
Great Depression Online
Long Beach, CA
October 08, 2010
Inside This Issue You Will Discover…
*** How Long Will the Greater Depression Last
*** The Financial Asteroid Strike Theory
*** No Way Out
*** And More
[Editor’s note: Today we bring you a must read essay from
the inimitable Doug Casey. You’d be hard pressed to find an
article out there with even half the insights contained herein…but
be forewarned – this may offend you. It’s a lengthy read, but
well worth your time. So we’ll skip over the introduction and
get right to it. Enjoy! M.N. Gordon]
---
No Way Out
By Doug Casey,
Casey Research
I really dislike sounding inflammatory. Saying that things
are going to go terribly wrong runs a risk of being classed with
those who think the world will end in December 2012 because of
something Nostradamus or the Bible says, or because that’s what the
Mayan calendar predicts.
This is different. In the real world, cause has effect.
Nobody has a crystal ball, but a good economist (there are some,
though very few, in existence) can definitely pinpoint causes and
estimate not only what their immediate and direct effects are likely
to be (that’s not hard; a smart kid can usually do that) but the
indirect and delayed effects.
In the first half of this year, people were looking at the
U.S. economy and seeing that some things were better. Auto sales
were up – because of the wasteful Cash for Clunkers program. Home
sales were up – because of the $8,000 credit and distressed pricing.
Employment was up – partly because of Census hiring, and partly
because hundreds of billions have been thrown at the economy. The
recovery impresses me as a charade.
Let’s get beyond what the popular media parrots are telling
us and attempt to derive some reasonable assumptions about how
things really are and where they’re headed.
A Brief Summary of Our Story So Far….
Before we get to where things stand at the moment, let’s
briefly look at where we‘ve come from.
That a depression was in the cards has been foreseeable for
decades. The distortions cranked into the system in the ‘60s – the
era of “guns and butter” spending by the government – resulted in
the tumult of the ‘70s. Things could, and one could argue should,
have come unglued then. But they didn’t, for a number of reasons
that have only become clear in retrospect:
- Interest rates were allowed to rise to curative
levels;
- The markets were non-manipulated and so, as they
became quite depressed, were left to send out real distress signals;
- The U.S. was still running a trade surplus;
- The dollar had only come off the gold standard in
1971 and was still relatively sound.
Then, starting with Reagan and Thatcher, the world’s
governments started cutting taxes and deregulating. The USSR
collapsed peaceably. China, then India, made a shift toward free
markets. And on top of it all, the computer revolution got
seriously underway. All told, a good formula for recovery and a
sound foundation for a boom.
~~~~~~Gold Summit~~~~~~
“Fiat money to meet its end… To my mind, the biggest fraud
of the last fifty years has been the rise and acceptance of fiat
‘money.’ For that reason, I expect fiat money to meet its end
before this bear market breathes its last.” – Richard Russell, Dow
Theory Letters
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
But sadly, taxes, government spending, and deficits soon
started heading much higher. Despite the collapse of its only
conceivable enemy, U.S. military spending continued to skyrocket.
Monetary policy encouraged everyone to take on huge amounts of
debt, much more than ever in the past, and everyone soon found they
could live way above their means. The stock, real estate, and bond
markets got pumped up to ridiculous levels. The main U.S. export
became trillions of paper dollars. Worst of all, the U.S. devolved
into just another country, undistinguished by anything other than a
legacy of a high standard of living.
The standard of living in the U.S. is now going down for
these reasons, and others. But most disturbing to the average
American is the falling position of the U.S. relative to the rest of
the world. In brief, Americans won’t take kindly to the notion that
they can’t continue earning, say, $10-40 an hour, for doing exactly
the same thing a Chinese will do for $1-4 an hour.
What’s going to happen is that the Americans’ earnings are
going to drop, while those of the Chinese are going to rise, meeting
someplace in the middle. Especially when the Chinese works harder,
longer, saves his money, and doesn’t burden his employer with all
kinds of legacy benefits, topped off with lawsuits. This is a new
threat, one that can’t be countered with B-2 bombers. It’s also
something as big and as inevitable as a glacier coming down a valley
during an Ice Age.
This, along with other problems presented by the business
cycle have ushered in the Greater Depression.
How Long Will the Greater Depression Last?
Let’s briefly recap two definitions of a depression, along
with a couple of examples, with an eye to seeing how things may
evolve from here.
One definition is that a depression is a period of time
when most people’s standard of living drops significantly. Russia
had this kind of depression from roughly 1917 to 1990, so more than
70 years. A second definition is that it is a period of time when
economic distortions and misallocations of capital are liquidated.
