillary reflexes, which is a measure of photoreceptor function after transplantation. Under low-light conditions, constriction of the pupil is dependent on rod photoreceptor function. Within a month of transplantation, six of 14 (43%) animals showed robust pupil constriction under low light compared to none of the untreated controls.

Moreover, treated mice with pupil constriction were significantly more likely to seek out and spend time in dark spaces compared with treated mice with no pupil response and untreated controls. Preference for dark spaces is a behavior that requires vision and reflects the mouses natural tendency to seek out safe, dark locations as opposed to light ones.

Even mice with severely advanced retinal degeneration, with little chance of having living photoreceptors remaining, responded to transplantation. Such findings suggest that the observed improvements were due to the lab-made photoreceptors rather than to an ancillary effect that supported the health of the hosts existing photoreceptors, said the studys first author Biraj Mahato, Ph.D., research scientist, UNTHSC.

Three months after transplantation, immunofluorescence studies confirmed the survival of the lab-made photoreceptors, as well as their synaptic connections to neurons in the inner retina.

Further research is needed to optimize the protocol to increase the number of functional transplanted photoreceptors.

Importantly, the researchers worked out how this direct reprogramming is mediated at the cellular level. These insights will help researchers apply the technique not only to the retina, but to many other cell types, Swaroop said.

If efficiency of this direct conversion can be improved, this may significantly reduce the time it takes to develop a potential cell therapy product or disease model, said Kapil Bharti, Ph.D., senior investigator and head of the Ocular and Stem Cell Translational Research Section at NEI.

Chavala and his colleagues are planning a clinical trial to test the therapy in humans for degenerative retinal diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa.

The work was supported by grants EY021171, EY025667, EY025905, and EY025717 and NEI Intramural Research Program grants ZIAEY000450, ZIAEY000474 and ZIAEY000546.

The University of North Texas has a patent pending on the chemical reprogramming method reported in this paper. CIRC Therapeutics is a start-up company that plans to commercialize treatments using the technology.

This press release describes a basic research finding. Basic research increases our understanding of human behavior and biology, which is foundational to advancing new and better ways to prevent, diagnose, and treat disease. Science is an unpredictable and incremental process each research advance builds on past discoveries, often in unexpected ways. Most clinical advances would not be possible without the knowledge of fundamental basic research.

NEI leads the federal governments research on the visual system and eye diseases. NEI supports basic and clinical science programs to develop sight-saving treatments and address special needs of people with vision loss. For more information, visit https://www.nei.nih.gov.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

Mahato B, Kaya KD , Fan Y, Sumien N, Shetty RA, Zhang W, Davis D, Mock T , Batabyal S, Ni A, Mohanty S, Han Z, Farjo R, Forster M, Swaroop A and Chavala SH. Pharmacologic fibroblast reprogramming into photoreceptors restores vision. Published online April 15, 2020 in Nature.http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2201-4

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Researchers restore sight in mice by turning skin cells into light-sensing eye cells - National Institutes of Health

When should we reopen the economy? – Brandeis University

An analysis by International Business School professor Anna Scherbina shows we would hurt more than help the economy if we do it before mid-June.

The U.S. risks hurting the economy more than helping it if the economy is restarted before mid-June, new research shows.

In the paper, which was published March 27 on the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) website and updated this week, Scherbina found that for at least two more months, the economic benefits of controlling the virus and preventing illness and death are greater than the economic cost of closing most non-essential businesses.

She also found that even after we lift the lockdown, or what economists call suppression, we must keep in place more moderate measures, such as wearing face masks and limiting public gatherings, until a vaccine or an effective drug or treatment becomes widely available.

Otherwise, the economic harm from the viruss spread will be greater than keeping the economy shuttered.

Before coming to the Brandeis International Business School in 2019, Scherbina worked for two years as a senior economist at the U.S. Council of Economic Advisers. While there, she coauthored a paper modeling the economic costs and health impact of a theoretical influenza pandemic on the United States.

When Scherbina wrote her paper for AEI, some 30,000 Americans were infected with COVID-19; as of last week the figure stood at 460,000; Scherbina revised her conclusions to include the new data.

She also stressed that some assumptions in her model depend on still unfolding government policies and human behavior while others may change as we learn more about the virus.

In her analysis, Scherbina compared the economic costs of businesses staying closed, which causes a steep drop in the gross domestic product, with the economic benefits of a lockdown that prevents people from getting sick and dying.

With widespread illness, productivity drops as people skip work to recover or care for their sick relatives. There are also increased medical costs. Policymakers and economists also assign a dollar value to every life, based on a calculation of how much we would be willing to pay to prevent the death.

In determining the mid-June date, Scherbina used a relatively optimistic estimate of how successful we are in limiting the virus's spread during the lockdown.

Left to spread uncontrollably, the virus has a reproduction rate of 2.4, meaning the typical person would infect an average of 2.4 people over the course of their illness (assuming that no one in the population is immune).

Scherbina's optimistic scenario assumes that our current containment efforts reduce the reproduction rate to 0.5 by the time the economy reopens.

Both these estimates assume that mitigation efforts will be in place when the lockdown lifts and will largely succeed in slowing the spread of the virus until a vaccine or other treatment is available.

If mitigation efforts fail, the gains from the lockdown will be negated, and we may have to enter another lockdown period, Scherbina said.

Scherbina also calculated the cost to the economy if we made no efforts to control the virus at $9 trillion, a more than 40% drop in the gross domestic product.

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When should we reopen the economy? - Brandeis University

Stress causes physical changes in the brains of mice, and it may help us design medicine to fight it – ZME Science

New research at the Louisiana State University (LSU) Health Sciences Center points the way to a potential treatment against stress.

The team shows that stress can physically alter the structures of mouse brains, with long-lasting effects. They also identify a molecular pathway that could be used to prevent or reverse such changes.

Stress alters brain function and produces lasting changes in human behavior and physiology. The experience of traumatic events can lead to neuropsychiatric disorders including anxiety, depression, and drug addiction, explains Si-Qiong June Liu, MD, PhD, Professor of Cell Biology and Anatomy at LSU and lead author of the paper.

Investigation of the neurobiology of stress can reveal how stress affects neuronal connections and hence brain function. This knowledge is necessary for developing strategies to prevent or treat these common stress-related neurological disorders.

