# Leverage Points Donella Meadows, 1997/1999. 12 places to intervene in a system, in increasing order of effectiveness. Most policy interventions happen at the bottom of the list (parameters); the actually transformative ones happen at the top (paradigms) — and are the most resisted. ## When to use - Civic / org / institutional change - Diagnosing why interventions fail (almost always at lower level than problem) - Strategic critique of policy proposals - "Where in this system should I push?" ## Don't use when - Single-creator creative work (framework needs multi-actor systems with feedback loops) - Short-term tactical decisions - Team of <5 (use simpler tools) ## The 12 levels (least → most powerful) **12. Constants, parameters, numbers** — subsidies, taxes, standards, prices. Most policy fights happen here. Rarely change behavior. **11. Sizes of buffers** — stabilizing stocks relative to flows. Big buffer = stable but inflexible. **10. Structure of stocks and flows** — transport networks, supply chains, age structures. Hard to change once built; high leverage in original design. **9. Lengths of delays** — relative to rate of system change. Delays usually can't be shortened; the leverage is in *slowing the system to match the delays*. **8. Strength of negative feedback loops** — relative to disturbance corrected against. Strengthen with: preventive medicine, pollution taxes, FOIA, whistleblower protection. **7. Gain around positive feedback loops** — *Reducing* gain on a positive loop is more leveraged than strengthening the negative loop counter-acting it. Progressive tax weakens "success-to-the-successful" loops directly. **6. Information flows** — who has access to what. Adding a feedback loop where one didn't exist. (Toxic Release Inventory: pure disclosure dropped emissions 40%.) **5. Rules** — incentives, punishments, constraints. Constitutions, laws, terms of service. *"If you want to understand the deepest malfunctions of systems, pay attention to the rules, and to who has power over them."* **4. Power to add, change, evolve, or self-organize** — biological evolution, technical advance, social revolution. Suppressing variety to maintain control is a system crime. **3. Goals of the system** — what is it *for*? Shareholder return vs employee welfare = different systems with same physical structure. *"Everything further down the list will be twisted to conform to that goal."* **2. Mindset / paradigm** — unstated assumptions that generate the goals. "Growth is good", "markets are efficient". Hard to change in cultures (generations); change in individuals all at once (a click). **1. Power to transcend paradigms** — hold any paradigm lightly. The capacity to *switch*. Personal practice, not policy. ## Procedure 1. **Map the system.** Stocks, flows, feedback loops, rules, goals, paradigm. 2. **Locate the problem at a level.** A symptom at level 12 (rising costs) often originates at level 5 (rules permit cost externalization), level 3 (short-term return goal), or level 2 (paradigm assumes infinite resource). 3. **List candidate interventions at 3+ levels.** Be honest about which you can act on. 4. **Order by leverage and feasibility.** The most leveraged intervention is rarely the most feasible. 5. **Note direction risk.** A high-leverage intervention pushed wrong is worse than a low-leverage one pushed right. *"Time after time I've ... discovered that there's already a lot of attention to that point. Everyone is trying very hard to push it IN THE WRONG DIRECTION."* ## Worked example **System**: 50-person tech company with chronic burnout despite generous benefits. - Level 12 (PTO): fine, no help. - Level 8 (negative feedback): weak — burnout invisible until people quit. - Level 6 (info flows): obscured — managers don't see workload signals. - Level 5 (rules): implicitly reward overwork. - Level 3 (goal): "ship features fast." - Level 2 (paradigm): "engineering output is linearly proportional to hours worked." Recommendation: combine level-8 (mandatory monthly burnout-explicit 1:1s — feasible) + level-3 (explicit goal change to "build sustainable engineering org" — slow but high-leverage). Skip level 12. ## Anti-slop notes - Don't list all 12 levels every time. Identify the relevant 2–3 for this problem. - Don't claim every problem has a paradigm-level solution. Most have rule-level or parameter-level. - Don't recommend "change the paradigm" as if it were actionable. It usually isn't, on its own. Source: Meadows, *Places to Intervene in a System* (1997/1999); *Thinking in Systems* (Chelsea Green, 2008). donellameadows.org.