Russia had this kind of depression from 1990 up to about 2000. It
was very sharp but relatively brief.
The difference between these two examples is that, during
the first, the state was in total – or even increasing – control.
By the time of the second, the country had greatly liberalized. As
a result, the depression was a period of necessary and tumultuous
change, rather than drawn-out agony. A depression can be a bad
thing or a good thing, partly depending on which definition applies.
Today, things are problematic in Russia for a number of
reasons that aren’t germane to this article. But people can own
property, entrepreneurs can start businesses, and the top tax rate
is 11%. The depression of 1990-2000 resulted in greatly improved
conditions in Russia.
Let’s look at a couple of other examples: Haiti and
Mozambique.
Haiti has been a disaster since Day One and has no current
prospect of improvement. The billions of dollars Obama is
idiotically about to send them will evaporate like a quart of water
poured into the Sahara – just like the billions of aid and charity
that have gone before it. Worse, it will eliminate the necessity of
Haiti making meaningful reforms. Additional aid actually precludes
the possibility of liquidating distortions, misallocations of
capital, and unsustainable patterns of life. It’s counterproductive.
Mozambique went through a long and nasty civil war from
about 1970 to the early ‘90s. The war made conditions worse than
anything even Haiti has seen. But when it came to an end, the
Mozambicans changed things simply in order to survive. The place is
hardly a beacon of the free market today, but duties and taxes have
been reduced, most parastatals have been privatized, and
entrepreneurs can operate. It’s a good sign that the country is
drawing foreign investment but very little foreign aid, which always
just cements people in their bad habits while ensuring government
officials stay in office.
Why do I bring up these examples? Because it’s clear to me
the U.S. is heading in the direction of Russia before 1990, or Haiti
today. Not in absolute terms, of course. But everything the U.S.
government is doing – raising taxes, increasing regulations, and
inflating the currency – is not only the wrong thing to do, but
exactly the opposite of the right thing.
This is really serious, because the government is the
800-pound gorilla in the room. What governments do makes all the
difference – actually the only difference – in how countries
perform. How else to explain that Haiti and Singapore were on
pretty much the same level after World War 2, and look where they
are now.
To my thinking, the U.S. is now clearly on the path
Argentina started down with the Peron regime. Cause has effect.
Actions have consequences, and the result will be much the same.
Except I believe the descent of the U.S. will be much faster,
much scarier, and will end in a much harder landing than that
experienced by Argentina.
I say this because there’s no realistic possibility the
Obama regime is going to change course. To the contrary, they’re
likely to accelerate in the present direction. They believe the
government should direct society – as do most Americans at this
point. They feel government is a magic cure-all and not only can
but should “do something” in response to any problem. Most
complaints aren’t that they’re doing too much, but that they’re
doing too little. Everything on the political front, therefore, is
a disaster. There’s absolutely no prospect I can see that it will
get better, and every indication it will get worse.
I’m not going to try to predict what will happen in the
2012 elections, but it’s fair to say the last several elections are
indicators of the degraded state of the average American. What are
the chances they’ll make a 180-degree turn, in the direction of
someone like Ron Paul? I’d say close to zero, and libertarianism
will remain a fringe movement, at best. Will Boobus americanus vote
for someone who says the government should actually do less – much
less – in the middle of a crisis? Especially if the current wars
expand, which is quite likely in this kind of environment? No way.
Simply, the chances of a reversal in what passes for the
philosophical attitude of this country are slim and none. And
Slim’s left town. While there are some who hope for an improvement
on the political front, I think that’s very naïve.
The Tea Party movement? Its ruling ethos appears to be a
kind of inchoate rage. I sympathize with the fact that many seem to
be honest middle to lower middle-class Americans who see their
standards of living slipping away and don’t know why, or how to stop
it. They feel bad that it’s no longer the America portrayed in
Jimmy Stewart and John Wayne movies, but many are quick to blame the
changes on swarthy immigrants. They’re desperately looking for a
political solution. These folks tend to be highly nationalistic and
atavistic, with a tendency to worship their preachers and the
military. I just hope some popular general doesn’t get political
ambitions…
The only bright spots – but these are very major bright
spots – are in the areas of individual savings and technology.
As things get worse, the productive members of society will
redouble their efforts to save themselves by producing more while
consuming less; the excess will be savings. Those savings create a
pool of capital that can be used to fund new businesses and
technologies.
The problem here is that with the dollar losing value
quickly, the savers will be punished for doing the only thing that
can really improve the situation. And they’ll be discouraged by
wrongheaded propaganda telling people to consume more, not to save.
Funding new business and technologies will be harder with more
regulations. But still, people will find a way to set aside a
surplus. And that is a factor of overwhelming importance.
