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Simon–Ehrlich wager

The Simon–Ehrlich wager was a 1980 scientific wager between business professor Julian L. Simon and biologist Paul Ehrlich, betting on a mutually agreed-upon measure of resource scarcity over the decade leading up to 1990. The widely-followed contest originated in the pages of Social Science Quarterly, where Simon challenged Ehrlich to put his money where his mouth was. In response to Ehrlich's published claim that "If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000" Simon offered to take that bet, or, more realistically, "to stake US$10,000 ... on my belief that the cost of non-government-controlled raw materials (including grain and oil) will not rise in the long run."

Simon challenged Ehrlich to choose any raw material he wanted and a date more than a year away, and he would wager on the inflation-adjusted prices decreasing as opposed to increasing. Ehrlich chose copper, chromium, nickel, tin, and tungsten. The bet was formalized on September 29, 1980, with September 29, 1990, as the payoff date. Ehrlich lost the bet, as all five commodities that were bet on declined in price from 1980 through 1990, the wager period.[1]

Background edit

In 1968, Ehrlich published The Population Bomb, which argued that mankind was facing a demographic catastrophe with the rate of population growth quickly outstripping growth in the supply of food and resources. Simon was highly skeptical of such claims, so proposed a wager, telling Ehrlich to select any raw material he wanted and select "any date more than a year away," and Simon would bet that the commodity's price on that date would be lower than what it was at the time of the wager.

Ehrlich and his colleagues picked five metals that they thought would undergo big price increases: chromium, copper, nickel, tin, and tungsten. Then, on paper, they bought $200 worth of each, for a total bet of $1,000, using the prices on September 29, 1980, as an index. They designated September 29, 1990, 10 years hence, as the payoff date. If the inflation-adjusted prices of the various metals rose in the interim, Simon would pay Ehrlich the combined difference. If the prices fell, Ehrlich et al. would pay Simon.

Between 1980 and 1990, the world's population grew by more than 800 million, the largest increase in one decade in all of history. But by September 1990, the price of each of Ehrlich's selected metals had fallen. Chromium, which had sold for $3.90 a pound in 1980, was down to $3.70 in 1990. Tin, which was $8.72 a pound in 1980, was down to $3.88 a decade later.[2]

As a result, in October 1990, Paul Ehrlich mailed Julian Simon a check for $576.07 to settle the wager in Simon's favor.

Analysis edit

Julian Simon won because the price of three of the five metals went down in nominal terms and all five of the metals fell in price in inflation-adjusted terms, with both tin and tungsten falling by more than half.[3][4] In his book Betrayal of Science and Reason, Ehrlich wrote that Simon "[asserted] that humanity would never run out of anything". Ehrlich added that he and fellow scientists viewed renewable resources as more important indicators of the state of planet Earth, but that he decided to go along with the bet anyway.[3] Afterward, Simon offered to raise the wager to $20,000 and to use any resources at any time that Ehrlich preferred. Ehrlich countered with a challenge to bet that temperatures would increase in the future.[3] The two were unable to reach an agreement on the terms of a second wager before Simon died.

Ehrlich could have won if the bet had been for a different ten-year period.[5][6][7] Ehrlich wrote that the five metals in question had increased in price between the years 1950 and 1975.[3] Asset manager Jeremy Grantham wrote that if the Simon–Ehrlich wager had been for a longer period (from 1980 to 2011), then Simon would have lost on four of the five metals. He also noted that if the wager had been expanded to "all of the most important commodities," instead of just five metals, over that longer period of 1980 to 2011, then Simon would have lost "by a lot."[7]

However, economist Mark J. Perry noted that for an even longer period of time, from 1934 to 2013, the inflation-adjusted price of the Dow Jones-AIG Commodities Index showed "an overall significant downward trend" and concluded that Simon was "more right than lucky".[8]

The proposed second wager edit

Understanding that Simon wanted to bet again, Ehrlich and climatologist Stephen Schneider counter-offered, challenging Simon to bet on 15 current trends, betting $1000 that each will get worse (as in the previous wager) over a ten-year future period.[3]

The bets were:

