Sunday, June 12, 2022

The Great Debt Crisis And Today

 If you started reading this blog in late 2006 you know that I was puzzled and worried by the escalation of sovereign and private debt, the explosion of real estate prices, the proliferation of tranched mortgage bonds and leveraged credit derivatives.  Today, many have forgotten that the trouble was not isolated to sub-prime loans. There was excess everywhere, from FNMA and GNMA all the way to government bonds, real estate and consumer banking in PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece, Spain). 

Greece, Lehman, Nationwide Savings and many more went bankrupt, Cyprus  seized bank deposits over 100.000 euro, Iceland reneged on all foreign investors, AIG, Merrill Lynch and others were bailed out or forced into shotgun mergers. Yeah, there was much more trouble than people remember. The movie Big Short, though quite accurate, described just one aspect of the excess (sub prime loans and derivatives).

Yet, compared to today the Great Debt Crisis (GDC) was a walk in the park.

In many ways, GDC never ended - the real problems were just swept under the carpet. The ECB hasn’t raised rates in over a decade and many countries “enjoyed” negative interest rates. Money policy-wise, we have been living in party-hardy times for a very, very long time. I would dare say an unconscionably long time, if it wasn’t for the pandemic, which panicked governments into taking monumentally unwise actions.

In sum, zero interest rates for over a decade, plus gigantic money creation in 2020-22 resulted in:

  1. Enormous risk appetite. Basically, people threw money at everything, including truly moronic “assets” .
  2. The creation of an ocean of money supply, the fuel for inflation which has now ignited.
  3. The unshakeable belief that central banks will always come to the rescue, no matter what (the so-called Fed put).
Today’s problems are systemic and widespread.  They go to the very heart of monetary economics and policy, as practiced by governments and central banks in the US and EU who no longer consider money as a storehouse of value. They use it as just another expedient political tool, a sort of socioeconomic panacea, a cure-all whipped out for each and every malady.  

And why? Because truly effective macroeconomic political solutions have become impossible to enact, or even propose. 
  • The US is deeply divided politically, economically and socially. Inequality is back to 19th century levels and the working middle class has been eradicated.
  • The EU is a hodgepodge of completely unequal sovereign nations bound together by the euro straight-jacket.  Well intentioned, but terribly executed.
In the absence of coherent political leadership, everything and anything is thrown to the Fed and ECB, whose heads have become mere compliant figureheads.  Instead of facing reality, they have come up with Modern Monetary Theory where money just doesn’t matter.  

In some ways the period from 2006 to now is like WWI and WWII, which we now understand to be a Long War interrupted by a period of growing imbalances leading to disaster.  We cannot make the same mistake. To wit:
  1. We have to restore the Middle Class in the West, particularly the US.
  2. We have to renounce Permagrowth globally.
  3. We have to remove financial markets’ influence on political decisions.
  4. We have to restore faith in money.
I will close with a chart. After all, a Sudden Debt post can’t be complete without one 😆😆

In the past 40 years the top 0.01% of Americans have seen their income grow 600% while the “bottom” 99% saw only a 50-80% rise. Mind you, this chart comes from the Council on Foreign Relations, publisher of Foreign Affairs, not some dubious left wing fringe.  It vividly portrays the need for #1 above.

Soaring inflation for essential goods plus much lower wage gains create a highly toxic social mixture.  I fear that Trumpism and the attack on Capitol Hill are a mere opening act; discontent could easily spin out of control into rage. 

15 comments:

  1. I'm going to offer a viewpoint that is somewhat disturbing... but is (I believe) true.

    It is not society's job the rebuild the middle class. It is not society's job to give worth to its members.

    It is society's job to demand worth from its members. To help those who are prepared to help themselves. Those who will not contribute?.... Well the bible did say... he who does not work, let him also not eat....

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    1. True, AKOC. But, the middle class must first be given the opportunity to do so. When you remove 100 solid middle class jobs (eg manufacturing) and replace them with 1 app coder plus 99 hamburger flippers you have a very serious policy problem. How can the 99 react? How can they add value? What has CONSCIOUSLY happened by policy makers is to take the wealth formerly created by the 99 and transfer it to the very top 0.01% via the rise in their shares.