The team found that, for mice, experiencing even a single stressful event was enough to cause quick, long-lasting changes in the structure of astrocytes, brain cells that help feed neurons and maintain synaptic function. Such events cause the outer branches of these cells to shrink away from synapses (the contact spaces between neurons used to transmit impulses via chemical messengers).

Synapses perform the same role in our brains as transistors do in computers they give us our processing power. And, without astrocytes, they can become clogged with waste ions.

During a stressful event, the team explains, the stress hormone norepinephrine suppresses a molecular pathway that normally produces a protein, GluA1. This protein is essential in allowing nerve cells and astrocytes to communicate with each other.

Stress affects the structure and function of both neurons and astrocytes, adds Dr. Liu. Because astrocytes can directly modulate synaptic transmission and are critically involved in stress-related behavior, preventing or reversing the stress-induced change in astrocytes is a potential way to treat stress-related neurological disorders.

They explain that the pathway they identified should, in theory, be targeted with medicine to prevent or even potentially reverse stress-induced changes.

For now, the findings only apply to mice. But many signaling pathways are conserved throughout evolution, the team notes. The molecular pathways that lead to astrocyte structural remodeling and suppression of GluA1 production may, therefore, also occur in humans who experience a stressful event and they could hold the key to fighting stress.

The paper . Emotional stress induces structural plasticity in Bergmann glial cells via an AC5-CPEB3-GluA1 pathway has been published in The Journal of Neuroscience.

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Stress causes physical changes in the brains of mice, and it may help us design medicine to fight it - ZME Science

Bandwagon effect beats advice from human experts and AI – Futurity: Research News

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Advice from artificial intelligence experts may be just as influential as from human experts, researchers report.

Both human and robotic bearers of bad news may find, however, that they lose influence when their negative opinions run contrary to a positive crowd, according to a new study.

Machines that generate recommendationsor AI expertswere as influential as human experts when the AI experts recommended which photo a user should add to their online business profile, researchers found.

But both AI and human experts failed to budge opinions if their feedback was negative and went against popular opinion among other users, says S. Shyam Sundar, professor of media effects in the Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications, co-director of the Media Effects Research Laboratory, and an affiliate of the Institute for Computational and Data Sciences (ICDS) at Penn State.

The findings may show that there are times when the opinion of the crowd, also called the bandwagon effect, can beat out the opinions of experts whether they are AI or human, Sundar says.

Both AI-powered and human experts with a positive evaluation on a business profile picture were able to influence users own assessment of the photo, he says. However, if experts did not like the photograph and the crowd offered a positive evaluation of it, the experts influence waned.

Because people are increasingly using social media to look for feedback, cues that suggest expert opinions and the bandwagon effect may be important factors in influencing decisions, according to first author Jinping Wang, a doctoral candidate in mass communication.

Nowadays, we often turn to online platforms for opinions from other peoplelike our peers and expertsbefore making a decision, says Wang. For example, we may turn to those sources when we want to know what movies to watch, or what photos to upload to social media platforms.

AI experts are often less expensive than human experts and they can also work 24 hours a day, which, Wang suggests, might make them appealing to online businesses.

The researchers also found that the AIs group statusin this case, national origin was designateddid not seem to affect a persons acceptance of its recommendation. In human experts, however, an expert from a similar national origin who offered a negative assessment of a photograph tended to be more influential than a human expert from an unknown country who offered a similar negative rating of a photograph.

While findings that suggest group status may not affect whether a person values the judgment of AI experts sounds like good news, Sundar suggests that the same cultural biases might still be at work in the AI expert, but they could be hidden in the programming and training data.

It can be both goodand badbecause it all depends on what you feed the AI, says Sundar. While it is good to have faith in AIs ability to transcend cultural biases, we have to keep in mind that if you train the AI on pictures from one culture, they could give misleading recommendations on pictures meant for use in other cultural contexts.

The researchers recruited 353 people through an online crowdsourcing service to take part in the study. Researchers randomly selected the participants to view a screenshot of a website that offered users recommendations for their business profile photos.

Researchers also told participants that the website allowed feedback from other users of platform, in addition to expert raters. The screenshots represented the various conditions the researchers studied, including whether the expert raters were human or AI; whether their feedback was positive or negative; and whether the source of the rater came from a similar, different, or unknown national identity.

In the future, researchers plan to investigate the group dynamics of influence more deeply and examine whether the experts gender plays a role in influencing opinion.

The research appears Computers in Human Behavior.

Source: Penn State

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Bandwagon effect beats advice from human experts and AI - Futurity: Research News

Grace Sprecher: Did you really ‘choose’ to read this article? – PostBulletin.com

Our lives are constantly filled to the brim with hasty decision-making, wearisome contemplation, and trivial everyday choices ... right? Maybe it's a debate over which college to attend, which job to apply for, or even which cat to adopt. Whatever the choice may be, its normal to experience anxiety over the possibility of making an incorrect decision.

However, as daunting as a momentous decision may seem, take comfort in knowing that a choice wasnt actually made in the first place.

A lot of the time, we neglect to realize the lack of control we actually possess over the events that occur within our lifetime. Much of the human race is convinced theyre consciously making their own choices, but because we are a product of evolution, its impossible to be in control of how our lives progress.

While we experience the illusion of making a choice, only one possible outcome can occur for every situation -- and the probability of that outcome after it has occurred is consistently 100 percent. Because of this, the free will were convinced we maintain is nothing more than our lives unfolding as they were destined to from the start.

Imagine life as a movie youre about to watch for the first time. While you can enjoy in anticipation the uncertainty of the upcoming scenes, you still understand that the plot of the movie is predetermined. The movie progresses exactly as it does, and the previous scenes happened exactly as they did with no room for any alternate realities created by the concept of choice. There exists only what is and never what isnt or what couldve been.

So why do we even believe in free will? The answer may lie in the question itself. As human beings, we possess an advantage over any other animal we share the planet with -- our ability to ask why and seek the answer. Because of this unique feat, our perception of reality heightens and our self awareness is brought to a new level.

As the very particles were made up of work endlessly to understand themselves, were convinced this level of intelligence is enough to allow our choices to govern entire sections of our lives. As Neel Mukherjee blatantly puts it, We credit ourselves with far more agency than we actually possess. Things happen because they happen.

