Resumo:
: Humanity has been fascinated by the pursuit of fortune since time immemorial, and
many successful outcomes benefit from strokes of luck. But success is subject to complexity,
uncertainty, and change – and at times becoming increasingly unequally distributed. This leads
to tension and confusion over to what extent people actually get what they deserve (i.e.,
fairness/meritocracy). Moreover, in many fields, humans are over-confident and pervasively
confuse luck for skill (I win, it’s skill; I lose, it’s bad luck). In some fields, there is too much risktaking; in others, not enough. Where success derives in large part from luck – and especially
where bailouts skew the incentives (heads, I win; tails, you lose) – it follows that luck is
rewarded too much. This incentivizes a culture of gambling, while downplaying the importance
of productive effort. And, short term success is often rewarded, irrespective, and potentially at
the detriment, of the long-term system fitness. However, much success is truly meritocratic,
and the problem is to discern and reward based on merit. We call this the fair reward problem.
To address this, we propose three different measures to assess merit: (i) raw outcome; (ii) riskadjusted outcome, and (iii) prospective. We emphasize the need, in many cases, for the
deductive prospective approach, which considers the potential of a system to adapt and mutate
in novel futures. This is formalized within an evolutionary system, comprised of five processes,
inter alia handling the exploration-exploitation trade-off. Several human endeavors – including
finance, politics, and science – are analyzed through these lenses, and concrete solutions are
proposed to support a prosperous and meritocratic society
Fonte: The fair reward problem: the illusion of success and how to solve it Didier Sornette, Spencer Wheatley and Peter Cauwels ETH Zurich
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