Bubble Headed Thinking

Published: Nov. 20, 2018, 9 a.m.

b'We humans have an incredible inability to see bubbles when we\\u2019re in the middle of one. They seem to make rational sense in a strange sort of way. At least some highly educated people can speak at length about why the value should be so high. They can explain the science behind it. \\n\\nIt\\u2019s hard to believe that people thought tulip bulbs would be the path to riches. But in 1636, valuations went into the stratosphere, only to come crashing down in 1637. At the peak, some tulips were worth 10 times the annual wage of a single worker. \\n\\nAfter a long period of real estate prices increasing, of rents increasing, and of prices increasing, it\\u2019s easy to become conditioned into thinking that prices only go up. Rents only go up. Salaries only go up. \\n\\nBut they don\\u2019t. We\\u2019ve seen periods of time when rents went down. We\\u2019ve seen prices fall. We\\u2019ve seen incomes fall. In each of those cases, there was an explanation as to why that happened. \\n\\nIt\\u2019s too easy to look back at history and explain away what happened. That will never happen again.'