For some, the troubling part includes how the realization of free will as an illusion could understandably invalidate a sense of purpose. A lack of control over ones life is not necessarily a pleasant idea, so the illusion of choice exists partly to console.

However, would understanding the illusoriness of free will actually change how life is perceived? If anything, the idea is expansive. By eliminating the free will aspect, were able to gain a more in-depth knowledge of human behavior by investigating the true causes of an event rather than dubbing it as, They did it because they felt like it. Additionally, the absence of free will can promote less self judgment and a more efficient, constructive outlook on life.

If we truly were in possession of free will, wouldnt every bacteria and microorganism contributing to our bodys composition also need to possess free will? How could a brainless, unicellular organism without the knowledge of self awareness possibly make its own decisions?

Its impossible, so at what point during the coming-together of these life forms could they possibly create a truly independent being? How many trillions of unaware bacterium would it take to form an entity with conscious volition, and does our own self awareness truly validate our sense of free will?

Have you really chosen to read this column, or was it inevitable?

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Grace Sprecher: Did you really 'choose' to read this article? - PostBulletin.com

From the Chamber: Tips During the COVID-19: Era Part 1 – Press Herald

These are trying times, and were all having our limits tested on how much we can adjust and adapt to in order to keep ourselves and our families safe. This new sense of normal has been a struggle to create, yet, being at the beginning of my fourth week of social distancing, I can say that there is now at least a temporary routine to my days now. Having even a temporary routine helps.

As the executive director of the chamber of commerce in our region, Ive been fortunate to help direct hundreds of people to the resources they need over the last month. By the nature of our business, Ive been on dozens of calls every week with legislators, with business owners and with citizens. Ive been distributing as much information as possible on new funding programs, social programs and safety protocols to try and help as many people as I can. And to be honest, being able to help people right now, has given me a purpose that I can focus on, and I think some people are struggling without such a focus.

Below are a collection of tips you can do to help yourself, your family or your community. Take them as they are intended- simply as unsolicited advice intended to help. Right now, I think the best thing we can do is to try and help as many people as possible. I hope this helps.

Be Vigilant

A common refrain echoed across social media and in press briefings is, When can we go back to normal? It stems from people being tired of the isolation and frankly exhausted from being a worker-teacher-mentor-entertainer-cook-task masker for 16 hours per day, 7 days per week, to help their families cope.

Dr. Anthony Fauci and all other experts will tell you there is no date they can predict because there still isnt enough known on how prevalent the virus is. We dont know where it is and new hot spots are popping up daily.

The metaphor I find myself returning to time and again, is a burning city. You cant re-enter the city until the fire is gone, or at the very least controlled. No one would say, Yeah, Im tired of not being able to go to my city, and even though its still burning Im going to move back in.

So yes, the monotony, uncertainty and this adjustment we have made to survive is a tough situation to deal with. But be vigilant. Take it day by day, and step by step. To rush back to normal would undoubtedly bring the virus roaring back. We literally cannot afford that, both in human lives and monetarily.

Find Authentic Resources

What stores are open? Who are considered essential workers? Where can my boss findbusiness loans? Where can I donate my time or efforts? These are all good questions. The best place to start in our area, is the chambers website. We have a COVID-19 Community Resource page. On it we list resources for Brunswick and Bath business updates (created by Brunswick Downtown Association and Main Street Bath), we have government postings from local town ordinances to State of Maine Executive Orders, we have links to information on the Paycheck Protection Program and other SBA loans for businesses, information on unemployment and more. Find the resource link on our homepage at http://www.midcoastmaine.com or directly at http://www.midcoastmaine.com/covid-19

Build a Budget

Many families already do this, but I remember when I was single, I took each bill and expense as they came. I knew the big ones like rent and car payments but I wasnt tracking my food budget or other medical bills. I paid them as they came in. Do yourself a favor and write out a brief budget. What bills are due and when is a good basic starting point. Then figure out what you can spend on food and other essentials. Right now, many debt collectors are offering payment plans or deferments, so if your budget right now wont allow for you to pay all of your bills, its time to be proactive in contacting these people, rather than ignoring the bills and hoping theyll go away. Its no fun to look at what you have and realizing you need to adjust your lifestyle, but knowing is better than not knowing, and it will help you make better decisions.

Nobody Prefers This, Except Dogs

This may seem obvious, but nobody likes to adjust their lives so drastically and so rapidly. Even those essential workers who still go into work have had their work protocols, their commutes and their work environments be overhauled. I remind you of this because change is difficult for many people.

A communications studies professor named Everett Rodgers had a ground-breaking book in the mid-1960s called Diffusion of Innovations that studies what rate people will accept and adopt a new idea. The study notes that 2.5% of the population are Innovators, while only 13.5% are Early Adopters (meaning those who accept something immediately when its introduced). This is followed, over time, by the Early Majority (34%), the Late Majority (34%) and the Laggards (the final 16%).

This is to say that even when people know social distancing is working, exactly half of us are innovators, early adopters or the early majority, meaning it takes the other half of us, more time to accept this change. Change leads to stress. Stress changes attitudes. Stress changes human behavior.

So what can you do? Again, be vigilant with safety and health protocols. Accept that some people will take longer to be convinced (though you should continue to tell them the best way). And check in on friends and family more regularly to ensure they are handling this well.

Were all in this together. More tips next week. Be safe and wash your hands.

Cory King is the executive director of the Southern Midcoast Maine Chamber.

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From the Chamber: Tips During the COVID-19: Era Part 1 - Press Herald

Can Stress Tests Be Effective Crisis-fighting Tools for Banks? – Knowledge@Wharton

Stress tests in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis helped restore public confidence in the banking system by showing that banks had enough loss-absorbing capacity to weather an even more serious economic decline, noted Wharton finance professor Richard Herring in an interview with Knowledge@Wharton.

Since that time, stress tests have become a regular feature of regulatory oversight of the banking system to help officials assess the resilience of the financial system and guide capital planning by banks. The stress tests should be strengthened to capture the second-round effects of shocks, address a wider range of risks, and incorporate feedback effects within the banking system and between the real economy and banks, Herring said. He also called for the extension of stress tests to a wider range of institutions such as some shadow banks, the harmonization of stress tests globally, the improvement of data and market intelligence to monitor emerging risk, and robust safeguards to ensure that scenarios are not manipulated to suit political objectives. Stress testing may, in fact, be one of the key measures that has prevented the economic damage from the pandemic from being compounded by a banking crisis, he added.

