Doing more of what failed spectacularly will
not save the day a second time, as the scale required to create yet
more phantom collateral and more asset bubbles will collapse the
system.
The financial storm clouds are gathering,
ominously darkening the horizon. Though the financial media
and the organs of state propaganda continue forecasting blue skies of
recovery and rising corporate profits, the factual evidence belies
this rosy forecast: internal measures of financial and economic
activity are weakening across the globe as the state-central bank
solutions to all ills–massive increases in credit creation,
leverage and deficit spending–have failed to address any of the
structural causes of the 2008 Global Financial Meltdown.
This failure to address the causes of 2008
Global Financial Meltdown is disastrous in and of itself–but
the status quo has magnified the coming disaster by scaling up the
very causes of the 2008 Global Financial Meltdown: excessive
credit expansion, misallocation of capital on a grand scale, an
opaque shadow banking system constructed of excessive leverage and a
dependence on phantom collateral, i.e. risks and assets that are
systemically mispriced to skim stupendous profits for financiers,
bankers and their political enablers.
This is what I have called doing
more of what has failed spectacularly.
Extremes inevitably lead to collapse, but
even the most distorted system has some feedback mechanisms that
attempt to counter the momentum toward disaster. Just as the
body will try to mitigate the negative consequences of a diet of
greasy fast food, our grossly distorted financial and political
systems still retain some modest feedback loops that attempt to
mitigate rising risks.
These interactive forces make it impossible to
predict the moment of collapse, even as systemic failure remains
inevitable. Precisely when the heart of an obese, unfit person who
eats nothing but fast food will give out cannot be predicted, but
what can be predicted is the odds of systemic failure rise with every
passing day.
Doing more of what has failed
spectacularly–inflating new asset bubbles in housing, stocks
and bonds via quantitative easing, obfuscating financial skimming
operations with thousands of pages of new regulations, and so on–is
the equivalent of pushing an obese, unfit person to run uphill.
Rather than repair the system, doing more of what has failed further
stresses the system.
But even if the financial system were
cleansed of bad debt and phantom collateral, the status quo would
remain only partially repaired. For it’s not just the
financial system that has reached the point of negative return: the
entire economic foundation of the developed world–credit-dependent
consumerism–is as bankrupt and broken as the financial system that
fuels it.
The state’s response to this economic
endgame is depersonalized welfare, both corporate and
individual. When favored sectors can’t succeed in the open
market, the state enforces cartel-capitalism that enriches the
corporations at the expense of the citizenry. When the cartel-state
economy no longer creates paying work for the citizenry, the state
issues social welfare benefits, in effect paying people to stay home
and amuse themselves.
This destroys both free enterprise on the
corporate level and the source of individual and social meaning, i.e.
the opportunity to contribute in a meaningful way to one’s
community, family and trade/skill.
The status quo is thus not just financially
bankrupt–it is morally bankrupt as well.
The status quo is as intellectually bankrupt
as it is financially bankrupt. Our leadership cannot
conceive of any course of action other than central bank credit
creation and expanding state control of the economy and social
benefits, paid for with money borrowed from future generations.
Let’s take a wild guess that the obese,
unfit person won’t make it up the second hill, never mind the third
or fourth one. The status quo responded to the financial
heart attack of 2008 by doing more of what had failed spectacularly.
That injection of trillions of dollars, euros, yen, renminbi,
quatloos, etc. revived the global financial system in the same way a
shot of nitroglycerin resolves a life-threatening crisis: it doesn’t
fix the causes of the crisis, it simply gives the system some
additional time.
The next global financial storm is already
gathering on the horizon. Doing more of what failed
spectacularly will not save the day a second time, as the scale
required to create yet more phantom collateral and more asset bubbles
will collapse the system.
Intellectual, moral and financial bankruptcy
all go hand in hand. There isn’t just one storm gathering
on the horizon–there are three, each adding force and fury to the
other two.
Posts and email responses will be sporadic
in October due to family commitments. Thank you for your
understanding.
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