  • The three years 2002–2004 will on average be warmer than 1992–1994.
  • There will be more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in 2004 than in 1994.
  • There will be more nitrous oxide in the atmosphere in 2004 than 1994.
  • The concentration of ozone in the lower atmosphere (the troposphere) will be greater than in 1994.
  • Emissions of the air pollutant sulfur dioxide in Asia will be significantly greater in 2004 than in 1994.
  • There will be less fertile cropland per person in 2004 than in 1994.
  • There will be less agricultural soil per person in 2004 than 1994.
  • There will be on average less rice and wheat grown per person in 2002–2004 than in 1992–1994.
  • In developing nations there will be less firewood available per person in 2004 than in 1994.
  • The remaining area of virgin tropical moist forests will be significantly smaller in 2004 than in 1994.
  • The oceanic fishery harvest per person will continue its downward trend and thus in 2004 will be smaller than in 1994.
  • There will be fewer plant and animal species still extant in 2004 than in 1994.
  • More people will die of AIDS in 2004 than in 1994.
  • Between 1994 and 2004, sperm cell counts of human males will continue to decline and reproductive disorders will continue to increase.
  • The gap in wealth between the richest 10% of humanity and the poorest 10% will be greater in 2004 than in 1994.

Simon declined Ehrlich and Schneider's offer to bet, and used the following analogy to explain why he did so:[9]

Let me characterize their offer as follows. I predict, and this is for real, that the average performances in the next Olympics will be better than those in the last Olympics. On average, the performances have gotten better, Olympics to Olympics, for a variety of reasons. What Ehrlich and others says [sic] is that they don't want to bet on athletic performances, they want to bet on the conditions of the track, or the weather, or the officials, or any other such indirect measure.

In his 1981 book The Ultimate Resource, Simon noted that not all decreases in resources or increases in unwanted effects correspond to overall decreases in human wellbeing.[10] Hence there can be an "optimal level of pollution" which accepts some increases in certain kinds of pollution in a way that increases overall wellbeing, while acknowledging that any increase in pollution is nevertheless a cost which must be considered in any such calculation (p. 143). Some of the trends listed above are actually predicted by Simon's theory of resource development, and do not in themselves even count as costs (as pollution does). E.g., he pointed out that due to increased efficiency, the amount of cropland required and actually used to grow food for each person has decreased over time and is likely to continue to do so (p. 5). The same might potentially be true of decreased reliance on firewood in developing countries, and per capita use of specific food sources like rice, wheat, and fish, if economic development makes a diverse range of alternative foods available. Some have also proven false, e.g., the amount of ozone in the lower atmosphere has decreased from 1994 to 2004.[11]

If Simon had taken the bet, he would have lost on 11 out of 15 trends.[12]

Other wagers edit

In 1996, Simon bet $1000 with David South, professor of the Auburn University School of Forestry, that the inflation-adjusted price of timber would decrease in the following five years. Simon paid out early on the bet in 1997 (before his death in 1998) based on his expectation that prices would remain above 1996 levels (which they did).[13]