These concerns are the focus of a December 2019 paper titled Objectives and Challenges for Stress Testing, which Herring co-authored with Til Schuermann, a partner and co-head of the risk and public policy practice in the Americas at Oliver Wyman, a consulting firm. It discusses a range of challenges to improving the effectiveness of stress tests, such as incorporating nonfinancial risks like cyber [threats], taking into account second-round effects of shocks, broadening the scope beyond just banks, and resisting a tendency to disaster myopia (or the tendency to underestimate adverse outcomes) as memories of the financial crisis recede into the past. Herring shared his insights on tackling some of those challenges. An edited transcript of the conversation follows.

Knowledge@Wharton: Before we talk about your paper, perhaps we could spend some time on whats going on at present. In response to the coronavirus pandemic, the Federal Reserve has cut interest rates close to zero, and it has provided enormous liquidity support to a wide range of markets. What is your assessment of the crisis that the coronavirus pandemic has sparked? What do you think of the Federal Reserves actions?

Richard Herring: I think the intense focus on the role of the Fed in these circumstances is fundamentally misplaced. At best, the Fed can play a supporting but significant role to ensure that the macroeconomic shock caused by the pandemic and the policy response to combat it is not compounded by a financial crisis. The first-order concern should be to support and improve the healthcare infrastructure and provide support for people who are suddenly without income. The Fed cannot stop the pandemic, but it can provide enough liquidity to keep the financial system functioning. One of the key challenges ahead for the financial system will be coping with the credit risks that inevitably materialize because much of the economy has come to a full stop. If firms dont have revenue, they wont be able to meet their commitments. They will be under enormous pressure to reduce costs and, sadly, that will involve terminating much of their workforce. Of course, this response will exacerbate economic conditions.

Economic conditions are made still worse by the panicky responses among consumers who are trying to stock up on everything from canned goods to toilet paper. This behavior can create shortages where they need not exist. We have seen parallel behavior in financial markets with the sudden dash to cash, that roiled markets. Luckily the Fed can remedy that problem by supplying more cash, but it is powerless to deal with shortages in the real economy. Hoarding reflects a loss of confidence in the system and a worrisome unraveling of society.

We would have been in much better shape if the responsible officials had taken appropriate precautions in response to the many simulations that have been conducted showing the potentially devastating consequences of a pandemic. For example, in 2005 the Wharton Financial Institutions Center co-sponsored a conference with the Brookings Institution and The Goldman Sachs Global Markets Institute to identify the top ten financial risks to the global economy. These risks included a global pandemic and featured a simulation showing how much more rapidly the Spanish flu of 1918 would have traveled and how much more devastating it would be because of modern international air travel. Although governments and international organizations have conducted these kinds of stress tests, there has been no corresponding obligation to take appropriate measures to protect against these adverse scenarios.

In contrast, banks have been required to raise capital to absorb losses in response to severely adverse economic scenarios. Unfortunately, the responsible officials do not appear to have subjected themselves to comparable disciplines such as stockpiling enough protective gear for healthcare workers and first responders, necessary life-support equipment and investing in tests to detect infection and vaccines to protect. These measures might have enabled leaders to put in place a more effective response to the advance of the virus without shutting down much of the economy. But thats not where we are now. Policymakers completely underestimated the severity and speed of contagion, and we are ill-prepared to deal with a pandemic.

Policymakers completely underestimated the severity and speed of contagion, and we are ill-prepared to deal with a pandemic.

Given where we are now, what can the Fed do? Its important to keep markets functioning. Were going to see volatility because nobody can predict with certainty what the longer-term impacts of this epidemic will be and so the price discovery process will likely remain a source of volatility. People really dont understand the longer-term effects of the measures were taking to try to stem the panic, and we dont know how long the healthcare crisis will last. If its just a couple of months, we should be able to bounce back relatively quickly. If it ends up lasting much longer, however, recovery will be much more difficult.

Thankfully Congress and the Administration have taken some bold actions on the fiscal side, because the blow to income is where the most painful economic impacts are being felt. If we dont act to help people who have suddenly lost their income the human tragedy will be appalling.

But to return to the Fed, I would give them high marks for their quick action to avert a widespread liquidity crisis. They clearly learned many lessons from 2008-2009 and acted quickly to put in place facilities to support liquidity in several important markets. They also deserve praise for rapidly activating swap lines with other major central banks in recognition of the fact this is not just a U.S. problem. The pandemic is worldwide, and an international financial crisis would cause an even larger decline in world demand and production than we now face. Although its difficult to achieve in the current climate, global cooperation is more important than ever. Inadequate cooperation may cause an even larger collapse and much slower recovery.

I am less enthusiastic about the Feds dramatic cut in interest rates. It strikes me that lowering already historically low interest rates is purely symbolic and undermines the power of a tool they may need later. Its unrealistic to expect that investors or consumers will respond to a decline in the level of the interest rate under current conditions in which the problem is a government-directed shut down in economic activity. When we emerge from the current period of life support to begin an economic recovery a cut in interest rates might be very helpful. But if interest rates are already near zero, theres no scope for deploying this traditional tool of monetary policy without reducing interest rates to negative levels. Having witnessed the virtual impotence of negative interest rates in other economies, the Fed seems determined to resist that course of action.

Its important to ensure temporary aid does not become a permanent subsidy.

Knowledge@Wharton: Since you mentioned credit risk being a critical issue, what do you think should be done about that?

Herring: It depends on the nature of the problem. If it is a fundamentally sound business that we can expect to bounce back, we surely dont want to take it through bankruptcy. Thats costly. It can destroy the value of organizational, physical and human capital.

Allocating this kind of support can be very tricky because it requires judgments about long-term viability, which are somewhat subjective. Ideally, we should offer support to any firm that is temporarily in distress. That is a rationale for helping, for example, the airline industry or hundreds of thousands of small restaurants. But its difficult to administer, and its important to ensure temporary aid does not become a permanent subsidy. In the beginning, however, it seems wise to err on the side of assuming were facing temporary liquidity problems until we fully understand how the economic shock is going to play out.