As are breakthroughs in science and technology. Don’t
forget that there are more scientists and engineers alive today than
have lived, altogether, in all of previous human history. These are
the people that will wind the main stem of human progress. And their
numbers are going to grow. So there’s real cause for optimism.
The problem is that most young Americans now go in for
things like sociology and gender studies, whereas the up-and-coming
scientists and engineers are primarily Chinese and Indians who, even
if they get advanced training in the U.S., tend to go back home
afterwards. Partly because the U.S. discourages hiring
non-Americans for “good” jobs, but mostly because they can see more
opportunity abroad.
So, how long will the Greater Depression last? Quite a
while, at least for the U.S.
But wait. Aren’t there other bright spots? How about the
dollar?
The Dollar
Over the years I’ve been agnostic as to whether this
depression would be inflationary or deflationary. Or both in
sequence, with inflation first, followed by a credit collapse
deflation; or a deflation followed by a runaway inflation. Or
perhaps both at the same time, just in different sectors of the
economy – e.g., prices of McMansions collapse because people can’t
afford to live in them, while the prices of rice and beans skyrocket
because that’s all people can afford.
At the moment I’m leaning towards a deflation in most
areas. Why? Because the purchasing media in the U.S. is primarily
credit based. If a mortgage defaults, what happens to the dollars
it represents? They literally disappear, which is deflationary. If
a bond defaults, the same thing happens. If stocks and property
prices crash, the dollars they represent vanish. If people or
businesses don’t borrow, the money supply fails to expand; in fact,
many are trying to pay back loans, which is deflationary. Even so,
contrary to popular opinion, deflation is much better than
inflation.
Because today’s dollar is just paper and credit, and
because deflationary conditions will create a clamor for many more
of them, the government will eventually succeed in its inflationary
efforts. It’s true, as Bernanke has said in a moment of wry wit,
that they can dump $100 bills from helicopters to prevent deflation.
But it’s not likely since, in our fractional reserve banking
system, the primary way the money supply is expanded is through the
granting of loans, not the printing of paper, the way it was done in
Weimar Germany and Zimbabwe.
One problem with credit-based inflation is that at some
point, banks become afraid to lend, and people afraid to borrow – a
time like right now. In fact, people may even become too afraid to
leave their dollars in banks. They’re coming to realize the FDIC is
thoroughly bankrupt.
Here’s a speculative scenario. To solve these deflationary
problems and resolve Ben’s helicopter conundrum, maybe the Fed will
go into the retail banking business by directly taking over the
hundreds of institutions that are now failing. The average American
would feel safe depositing directly with the Federal Reserve. And
the Fed could lend as much as they want, without the restrictions
imposed by actual capital or pesky shareholders.
Ridiculous? I think not, certainly not after GM, Fannie,
and the rest. Certainly not when you consider that this depression
is still in only the second inning. It would be one way to head off
deflation.
Be that as it may, or may not, at some point after the
deflationary waters have receded as far as possible, an inflationary
tsunami is going to wash ashore, to the surprise of all.
Everybody knows how bad things were in Weimar Germany, and
what a catastrophe hyperinflation has been in Zimbabwe. But those
were agrarian economies, with people still quite close to the land.
If it hits in the U.S., as highly specialized and urbanized as it
is, it will be an unparalleled disaster. And not just for the U.S.,
because the reserves of almost all governments are mostly U.S.
dollars. And dollars are used as the de facto currency by the
average man in about 50 countries. All told, there may be as many
as seven trillion of the things held outside of the U.S., and, at
some point, everybody will be trying to unload them at once. At
which time they’ll lose value very, very quickly.
So, far from being something to rely on, and very far from
being as good as gold, the dollar is going to be a lead player in
the catastrophe called the Greater Depression. And all the other
paper currencies are going down with it. Pity the fool who doesn’t
see this coming.
Or, for that matter, what’s going to happen to interest
rates.
Interest Rates
The government is doing everything in its power to keep
interest rates as low as possible. There are many reasons for this.
Low rates make it easier for people to support their debt burdens
and borrow more. Low rates inflate the value of stocks, bonds, and
real estate – and the last thing the government wants to see is a
meltdown of the markets. But, perhaps even more important, it’s a
lot easier for the government to service $12 trillion of official
debt at 2% than at 12%. That much of a rise in rates alone will add
over a trillion to what they need to borrow to keep the giant Ponzi
scheme going.