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    2. I have thought about this question round and round and round.... and here is my answer.... and it is a really scary answer...

      I will split the answer into two. The first is physical, the second is moral.

      Physically, these people are doomed. It is not about evil capitalist. With increasing mechanism, there is less and less need of "normal" people... these people know it... and with their current numbers, the are poisoning the political system... determined that if they die, they take everything down with them.

      We are used to thinking of them as friends and family... as fellow men... but they are becoming monsters instead.... in their determination to force their worth on everyone... they are going to kill everything...

      If you don't cut lose from them... they will take you to their grave...

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    3. Morally... the "normal" people don't really care about anyone but themselves... they did not care when the Indian's walked the trail of tears.... they did not care when the Chinese died by their millions... they do not care when the African's starve in the horn... they do not care as species after species is driven over the brink.....

      why then should we are what happens to them?... let them go... it is time...

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    4. The blunt answer to why should we care is… numbers. The top 1% has NEVER been able to overcome a Revolution by the 99%. France, Russia, Soviet Union… when push coves to shove size matters.

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    5. I am not talking about the top 1% in wealth.... and with mechanization,... this time is really different... look at U.S. army force structure....

      think also of medieval society... well equipped and trained... one knight was worth a hundred peasants... technology is leading us back to that era... except now, we don't even need peasant labor...

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    6. America has more guns than people.

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    7. sadly,... unless the army joins in... there ain't going to be no revolution.... the guns don't do squat against tanks...

      go ask the ccp... =)

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    8. anyway... I am all for coopting the fighting heart of America... if you want to fight... we want you... =)

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    9. AKOC, Americans aren’t useless. They have proven time and again that they work hard and fight harder when they have to - even against staggering odds. But since the late 1980s and much faster after 2000, their middle class jobs have been taken from them and shipped to China (mostly), in the name of low prices and high corporate profits. Earned income has been replaced by debt, piled on and on.

      It’s a massive failure of leadership - I could call it a criminal conspiracy, but I won’t. I’ll just call it a conspiracy of dunces. As we say, a fish starts rotting at the head.

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    10. right... lets debate that... how can we create an economic system in which the U.S. worker has value...?

      current average U.S. pay is about $6k... average global salary is about $1.5k... what job can he do such that he is 4 times more productive?...

      my rough feeling is that a U.S. worker is about 0.5 to 0.25 a China workers productivity... the gap is even higher in the thinking professions (like tech)...

      truly, I am not sure what to do with such a worker...

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    11. It’s all about adding value, there can’t be a straight line comparison, dollar for dollar. Productivity is a different measure: output/cost …. and it’s dependent on many factors, including capital investment on means of production, R&D, etc.

      For example, you can have worker x producing $4 and paid $1 (productivity 4) and worker y producing $200 and paid $100 (productivity 2)… but, who adds more value? Who’s work is more valuable?

      Anyway, we do agree on this: China has created a vast new productive Middle Class, while America has annihilated its own.

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    12. exactly... I like how you phrase it... so what industry can we put in the U.S. that we cannot put somewhere else?

      and about tech... I agree it is currently in the U.S. but it is almost all done by foreigners... the U.S. workers are treated as walking jokes... For example, the (younger, 40-60 age bracket) U.S. professors in the top universities (yes, I am talking MIT and Stanford), know almost nothing... they have the position.... but all their papers are written for them... check out PhD comics for the situation 20 years ago; now, it has gone from funny to horrifying....

      I dunno man... I dunno...

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    13. 10 year old article describing the state of research... things are much, much, much worse now.

      http://www.dcscience.net/lawrence-the-heart-of-research-is-sick-2011.pdf

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  2. How can someone prepare for coming recession? Asking as a recent college graduate that doesn’t want to be crushed by this whole thing. Been reading this blog for 2 weeks now. More insightful than my economics professor.

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