The Fed lacks the authority to take credit risk, but it can establish facilities underwritten by the Treasury than can do so. It resurrected several such facilities that had been deployed during the 2008-2009 crisis before passage of the CARES Act, which has greatly expanded Treasury resources for funding additional such facilities.

Knowledge@Wharton: Markets have continued to be volatile despite the Feds actions. Is there anything else that can be done to calm things down for investors?

Herring: We should not assume that the Fed can control expectations. In each recent case in which it has taken dramatic actions, the impact on expectations has been at best modest and transitory. The first dramatic cut in interest rates (on March 3), worked for about 14 minutes, and the bold actions taken on Sunday March 15, did not prevent markets from plunging. (The Dow fell nearly 3,000 points on March 16, the second-worst day in its history.) There is also a risk that people may take these heroic actions as a sign of panic. But more fundamentally, stabilizing expectations in these circumstances depends on limiting the spread of the virus and enabling the resumption of normal activity. This is first and foremost a healthcare crisis, which the Fed is powerless to influence.

We are in for a prolonged period of uncertainty because the market is trying to figure out what the longer-term value of various firms will be. The longer the pandemic persists, the greater the likelihood of changes in the structure of the economy. For example, we may find that many tasks can be performed more efficiently at home without wasting the time and resources of commuting. This could reduce the demand for office space and lead to different choices about where people choose to live. Although complex international supply chains and just-in-time inventory practices have made substantial contributions to reducing production costs, countries will inevitably question whether the efficiency gains justify the vulnerabilities exposed by this pandemic. It seems possible that we may experience a disintegration of the world economy that will prove costly to all countries.

The longer the pandemic persists, the greater the likelihood of changes in the structure of the economy.

We can see evidence of this response in the nationalistic actions of many countries that are trying to limit the export of anything needed to fight the pandemic. Its entirely understandable, but it means that you cant rely on these sources of supply when you need them most. I suspect we will increasingly see national defense arguments advanced for protecting manufactures of inputs into things like pharmaceuticals and medical equipment. Moreover, once that sort of argument gains traction, we can expect a growing number of industries to claim that they are vital to national defense. After all, the U.S. once protected makers of ice cream under the rationale that it is vital to the morale of our troops.

Knowledge@Wharton: Some commentators have said that the coronavirus crisis is Dodd-Franks first real test. Do you agree with that view? (The DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Actwas passed in 2010 as a response to the 2008 financial crisis.)

Herring: If you take the broad view that Dodd-Frank was supposed to increase the resilience of the banking sector, it seems to have served us well. We have implemented a number of policy reforms based on lessons drawn from 2008-2009 crisis increases in the quantity and quality of capital, implementation of a leverage ratio, introduction of liquidity requirements and living wills and, of course, stress test to ensure that banks are prepared to survive a severely adverse economic scenario.

That gets us around to the topic of the paper (Objectives and Challenges for Stress Testing), because one of the things that we learned from the crisis was that the capital adequacy of banks shouldnt be judged on the basis of current economic conditions alone. What we really care about is whether the banking system can continue functioning effectively even under a severe shock to the economy.

We discovered in the 2008-2009 crisis that as a result of ill-considered moves by the regulators and some very aggressive actions taken by banks, some international banks were operating with leverage above 50-to-1 (assets to equity). This assumes an incredibly optimistic view about the growth and stability of the world economy. If a banks assets should decline in value by a mere 2% it would be insolvent. Realistically, even a loss of 1% would be likely to bring the bank down because it would lose access to liquidity and be forced to incur losses on the forced sale of assets.

What we faced in 2008-2009 was a collapse of confidence in the plumbing of the world financial system. In recognition of the central role banks played in creating vulnerability to a financial crisis and in transmitting and amplifying the shock to the real economy, the Group of 20 (G20) the political leaders of the 20 most economically important countries placed reform of bank regulation at the top of the agenda. These reforms have been broad and global in reach and included, among many other measures, a requirement to institute stress tests.

The capital adequacy of banks shouldnt be judged on the basis of current economic conditions alone. What we really care about is whether the banking system can continue functioning effectively even under a severe shock to the economy.

Obviously, stress scenarios developed for the banking system did not include a global pandemic, but this does highlight an important issue. Stress tests should include scenarios that go beyond historical experience. A fundamental limitation of most statistical analysis is that its based on what has happened in the past. But the future is not bounded by experience. We may find ourselves confronted by a shock that has never occurred before an extreme tail event. Such events do not happen often, but unfortunately were living through one now.

The stress tests certainly didnt anticipate the pandemic, but it did include a severe recession. Banks were required to include a substantial amount of equity in their financial structures that would enable them to remain well-capitalized, even if a very damaging recession occurred. This is happening now but not because of a contemplated, conventional macro shock. This highlights an important point: When we dont know the future, the main source of resiliency in the banking system is its ability to absorb loss. Were very fortunate that the U.S. banking industry seems to be quite robust entering this crisis. Unfortunately, this is less true in the European Union.

I should note that it is important not to overstate what stress tests can do. Stress tests are designed to ensure that banks do not have to reduce lending to remain well capitalized. But that doesnt imply that banks will choose to lend. Most U.S. banks are comfortably above their required regulatory minimums, but we dont know how they will choose to use this financial flexibility.

We can, however, be confident that this time the banking system will not make the problem worse, which is a nontrivial accomplishment. During the crisis in 2008-2009 many banks were on the brink of insolvency (and, frankly, some had gone over the brink) and so they were forced to retrench. Very few were in shape to support an economic recovery thus contributing to the length and depth of the recession. Of course, banks will not lend to firms with no revenue, but parts of the CARES Act may provide guarantees that will enable banks to participate in current life support measures and aid the eventual recovery.

Knowledge@Wharton: You write in your paper that stress testing was an effective crisis-fighting tool that banks used during the great financial crisis 10 years ago. Do you think its still the right tool today, or do we need other tools to deal with the current crisis?

