Once upon a time there was a village in which there lived many married
couples. There were certain qualities about this village, though, that
made this village unique:
Whenever a man had an affair with
another man’s wife, every woman in the village got to know about the
affair, except his own wife. This happened because the woman who he had
slept with talked about their affair with all the other women in the
village, except his wife. Moreover, no one ever told his wife about the
affair.
The strict laws of the village required that if a woman
could prove that her own husband had been unfaithful towards her, then
she must kill him that very day before midnight. Also, every woman was
law-abiding, intelligent, and aware of the intelligence of other women
living in that village. You and I know that exactly twenty of the men
had been unfaithful to their wives. However, as no woman could prove
the guilt of her husband, the village life proceeded smoothly.
Then,
one morning, a wise old man with a long, white beard came to the
village. His magical powers, and honesty was acknowledged by all and his
word was taken as the gospel truth.
The wise old man asked all villagers to gather together in the village compound and then announced:
“At least one of the men in this village has been unfaithful to his wife.”
Questions:
1. What happened next?
2. And what this got to do with stock market crashes?
Answer 1:
After
the wise old man has spoken, there shall be 19 peaceful days followed
by a massive slaughter before the midnight of the 20th day when twenty
women will kill their husbands.
Proof:
We will use
backward thinking for the proof. Indeed, the very purpose of this post
is to demonstrate the utility of the backward thinking style.
Let’s start by assuming that there is only one unfaithful man in the village - Mr. A. Later, we shall drop this assumption.
Every
woman in the village except Mrs. A knows that he is unfaithful.
However, since no one has told her anything, and she remains blissfully
ignorant. But only until the old man speaks the words, “At least one of
the men in this village has been unfaithful to his wife.”
The old
man’s words are news only for Mrs. A, and mean nothing to the other
women. And because she is intelligent, she correctly reasons that if any
man other than her own husband was unfaithful, she would have known
about it. And since she has no such knowledge in her possession, it must
mean that it’s her own husband who is unfaithful. And so, before the
midnight of the day the old man spoke, she must execute her husband.
Now, let’s assume that there were exactly two unfaithful men in the village - Mr. A and Mr. B.
The
moment the old man speaks the words, “At least one of the men in this
village has been unfaithful to his wife,” the village’s women population
gets divided as follows: Every woman other than Mrs. A and Mrs. B knows the whole truth;
Mrs.
A knows about philanderer Mr. B, but, as of now, knows nothing about
her own husband’s unfaithfulness, so she assumes that there is only one
unfaithful man - Mr. B - who will be executed by Mrs. B that night; and
Mrs.
B knows about philanderer Mr. A, but, as of now, knows nothing about
her own husband’s unfaithfulness, so she assumes that there is only one
unfaithful man - Mr. A - who will be executed by Mrs. A that night. As
the midnight of day one approaches, Mrs. A is expecting Mrs. B to
execute her husband, and vice versa. But, and this is key, none of them
do what the other one is expecting them to do!
The clock is
ticking away and passes midnight and day 2 starts. What happens now is
sudden realization on the part of both Mrs. A and Mrs. B, that there
must be more than one man who is unfaithful. And, since none of them had
prior knowledge about this other unfaithful man, then it must be their
own respective husbands who were unfaithful!
In other words, the inaction of one represents new information for the other.
Therefore,
using the principles of inductive logic requiring backward thinking,
both Mrs. A and Mrs. B will execute their respective husbands before the
midnight of day 2.
Now, let’s assume that there are exactly
three unfaithful men in the village- Mr. A, Mr. B., and Mr. C. The same
procedure can be used to show that in such a scenario, the wives of
these three philandering men will kill them before the midnight of day
3.
Using the same process, it can be shown that if exactly twenty
husbands are unfaithful, their wives would finally be able to prove it
on the 20th day, which will also be the day of the bloodbath.
Answer 2: Connection with Stock Market Crashes
If
you replace the announcement of the old man with that provided, by say,
SEBI, the nervousness of the wives with the nervousness of the
investors, the wives’ contentment as long as their own husbands weren’t
cheating on them with the investors’ contentment so long as their own
companies were not indulging in fraud, the execution of twenty husbands
with massive dumping of stocks, and the time lag between the old man’s
announcement and the killings with the time lag between the old man’s
announcement and the market crash, the connection between the story and
market crashes becomes obvious.
Information Asymmetry
One of the most interesting aspects about the story is the role of information asymmetry.
You
and I knew that there were exactly twenty unfaithful men in the
village. We had complete information about the number of unfaithful men
in that village but not their identity.
On the other hand, every
woman in the village knew the identity of at least nineteen unfaithful
men. For example, if you were Mrs. A, you would have known about
nineteen unfaithful men, but not about your own husband’s
unfaithfulness. And, if you were one of the women whose husband was
faithful, then you’d know the identity of twenty unfaithful men.
But
the old man did not say that there were twenty unfaithful men in the
village. All he said was that there was at least one unfaithful man in
the village. So, his statement, did not add anything to the knowledge of
any individual woman because each of them knew of at least nineteen
unfaithful men!
And yet, his statement caused the bloodbath after twenty days!
The
lesson is simple: It’s not necessary for any new information to cause
havoc in the stock market. Sudden realizations about the stupidity of
gross overvaluations and dubious accounting practices followed by some
companies in bubble markets can and do occur simultaneously in the minds
of the crowd. And that sudden realization can cause markets to crash!
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