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The Economist Author Archetype

The Economists (the archetype, not just the profession) understand that most “irrational” behavior is perfectly rational once you see the incentives.

What The Economist Does

Core Question: What incentives are driving this?

The Economist archetype is built to resolve economic complexity by mapping the incentives that drive market behavior, revealing why people do what they do, and designing systems that align self-interest with collective good.

Where markets seem irrational—where people act against their apparent interests, where good strategies fail, where cooperation breaks down—the Economist asks: “What incentives did we miss?”

Economists (the archetype, not just the profession) understand that most “irrational” behavior is perfectly rational once you see the incentives. They design systems that align self-interest with collective good. They predict behavior by assuming that people respond to incentives—because they always do.

The Economist does not assume people are rational. The Economist maps the incentives that make their behavior predictable.

GreenDeveX classifies authors who embody the Economist to help brands understand the logic beneath the surface.

The outcome? Behavior becomes predictable. Strategy aligns with incentives. Your brand works with human nature, not against it.


7 Ideal Characteristics of The Economist

What Makes This Author Archetype Capable of Resolving Moral Uncertainty


Real-Life Example:
Michael Lewis

Michael Lewis, author of Liar's Poker, The Big Short, Moneyball, and The Undoing Project, is a definitive example of The Economist archetype in action.

Michael Lewis, author of Liar’s Poker, The Big Short, Moneyball, and The Undoing Project, is a definitive example of The Economist archetype in action.

Why does he embody The Economist:

How Lewis resolves economic complexity: 

When markets seem irrational or when smart people make obviously stupid decisions, Lewis finds the incentive that explains the behavior.
A trader sells bad bonds because his bonus depends on volume.
A banker approves bad loans because her compensation rewards origination, not quality.

The behavior is not irrational once you see the incentive.

The GreenDeveX Insight: 

Brands that partner with Economists like Michael Lewis do not need to be surprised by market behavior.

The Economist maps the incentives that make behavior predictable. Surprise becomes anticipation.


Other Notable Economists for Inspiration


The Economic Complexity Friction

What the friction looks like:

Markets cannot move when incentives are misaligned. People act in ways that seem irrational—until you see the incentives. Strategies fail because they assumed people would act one way, but incentives pulled them another.

The cost of this friction:

How The Economist resolves it:

The Economist does not assume people are rational. The Economist maps the incentives that make their behavior predictable.

Through incentive analysis, game theory, and system design, the Economist aligns self-interest with collective good.

The mechanism: Predictability transfer. The Economist maps the incentives that drive behavior. That map becomes the basis for a strategy that works with human nature, not against it.


Questions The Economist Helps Markets Answer


Publishing Formats for The Economist


Ideal Industries / Sectors

Ideal Brand Partnerships

5 Frequently Asked Questions About The Economist

FAQ 01: Is The Economist just for financial markets?

No. Incentives operate everywhere (in families, in teams, in communities, in ecosystems). The Economist archetype applies to any system where behavior is shaped by rewards and punishments. That is every system.

FAQ 02: How does The Economist differ from The Operator?

The Operator builds systems for reliability. The Economist designs incentives for behavior. One is about process; one is about motivation. They are natural partners. Great operations align incentives; great incentives enable operations.

FAQ 03: Does The Economist believe people are selfish?

No. The Economist believes people respond to incentives—but incentives can reward generosity, cooperation, and public good as easily as selfishness.

The question is not “are people good or evil?” The question is “what are we rewarding?”

FAQ 04: Can The Economist also be a Cultural Decoder?

Yes. Culture is an incentive system—status, belonging, shame, honor. The Cultural Decoder maps unwritten rules.
The Economist maps reward structures.

Together, they explain almost all human behavior.

FAQ 05: What is the most common incentive mistake brands make?

Rewarding the wrong behavior.

  • Sales teams are paid for signing new customers—so they ignore existing ones.
  • Customer support is measured on call time—so they rush off the phone.

The behavior you reward is the behavior you get. Be careful what you incentivize.


Example in Action

Scenario: 

A B2B software company has a sales team that closes deals—but customers churn at 40% annually.

The company is growing but leaking customers. Sales reps are hitting quotas.

No one understands why churn is so high.

The Economist intervention: 

The Economist maps the incentive structure. Sales reps are paid 100% on new business.

They have no incentive to ensure customers are successful after the sale.

Customer success managers are paid on retention—but they are brought in after the sale, too late to set expectations.

The incentives are misaligned.

The Economist recommends: 

Change the compensation plan. Sales reps are paid partially on retention. Customer success is involved during the sales process.

Incentives now align: everyone is rewarded when customers succeed.

Outcome: 

Churn drops from 40% to 15% within 12 months. The company stops leaking customers. Growth accelerates.

The Economist did not change the people; they changed the incentives.


Does your brand need The Economist?

If economic complexity is making behavior unpredictable, The Economist archetype may be your match.

GreenDeveX classifies and connects Economists to brands that need logic, predictability, and incentive alignment.

Your ecosystem transition starts here.

→ Join the Early Access Waitlist

→ Find Your Economist Match

Now that you understand The Economist, explore The Philosopher, the author archetype that provides principles and moral grounding for decisions.