Herring: My co-author Til Schuermann distinguished peace time from war time stress tests. Peace time stress tests are conducted during normal economic conditions when the attempt is to anticipate shocks that might occur. War time stress tests are conducted during a crisis. This is the circumstance in which system-wide stress testing began. It was an attempt to restore confidence in banks and regulators at a time when the public had lost confidence in both. The regulatory ratios were shown to be entirely misleading. The regulators had failed to keep banks safe and had no coherent plan for resolving insolvent institutions. They needed a way to reassure the public that they now understood the dimensions of the problem and how to fix it. This was the origin of the first stress test.

In wartime, its relatively easy to design a stress test because the relevant stress is all too obvious. In peacetime, however, the challenge is much more difficult because no one can know what stress is relevant. Its certainly possible, indeed likely, that reasonable people may disagree about what should be in a stress scenario and how seriously adverse it should be. And since the banking industry knows the more adverse the stress in a scenario, the more capital they will need, they will be very critical about severely adverse stress scenarios.

Some politicians have proposed subjecting stress scenarios to a period of public comment, which I think is a terrible idea. The objective should not be to arrive at some sort of consensus forecast, but rather to probe whether banks will be resilient, even if something quite unexpected and exceptional happens. These kinds of pressures to make stress tests more predictable indicate some of the challenges regulators face in maintaining the integrity of stress tests during peace time.

One obstacle to designing more flexible stress tests, however, is that they are very expensive. Collectively, banks have spent billions in developing the infrastructure to be able to conduct these tests. The Fed has made huge expenditures as well. Given these substantial sunk costs, theres an understandable reluctance to change the models much. Fundamentally, youre trying to see whats likely to happen to bank income statements and balance sheets, given a certain kind of scenario. The scenarios focus on unemployment, interest rate and inflation shocks, which are certainly important. But they are not the only things we need to worry about.

The next crisis may have nothing to do with any of that. It may be a pandemic, a climate shock, a cyber-attack or a natural disaster of some sort. And, because of the huge investments in the current stress-testing infrastructure, theres resistance to trying to evaluate other shocks that dont neatly fit the models we have in place. Banks also have an innate reluctance to introduce new kinds of stress scenarios also because they suspect one consequence may be a requirement to accumulate more capital.

This is a serious problem in the longer term, but perhaps the fact that we are now experiencing a severe, unanticipated shock will dampen some of the pressures for reducing the severity of the adverse scenarios. Nonetheless, its a simple fact of human behavior that the longer the stretch of good outcomes weve experienced, the less our concern about bad outcomes. Weve just experienced an abrupt end to one of the longest economic expansions in our history. This undoubtedly contributed to the record highs in equity markets we enjoyed earlier this year. Suddenly, however, we find ourselves in a very different world. We tend to forget how suddenly these shifts can happen.

Its a simple fact of human behavior that the longer the stretch of good outcomes weve experienced, the less our concern about bad outcomes.

Knowledge@Wharton: Thinking back about when you first started working on the paper, what were some of the main questions you were trying to answer? What were some of the key findings from your research?

Herring: This paper was part of a large project to produce a Handbook of Financial Stress Testing that is being published by Cambridge University Press. Our assignment was to think about the rationale for stress testing, how it has evolved, and to identify some of the key challenges looking ahead.

We began by distinguishing different objectives for conducting stress tests. The idea of conducting stress tests is not particularly novel. Weve seen them deployed in engineering and in medicine, for example. And, well before the 2008-2009 financial crisis, many financial institutions were stress testing trading positions and portfolios to anticipate how much they might lose under a variety of circumstances.

What was new about the kind of stress testing that emerged in response to the crisis was the attempt to look at all major banks, applying the same stresses to each institution at the same time. This permitted the authorities and the public to gain a perspective on the resilience of the banking system as a whole. The first stress test applied to 19 bank holding companies that represented about two-thirds of bank lending and to determine whether they were prepared to deal with a substantial worsening of economic conditions and still have sufficient capital to meet their regulatory capital requirements.

The results were not encouraging. Ten of the 19 institutions failed the stress test, a result the U.S. authorities disclosed to the public. This had the benefit of assuring the public that the stress test was rigorous and conducted with integrity. The obvious downside risk of identifying the banks that failed the test was limited by the availability of standby public funding, which assured anxious creditors that the failing banks would be recapitalized.

When the European Union tried to conduct comparable tests, it lacked the fiscal resources to recapitalize banks that failed the stress test. It seems likely that officials in Europe tried to finesse this problem by reducing the rigor of the stress tests so that nearly all banks passed. While this temporarily bolstered confidence, the widespread bank failures that occurred soon thereafter undermined confidence and raised troubling questions about the competence of the authorities. If the stress test isnt credible, theres no point in doing it.

When we dont know the future, the main source of resiliency in the banking system is its ability to absorb loss.

The success of the wartime stress test in the U.S. encouraged Congress to include stress tests in the Dodd-Frank reform package as a way of ensuring that the banking system would remain healthy and resilient. It was a huge advance over traditional regulatory tools used to monitor the safety and soundness of banks. Before the adoption of stress tests regulators relied primarily on ratios based on accounting data, which at best provided information about what had happened in the past, but they conveyed almost no useful information about the future. Yet what we need to know is whether the banking system will be resilient even if bad things happen in the future. The introduction of stress testing reframed the way the safety and soundness questions were posed. It was no longer, Is your bank currently well capitalized? It became, Is your bank sufficiently well-capitalized to deal with the kinds of stresses that might happen in the future?

Significance of Macro Stress Testing

Stress testing serves two different objectives. One is focused on evaluating the safety and soundness of individual institutions. This corresponds to the traditional microprudential objective of bank examiners but is a much more transparent approach to prudential supervision. The other objective is termed macroprudential. Its an attempt to evaluate the resilience of the banking system and ensure it can serve the real economy in a severely adverse downturn in activity.

These objectives are similar but not identical. Some measures taken to strengthen the safety and soundness of individual institutions may inadvertently undermine macroeconomic stability. For example, many prior efforts to reform capital regulation have aimed to make capital requirements more risk sensitive. To the extent these reforms succeed, banks will be obliged to increase their ability to absorb loss when the economy enters a recession. As a practical matter this often means they will need to reduce lending in order to comply with regulatory capital requirements. Although this may strengthen the safety and soundness of individual banks, the reduction in lending will reduce consumption and investment and exacerbate the recession. Very risk-sensitive capital requirements tend to amplify economic cycles.