In 1999, when The Economist headlined an article entitled, "$5 a barrel oil soon?" and with oil trading in the $12/barrel range, David South offered $1000 to any economist who would bet with him that the price of oil would be greater than $12/barrel in 2010. No economist took him up on the offer. However, in October 2000, Zagros Madjd-Sadjadi, an economist with The University of the West Indies, bet $1000 with David South that the inflation-adjusted price of oil would decrease to an inflation-adjusted price of $25 by 2010 (down from what was then $30/barrel). Madjd-Sadjadi paid South an inflation-adjusted $1,242 in January 2010. The price of oil at the time was $81/barrel.[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gorelick, Steven M. (2009). Oil Panic and the Global Crisis: Predictions and Myths. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 104. ISBN 978-1405195485.
  2. ^ Regis, Ed (February 1997). . Wired.com (Issue 5.02). Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ehrlich, Paul; Ehrlich, Anne (1998). Betrayal of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future. pp. 100–104. ISBN 978-1610912501.
  4. ^ [1] July 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Sabin, Paul (September 7, 2013). "Betting on the Apocalypse". The New York Times. from the original on 2013-09-11. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  6. ^ Worstall, Tim (2013-01-13). "But Why Did Julian Simon Win The Paul Ehrlich Bet?". Forbes. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  7. ^ a b Grantham, Jeremy (July 2011), "Resource Limitations 2: Separating the Dangerous from the Merely Serious" (PDF), GMO Quarterly Letter, GMO LLC, p. 12, retrieved 2013-06-05
  8. ^ Perry, Mark J. (January 12, 2013). "Julian Simon: Still more right than lucky in 2013". American Enterprise Institute. Retrieved April 28, 2017.
  9. ^ "The Simon-Ehrlich bet - Jason Collins blog".
  10. ^ Simon, Julian (August 1981). The Ultimate Resource (Hardcover ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 069109389X.
  11. ^ url=https://www.epa.gov/air-trends/ozone-trends
  12. ^ Desrochers, Pierre; Geloso, Vincent; Szurmak, Joanna (March 2021). "Care to Wager Again? An Appraisal of Paul Ehrlich's Counterbet Offer to Julian Simon, Part 2: Critical Analysis". Social Science Quarterly. 102 (2): 808–829. doi:10.1111/ssqu.12920.
  13. ^ . Forestry.auburn.edu. 1998-02-08. Archived from the original on 2008-05-10. Retrieved 2009-09-07.
  14. ^ . Forestry.auburn.edu. 2010-01-31. Archived from the original on 2012-06-08. Retrieved 2012-01-29.

Further reading edit

  • Sabin, Paul (2013), The Bet (Yale University Press).
  • Desrochers, Pierre and Vincent Geloso, "Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat: A Historical/Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin's The Bet: Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, and Our Gamble over Earth's Future (Yale University Press, 2013), Part 2: The Wager: Protagonists and Lessons." New Perspectives on Political Economy, vol. 12, no. 1-2 (2016), pp. 42–64.
  • Desrochers, Pierre and Vincent Geloso, "Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat: A Historical/Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin's The Bet: Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, and Our Gamble over Earth's Future (Yale University Press, 2013). Part 1: The Missing History of Thought: Depletionism vs Resourceship." New Perspectives on Political Economy, vol. 12, no. 1-2 (2016), pp. 5–41.