Of course it’s a fool’s game. Eventually (I’ll guess
between six and 24 months), when their creation of dollars
eventually overcomes the credit markets’ destruction of dollars,
consumer prices will go up. That evidence of inflation will cause
interest rates to rise, with all the short-term negative effects the
government so fears. But higher rates are absolutely necessary to
get out of the depression. Remember, it was the high rates of the
early ‘80s that set the stage for the boom that followed.
Rates – the price of money – shouldn’t be controlled by the
state, up or down, any more than the state should control the price
of oil, or bread, or toothpaste. One of the major reasons the USSR
collapsed was an inability to make correct economic calculations,
and much of that was due to their arbitrarily fixed interest rates.
One reason why Japan has been fading into the economic background
over the last two decades is that the government has artificially
suppressed rates, in the vain hope of stimulating the economy. All
they’ve gotten is excessive levels of government debt, which will
result in the destruction of the yen. And what will be tens of
millions of impoverished, and very angry, Japanese savers.
The same thing is in process of happening in the West due
to suppressed interest rates.
The Next Steps Down in the Markets
With interest rates depressed to near zero, stocks, bonds,
and property in the Western countries are as good as they’re going
to get – especially after a very long boom in all three. When rates
inevitably go higher, stocks, property – absolutely bonds – are
likely to head much lower. That’s entirely apart from the
fundamentals under them, which are truly ugly. In turn, that will
bankrupt pension funds across the economy, many of which are already
severely underfunded.
These pension funds are likely to be the centerpieces of
the next leg down of the evolving crisis. Will the government bail
them out? Perhaps, although after the misadventure of poor
taxpayers throwing money at rich traders at Goldman and AIG, the
public doesn’t like the ring of that term. More likely it will
nationalize them, assuming their assets in exchange for a special
class of its paper. In the interest of “fairness,” that will happen
to small and solvent funds as well as large and bankrupt ones.
After that, the next problem area will be insurance
companies. And not necessarily because they’ll suffer from the same
problems, like derivative trading, that sunk AIG. Even the
well-managed ones have their assets invested primarily in commercial
loans, commercial property, bonds, and stocks.
How This Will End
Nassim Taleb has popularized the concept of the Black Swan:
an event that no one thought was possible, actually happening.
Naturally, it takes everyone by surprise. To that lesson from
zoology, let me suggest one from astronomy. Let’s call it the
Financial Asteroid Strike theory.
It’s well known that there are millions of pieces of
sizable space debris floating around the solar system. It’s just a
matter of time before something crosses our path at an inopportune
moment, as has happened so many times in the past. Unlike the Black
Swan, it’s well known that Financial Asteroids exist. It’s just
that really serious ones appear so rarely that people conduct their
lives as if they never will. It’s been such a long time since the
last depression that people see it as something distant and academic
– like the Chicxulub or Tunguska asteroid strikes. Until the actual
moment it hits, everything is completely normal. Then everything
changes radically.
I’d sum it up by saying that a Financial Asteroid Strike
takes much longer to happen than you might expect, but once it
actually gets underway, it happens much more quickly than you could
have imagined. We had a strike in 2008. But they tend to come in
clusters. I expect more to enter the atmosphere fairly soon.
The question is whether the next one is going to wipe out
all the economic and financial dinosaurs or just flatten the trees
for some miles around.
Either way, it’s far from being all gloom and doom.
How This Could Be a Good Thing
Everyone, certainly including myself, prefers good times to
bad times. But much of the good times of the last two decades were
a result of an entire civilization living above its means. It was
great fun while it lasted, but the party is over. The result will
be massive unemployment, lots of business failures, and huge
investment losses. These things are most unpleasant, but
inevitable. That said, I always like to look at the bright side.
And what might that be?
Let’s restrict ourselves to just one of the lead actors in
this drama: the United States of America.
The bankruptcy of the U.S. government will, at least at
some point, lead to a big drop in the number of government
employees. This is a good thing, since little of what they do
serves a useful purpose; most are an actual impediment to
production.
With some luck it could result in the sale of agencies that
have some value, e.g., NASA, the Smithsonian, and the National Parks
– to private enterprise. It will also force a vast retrenchment of
the military, although only after more costly wars make that
necessity very obvious. It will force a decentralization of power,
with more devolving to the states and municipalities. It will mean
much less regulation, since there won’t be the personnel or money to
enforce it. It will also mean much less taxation for the same
reasons, even though the state will try desperately to collect more,
and will absolutely succeed in the near term.
Internationally, it seems to me a sure thing that
organizations like the UN, the IMF, the OECD, and so many more, will
be totally hollowed out or even disappear. At a time when
governments are straining to maintain themselves, they’re unlikely
to ship scarce capital abroad. So the people who are worried about
the UN taking over the U.S., One World Government and such, will
have to find something different to fret about.