Stress tests in the U.S. have been designed to reduce this pro-cyclicality of capital requirements to better support macroeconomic objectives. This has been accomplished by automatically increasing the severity of the severely adverse scenario as the unemployment rate falls below 10%.

Over the past decade, as the unemployment rate has fallen to record low levels, the stress tests have been getting tougher. This is the way macroprudential policy is supposed to work. Capital requirements increase in an economic expansion reducing the tendency of banks to over-lend and decrease in a downturn to reduce the tendency to under-lend.

Capital requirements increase in an economic expansion reducing the tendency of banks to over-lend and decrease in a downturn to reduce the tendency to under-lend.

Ironically, a more powerful countercyclical impact is due to the requirement that banks prefund all their expected distributions of capital over the next nine quarters. That has a strong counter-cyclical effect because understandably banks want increased payouts to their shareholders when times are good. This requirement means that they will need to accumulate more capital to fund the intended payout in addition to the amount they need to accumulate to cope with the more severe stress scenario.

Regrettably, in a recent reform, the Fed has relaxed the requirement to prefund planned distributions to shareholders. Banks need now prefund only four quarters of average dividends, which will reduce the countercyclical effectiveness of the stress testing regime.

Knowledge@Wharton: What are the implications of your findings for regulators and bankers?

Herring: The first point is that stress test should be strengthened, not relaxed. The second point is that we need to make them more versatile, and we need to think about the kinds of stresses we should worry about that dont readily lend themselves to conventional macro-modeling. And we should consider several kinds of stresses that may emerge in the financial system outside the banking sector.

Stress tests should be extended beyond banks to parts of the rapidly growing Shadow Banking sector. At present only very large banks are scrutinized carefully for their ability to withstand shocks. As more and more activity takes place outside the banking system, we ought to have a better understanding of how these entities will react in a severely adverse scenario. We dont have a mechanism for doing that. It requires significant coordination between bank and nonbank regulators, and some sort of oversight of important players that are not regulated by any national authority.

The FSOC (the Financial Stability Oversight Council created by Dodd-Frank) in principle should shoulder this responsibility, but it has no inclination to do so. FSOC has moved from an initial position of monitoring all financial institutions that received support from the Fed during the 2008-2009 crisis to a policy of more or less saying, Unless we can make a convincing case that youre a systemic threat, were not going to exercise any prudential oversight. I think thats a serious problem.

We ought to be thinking about harmonizing stress tests globally.

We also ought to be thinking about harmonizing stress tests globally, because the financial system is global and if things go badly wrong in Europe or Asia, then were going to have problems here as well. We ought to understand those interconnections and have a sense of the measures we could take to mitigate them, should it be necessary.

We should think about other kinds of stresses. To some extent, we are seeing the benefit of earlier attention to nonfinancial shocks. Almost all the major financial institutions are working remotely. The banks have adopted measures that facilitate a transition to working remotely at least in part because regulators have required them to have robust continuation of service and recovery plans. They have undergone examinations to show they could keep operating even if some shock put the headquarters out of commission. This isnt a new concern. For a long time, the largest banks have understood they need backup facilities to keep operations running if something should close down operations at headquarters.

The acid test came on 9/11. The Bank of New York, which is the largest custody bank and central to the payment system, believed it was adequately backed up. But its backup facility was on the same power grid and the same transportation network as the headquarters. This redundancy proved useless against the kind of shock that occurred because people couldnt get to work at the headquarters or the backup facility and lost power at both locations. The bank was essentially offline for two to three weeks.

Since that time, banks have been very thoughtful about how they can relocate work to facilities that have a different transportation grid, a different power grid, and access to a different pool of labor. Theyve also invested heavily in enabling employees to work from home.

We are in much better shape to deal with the operational consequences of the pandemic not because banks anticipated it, but because of what we learned from the 9/11 tragedy: to ensure operational resilience, you have to make sure that you have diversified the whole variety of inputs you need to keep the business going.

If theres a downside, it is that stress testing is extremely expensive.

Knowledge@Wharton: Is there a downside to stress testing?

Herring: If theres a downside, it is that stress testing is extremely expensive in part because of the detail with which it is overseen. There are heavy demands for documentation and rigorous requirements for ensuring the quality of data and validating models. Much of this is necessary. These costs make the system much less agile than it should be.

Fortunately, many of these expenses are in the nature of start-up costs. The continuing costs are significantly lower. And improvements in in software should reduce them over time admittedly, at the cost of substantial investments in software.

Its important to identify the additional data we need to collect to improve the relevance and effectiveness of stress tests. A lot of the problems we faced with the [2008] subprime crisis was that the authorities had no true understanding of the scope and size of the market. That, I think, remains a difficulty with respect to other innovative markets that might cause difficulties in the future.

This is the function many hoped the Office of Financial Research (an independent body within the Treasury department) would serve, but it has not received the financial support and political backing it needs to perform this function as well as it should. Its important to have some entity that is scanning the horizon and trying to figure out where the next shock may come from, identifying the information we need to be able to evaluate the potential dimensions of the shock and the likely consequences if the shock actually occurred.

Knowledge@Wharton: What are some of the questions for future research that youd like to tackle about these issues?

Herring: One problem, which is technical but important, is how to take account of second-round effects. Our current models focus mainly on the initial hit to banks income statements and balance sheets. But the actions banks take will affect what their customers and counterparties do. And, of course, these actions will, in turn set off additional actions by banks. These general equilibrium effects can be significant. They are difficult to model but important to understand because sometimes they can be as serious as the initial shock.

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Can Stress Tests Be Effective Crisis-fighting Tools for Banks? - Knowledge@Wharton

Dont Like What the Virus Models Say? Try Building Your Own – Yahoo Finance

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- These are the best of times for disease modelers. They have the ear of presidents and prime ministers, and are getting huge amounts of news media attention. Their work is surely havinggreater impact now than ever before.

These are also the worst of times for disease modelers, because they have to model the behavior not just of diseases but also of the humans that carry them. This is always tough to get right, but far tougher when presidents, prime ministers and otherpeople are listening to the disease modelers and in some cases rapidly changing their behavior in response.