External links edit

  • Paul Ehrlich's webpage on the two Simon bets

simon, ehrlich, wager, 1980, scientific, wager, between, business, professor, julian, simon, biologist, paul, ehrlich, betting, mutually, agreed, upon, measure, resource, scarcity, over, decade, leading, 1990, widely, followed, contest, originated, pages, soci. The Simon Ehrlich wager was a 1980 scientific wager between business professor Julian L Simon and biologist Paul Ehrlich betting on a mutually agreed upon measure of resource scarcity over the decade leading up to 1990 The widely followed contest originated in the pages of Social Science Quarterly where Simon challenged Ehrlich to put his money where his mouth was In response to Ehrlich s published claim that If I were a gambler I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000 Simon offered to take that bet or more realistically to stake US 10 000 on my belief that the cost of non government controlled raw materials including grain and oil will not rise in the long run Simon challenged Ehrlich to choose any raw material he wanted and a date more than a year away and he would wager on the inflation adjusted prices decreasing as opposed to increasing Ehrlich chose copper chromium nickel tin and tungsten The bet was formalized on September 29 1980 with September 29 1990 as the payoff date Ehrlich lost the bet as all five commodities that were bet on declined in price from 1980 through 1990 the wager period 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Analysis 3 The proposed second wager 4 Other wagers 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editIn 1968 Ehrlich published The Population Bomb which argued that mankind was facing a demographic catastrophe with the rate of population growth quickly outstripping growth in the supply of food and resources Simon was highly skeptical of such claims so proposed a wager telling Ehrlich to select any raw material he wanted and select any date more than a year away and Simon would bet that the commodity s price on that date would be lower than what it was at the time of the wager Ehrlich and his colleagues picked five metals that they thought would undergo big price increases chromium copper nickel tin and tungsten Then on paper they bought 200 worth of each for a total bet of 1 000 using the prices on September 29 1980 as an index They designated September 29 1990 10 years hence as the payoff date If the inflation adjusted prices of the various metals rose in the interim Simon would pay Ehrlich the combined difference If the prices fell Ehrlich et al would pay Simon Between 1980 and 1990 the world s population grew by more than 800 million the largest increase in one decade in all of history But by September 1990 the price of each of Ehrlich s selected metals had fallen Chromium which had sold for 3 90 a pound in 1980 was down to 3 70 in 1990 Tin which was 8 72 a pound in 1980 was down to 3 88 a decade later 2 As a result in October 1990 Paul Ehrlich mailed Julian Simon a check for 576 07 to settle the wager in Simon s favor Analysis editJulian Simon won because the price of three of the five metals went down in nominal terms and all five of the metals fell in price in inflation adjusted terms with both tin and tungsten falling by more than half 3 4 In his book Betrayal of Science and Reason Ehrlich wrote that Simon asserted that humanity would never run out of anything Ehrlich added that he and fellow scientists viewed renewable resources as more important indicators of the state of planet Earth but that he decided to go along with the bet anyway 3 Afterward Simon offered to raise the wager to 20 000 and to use any resources at any time that Ehrlich preferred Ehrlich countered with a challenge to bet that temperatures would increase in the future 3 The two were unable to reach an agreement on the terms of a second wager before Simon died Ehrlich could have won if the bet had been for a different ten year period 5 6 7 Ehrlich wrote that the five metals in question had increased in price between the years 1950 and 1975 3 Asset manager Jeremy Grantham wrote that if the Simon Ehrlich wager had been for a longer period from 1980 to 2011 then Simon would have lost on four of the five metals He also noted that if the wager had been expanded to all of the most important commodities instead of just five metals over that longer period of 1980 to 2011 then Simon would have lost by a lot 7 However economist Mark J Perry noted that for an even longer period of time from 1934 to 2013 the inflation adjusted price of the Dow Jones AIG Commodities Index showed an overall significant downward trend and concluded that Simon was more right than lucky 8 The proposed second wager editUnderstanding that Simon wanted to bet again Ehrlich and climatologist Stephen Schneider counter offered challenging Simon to bet on 15 current trends betting 1000 that each will get worse as in the previous wager over a ten year future period 3 The bets were The three years 2002 2004 will on average be warmer than 1992 1994 There will be more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere in 2004 than in 1994 There will be more nitrous oxide in the atmosphere in 2004 than 1994 The concentration of ozone in the lower atmosphere the troposphere will be greater than in 1994 Emissions of the air pollutant sulfur dioxide in Asia will be significantly greater in 2004 than in 1994 There will be less fertile cropland per person in 2004 than in 1994 There will be less agricultural soil per person in 2004 than 1994 There will be on average less rice and wheat grown per person in 2002 2004 than in 1992 1994 In developing nations there will be less firewood available per person in 2004 than in 1994 The remaining area of virgin tropical moist forests will be significantly smaller in 2004 than in 1994 The oceanic fishery harvest per person will continue its downward trend and thus in 2004 will be smaller than in 1994 There will be fewer plant and animal species still extant in 2004 than in 1994 