As domestic currencies the world over are inflated away,
some medium of exchange and store of value will have to be agreed
on. I don’t see any realistic alternative to gold. China is going
to be a focus of change in this regard (among many others). The
stupidity of the Chinese government buying U.S. government paper in
order to enable Americans to continue consuming the things Chinese
factories produce will come to an end. That will be an impetus to
demands for an alternative medium of exchange.
But if the U.S. and governments of other advanced countries
lose power, governments in places like Africa (in particular) will
collapse; Somalia is a model of things to come there. That may
sound like a horrible thing, but – notwithstanding teething pains –
it’s a big step forward. Deprived of free money, free weapons, and
lots of free bad advice that have entrenched kleptocracies, the
Africans are likely to make real progress after the Greater
Depression plays itself out.
The transition period, however, is likely to be messy
almost everywhere.
Can we prevent the status quo from falling apart, and
preclude these messy changes? Further, should we, if we could?
Entirely apart from the fact that change is an essential
part of life – and I think the status quo is in dire need of some
real change (although absolutely not the kind Obama and his posse
might have in mind) – I actually don’t think there’s a realistic
solution to the problems the world is facing in this decade.
Yes, there are solutions that the government could
proactively bring about – almost entirely by doing less, rather than
more. But the odds of the U.S. voluntarily defaulting on its debt,
abolishing the Fed, using gold as money, abolishing all agencies not
specifically designated in the Constitution, eliminating the income
tax, and cutting back on military expenditures by about 90% -- among
other things – are so small as to be considered a fantasy.
In fact, the concept of invoking changes of that scale are
too scary for most to even contemplate. But they’ll happen anyway.
Which means these things aren’t going to happen voluntarily, under
some kind of control, and in a more or less orderly manner. Even
so, because anything that must happen will happen – all these things
and more will actually happen and, in the happening, will be most
unpleasant and dangerous.
It seems to me that the upset we’re looking at could be the
biggest thing since the Industrial Revolution. Or perhaps the
French Revolution is a better analogy, although I expect it’s going
to be a bit of both. It seems entirely possible to me that we could
have another American Revolution, as unlikely as that seems among a
nation of commuters and suburbs-dwelling reality TV watchers.
But it’s hard to see how it could be anything like the
first one, which was led by thoughtful, rich, free market-oriented
farmers and merchants. More likely this one will center on people
like Sarah Palin and Sean Hannity on the one side, and Michael Moore
and Nancy Pelosi on the other – strident, antagonistic, and bent,
but also full of charisma and certainty. I don’t see much chance of
collegial and reasonable compromise.
The best advice is not to be around the watering hole when
two antagonistic groups of chimpanzees are hooting and panting at
each other, getting ready to fight for control of it.
I’m afraid the current state of affairs is corrupt through
and through. From the top of the financial world in New York, to
the top of the political world in DC, right down to the average man
on the street, 50% of whom aren’t obligated to pay income taxes but
feel entitled to be net recipients of government largesse at the
expense of others. Even among those that have assets, there’s no
feeling of shame in gaming the system any way possible. There’s no
longer any onus to being one of the 40 million people on electronic
food stamps, or defaulting on one’s mortgage and continuing to live
in the house, and collecting indefinitely extended unemployment
benefits. Bankruptcy is just something you do when needed.
Frankly, it’s a mystery to me how the U.S. in particular,
but most of the developed world, is going to escape from the very
unpleasant consequences of its very stupid past – and current –
actions.
I’ve just scratched the surface of the possibilities for
the next ten years here. What’s clear is that some patterns of
production and consumption are unsustainable; they will stop. What’s
not clear is what new patterns will replace them. But that’s not so
worrisome; what’s a matter of more concern is what forms of
political and social organization will appear.
But let me leave you with a final bit of good news. Most
of the real wealth – science, technologies, capital and consumer
goods – will still be here. There’s just going to be a change in
ownership. And it’s possible to position yourself to get more than
your share.
Based on the above, what looks good to me – on a long-term
basis – over the years to come? In general, stocks, bonds, and
property are dead ducks, and headed much lower. But when a real
bottom arrives, perhaps even in this decade, fortunes will be made
buying back into them. Gold and silver, even though they’re no
longer cheap, are going much higher; they’ll be what you’ll trade
for things that are cheap. Agricultural commodities are going to do
well. The trillions of currency units being printed all over the
world will definitely ignite more bubbles, which should present
fantastic speculative opportunities. And because the political
situation will be hairy, diversify your assets outside of your home
country.
Sincerely,
Doug Casey
Casey Research
P.S. What you just read is the content of Doug Casey’s
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