This conundrum has delivered some big forecast shifts. On March 16, the Covid-19 Response Team based at Imperial College Londons MRC Centre forGlobal Infectious Disease Analysiswas predicting thatin the (unlikely) absence of any control measures or spontaneous changes in individual behaviour, the disease would cause approximately 510,000 deaths in GB and 2.2 million in the US, not accounting for the potential negative effects of health systems being overwhelmed on mortality, a frightening forecastthat was said to have had a big impact at 10 Downing Street and the White House. Nine days later, the head of the team, Imperial College epidemiologist Neil Ferguson,was telling Parliament that U.K. deaths probablywouldnt top 20,000.

This was not the embarrassing admission of error it was made out to be by armchair epidemiologists on Twitter and in the media. Ferguson was simply saying that the worst-case scenario his team had modeled and dubbed unlikely had become even more unlikely as the government shifted policy and Britons began to take the disease more seriously, and that the best-case scenario in which social distancing efforts and case-based tracing and isolation halted the spread of the disease until a vaccine arrived had become more likely. Still, his updated mortality estimate was a little puzzling even for those of us who had read the initial report, and will almost certainly turn out to be too optimistic, given that the U.K. has alreadyreported more than 12,000 coronavirus deaths, with the daily death toll still rising, and thats probably a significant undercount given that it doesnt include most deaths from the disease outside of hospitals.

The model-based forecasts of coronavirus deaths and hospital-bed needs from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington havent produced quite that much whiplash, given that the first one on March 26 already assumed a significant amount of social distancing. But they too have produced rapidly changing estimates and a lot of head-scratching from observers by shifting within weeks from predicting that U.S. hospitals would soon be overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients to estimating now that peak resource usehas passed while, with some local exceptions, coming far short of exceeding hospital or intensive-care-unit capacity.

So one can kinda sorta see where Republican U.S. Senator John Cornyn was coming from when he tweeted last week:

The Wikipedia page that Cornynlinks to says the scientific methodinvolves formulatinghypotheses,making deductions based on them, testing those deductions against experimental or measurement-basedevidence, and then refining or eliminating the hypotheses. Far from being an indictment of the disease modelers, though, this describes more or less what theyve been doing: Formulating hypotheses about the behavior of the SARS-CoV-2 virus based on what theyve seen of it so far and what they know about other viruses, making deductions about the course of the disease based on those hypotheses and some hypotheses about human behavior, and then refining those hypotheses as new evidence comes in.

No, these arent thecontrolled experiments of laboratory science, but such modeling is probably the mostscientific way to tackle an emergent phenomenon like a pandemic or, for that matter, climate change although the disease modelers have the advantage of getting useful feedback on their forecasts much more quickly than the climate modelers usually do. The results of the Covid-19 models shouldnt be taken as the final word. Far from it. But they offer useful on-the-fly guidance that it would be ridiculous to ignore just because the eventual reality often turns out not to match the forecasts.

Story continues

To use these forecastsintelligently, I wonder if it might help if more politicians, journalists and others tried their hand atdisease modeling to get a sense of how it works. This is not hard to do these days, thanks to the excellentCovid-19 Scenarios site developed by scientists at the University of Basel in Switzerland and the Karolinska Institute in Sweden. Built around a simpleSusceptible-Infected-Recovered model of the sort that epidemiologists use, it allows users to tweak parameters ranging from Covid-19sreproduction rate (R0), a measure of how many people a person with the disease can be expected to infect,to its seasonality, its fatality rate and the expected length of hospital stays, then forecasts the diseases spread and impact based on demographic data from just about every country on earth. The site also allows one to impose interventions of varying duration and effectiveness and see what kind of impact they have, although at this point it doesnt say what exactly those interventions are (theyre working on that).

The horrifying (and by now seemingly quite unrealistic) intervention-free baseline of the model for the U.S. is that 95% of the population gets the disease and that a little over 1% of the infected, 3.3 million people, die. Thatfatality rate is not the unrealistic part, with estimates from epidemiologists so far seeming to convergearound 1%or a little lower. A much higher 6.2% of confirmed coronavirus cases worldwidehave died, but theres ample to reason to believe that confirmed cases represent a fraction of infections. There have been suggestions that they represent a quite tiny fraction, meaning that the disease is already widespread, the fatality rate is lower than the seasonal flus 0.1%and itll all be over soon. But local experiments with widespread or randomized testing for the disease have not backed up this view. A recentUniversity of Bonn study of the hard-hit German town of Gangelt, for example, found that 15% of residents were either infected with the new coronavirus or had antibodies indicating that they had been. This made for a fatality rate so far of 0.37%, whichis (1) several times worse than the seasonal flu, (2) possibly skewed by undercounted deaths and (3) likely to go up with the passage of time.

Thefatality rate could go downthanks to new treatments, or up if hospitals are overwhelmed. But 1% seems both reasonable and useful as a starting point, in part because it makes so clear that the key variable in most forecasts is how many people would be infected. Aforecast of 60,000 deaths in the U.S. from the coronavirus, the current working assumption at the White House, implies at a 1% fatality rate that only about 6 million people, or 1.8% of the population, will get the disease. (Given the greatly varying severity of the disease by age, it could also imply that more younger Americansget Covid-19 and that relatively few over 65 do, but Im trying to keep things simple here.) The 2.2 million-deathforecast in the Imperial College worst-case scenario, meanwhile, implies that about two-thirds of the U.S. population would get it, at or near the oft-cited threshold for herd immunity whereso many people have recovered from a disease and become at least temporarily immune to it that it can no longer spread. TheH1N1 pandemic of 2009-2010 stopped well short of that, though, with just under 20% of the U.S. population infected and the disease in decline even before a vaccine becamewidely available. That sounds encouraging, but if Covid-19 were to infect 20% of the U.S. population, the expected death toll (againassuming the age distribution of cases is the same as that of the population) would be 660,000.

My point in sharing all this morbid information is that if you want to criticize one of the model-based coronavirus forecasts as too pessimistic, or toooptimistic, you kind of need to have your own forecast of how many people will be infected and be willing to adjust it as new information comes in. Not so easy, right?

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Justin Fox is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering business. He was the editorial director of Harvard Business Review and wrote for Time, Fortune and American Banker. He is the author of The Myth of the Rational Market.

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Dont Like What the Virus Models Say? Try Building Your Own - Yahoo Finance