More people will die of AIDS in 2004 than in 1994 Between 1994 and 2004 sperm cell counts of human males will continue to decline and reproductive disorders will continue to increase The gap in wealth between the richest 10 of humanity and the poorest 10 will be greater in 2004 than in 1994 Simon declined Ehrlich and Schneider s offer to bet and used the following analogy to explain why he did so 9 Let me characterize their offer as follows I predict and this is for real that the average performances in the next Olympics will be better than those in the last Olympics On average the performances have gotten better Olympics to Olympics for a variety of reasons What Ehrlich and others says sic is that they don t want to bet on athletic performances they want to bet on the conditions of the track or the weather or the officials or any other such indirect measure In his 1981 book The Ultimate Resource Simon noted that not all decreases in resources or increases in unwanted effects correspond to overall decreases in human wellbeing 10 Hence there can be an optimal level of pollution which accepts some increases in certain kinds of pollution in a way that increases overall wellbeing while acknowledging that any increase in pollution is nevertheless a cost which must be considered in any such calculation p 143 Some of the trends listed above are actually predicted by Simon s theory of resource development and do not in themselves even count as costs as pollution does E g he pointed out that due to increased efficiency the amount of cropland required and actually used to grow food for each person has decreased over time and is likely to continue to do so p 5 The same might potentially be true of decreased reliance on firewood in developing countries and per capita use of specific food sources like rice wheat and fish if economic development makes a diverse range of alternative foods available Some have also proven false e g the amount of ozone in the lower atmosphere has decreased from 1994 to 2004 11 If Simon had taken the bet he would have lost on 11 out of 15 trends 12 Other wagers editIn 1996 Simon bet 1000 with David South professor of the Auburn University School of Forestry that the inflation adjusted price of timber would decrease in the following five years Simon paid out early on the bet in 1997 before his death in 1998 based on his expectation that prices would remain above 1996 levels which they did 13 In 1999 when The Economist headlined an article entitled 5 a barrel oil soon and with oil trading in the 12 barrel range David South offered 1000 to any economist who would bet with him that the price of oil would be greater than 12 barrel in 2010 No economist took him up on the offer However in October 2000 Zagros Madjd Sadjadi an economist with The University of the West Indies bet 1000 with David South that the inflation adjusted price of oil would decrease to an inflation adjusted price of 25 by 2010 down from what was then 30 barrel Madjd Sadjadi paid South an inflation adjusted 1 242 in January 2010 The price of oil at the time was 81 barrel 14 See also editLong Bet Project Malthusian catastrophe Oil price increases since 2003 Peak oil Richard Rainwater Simmons Tierney bet Scientific wagerReferences edit Gorelick Steven M 2009 Oil Panic and the Global Crisis Predictions and Myths Wiley Blackwell p 104 ISBN 978 1405195485 Regis Ed February 1997 The Doomslayer Wired com Issue 5 02 Archived from the original on 2008 05 16 Retrieved 2008 05 18 a b c d e Ehrlich Paul Ehrlich Anne 1998 Betrayal of Science and Reason How Anti Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future pp 100 104 ISBN 978 1610912501 1 Archived July 3 2007 at the Wayback Machine Sabin Paul September 7 2013 Betting on the Apocalypse The New York Times Archived from the original on 2013 09 11 Retrieved 24 October 2013 Worstall Tim 2013 01 13 But Why Did Julian Simon Win The Paul Ehrlich Bet Forbes Retrieved 24 October 2013 a b Grantham Jeremy July 2011 Resource Limitations 2 Separating the Dangerous from the Merely Serious PDF GMO Quarterly Letter GMO LLC p 12 retrieved 2013 06 05 Perry Mark J January 12 2013 Julian Simon Still more right than lucky in 2013 American Enterprise Institute Retrieved April 28 2017 The Simon Ehrlich bet Jason Collins blog Simon Julian August 1981 The Ultimate Resource Hardcover ed Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 069109389X url https www epa gov air trends ozone trends Desrochers Pierre Geloso Vincent Szurmak Joanna March 2021 Care to Wager Again An Appraisal of Paul Ehrlich s Counterbet Offer to Julian Simon Part 2 Critical Analysis Social Science Quarterly 102 2 808 829 doi 10 1111 ssqu 12920 The Simon South Bet On Pine Sawtimber Forestry auburn edu 1998 02 08 Archived from the original on 2008 05 10 Retrieved 2009 09 07 The Madjd Sadjadi South Bet On Oil Forestry auburn edu 2010 01 31 Archived from the original on 2012 06 08 Retrieved 2012 01 29 Further reading editSabin Paul 2013 The Bet Yale University Press Desrochers Pierre and Vincent Geloso Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat A Historical Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin s The Bet Paul Ehrlich Julian Simon and Our Gamble over Earth s Future Yale University Press 2013 Part 2 The Wager Protagonists and Lessons New Perspectives on Political Economy vol 12 no 1 2 2016 pp 42 64 Desrochers Pierre and Vincent Geloso Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat A Historical Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin s The Bet Paul Ehrlich Julian Simon and Our Gamble over Earth s Future Yale University Press 2013 Part 1 The Missing History of Thought Depletionism vs Resourceship New Perspectives on Political Economy vol 12 no 1 2 2016 pp 5 41 External links editPaul Ehrlich s webpage on the two Simon bets Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Simon Ehrlich wager amp oldid 1222644856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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