Three unsustainable trends are about to collide

A perfect storm of demographics, debt and energy

The population of the United States is expected to continue growing.

It’s getting more and more difficult to write with interest about the challenges the world economy is currently facing. Not because there’s a shortage of interesting things to write about — wars, sanctions, failed money-printing experiments, the list is long — but rather because most of the negative news and major world events we see around us are symptoms of the disease, not the disease itself.

There are only so many times you can describe the disease, before it becomes too repetitive for both the writer and the reader. Instead, I find it far more interesting to focus on the root causes, because then real solutions can be explored that offer the possibility of actual remedy.

So let’s start here, with a simple grounding in the facts as we know them. No spin, no agenda; just some numbers.

Demographics

There are approximately 7.2 billion humans on the planet, and consensus estimates put that number at 9.6 billion by 2050. Over the same time period in the U.S., people aged 65 and older will increase from 46 million currently to 84 million, a 82% increase, while the entire U.S. population is projected to swell from its current 319 million to 400 million, a 25% increase.

Debts

Next, the net present value of the actual liabilities of the US federal government are somewhere between $69 trillion and more than $200 trillion depending on whether you prefer the Treasury as your source or the CBO.

The real fiscal deficit of the U.S. government, as opposed to what was reported, was just over $1 trillion in FY 2014 (as measured by the actual increase in the federal debt).

When your debts and liabilities are increasing at several multiples of your income growth, you have a math problem that sooner or later will catch up with you.

The only nonpainful way out of such a math bind is to reverse the situation and grow our income faster than our debts and liabilities. The painful way involves either a hard default or a stealth default via inflation. Let’s assume we all wish to avoid the painful route.

This means we have to ask some hard questions. What will be the engines of all that future growth? Why has growth been so difficult to come by of late? What if the hoped-for future growth doesn’t materialize? Even worse, what if we get a sustained period of negative growth? Then what?

Here’s where things get sticky.

Energy production

One of the more solid economic correlations we know of is that between a growing economy and growing energy usage. And oil is one of the main factors in this relationship, if not the key factor. For now, the U.S. is enjoying a resurgent period of oil production thanks to shale (or “tight”) oil. The U.S. can use that energy to grow its economy, or we can export it to other countries so they can grow theirs.

Now, let’s widen our view back out to 2050. Where is the U.S. tight oil story then? Well, according to the Energy Information Administration, it will be 31 years in the rearview mirror, as the EIA projects that U.S. tight oil production will peak in 2019. That’s right, in just five short years from now, the U.S. “shale oil miracle” will start becoming a historical artifact.

On top of that, virtually every single oil reservoir in the world currently in production will be in decline by 2050. Perhaps we’ll find additional oil under the Arctic, or in ultra-deep ocean deposits, or in even tighter rock formations, but it won’t be cheap oil —- the sort that we rely on to drive economic expansion.

These trends in oil, debt and demographics are stark all on their own, but together they are staggering.

And if we then tie them to the obvious ecological strains of meeting the needs of 7.2 billion souls (let alone the 9.6 billion by 2050), any adherence to the status quo seems worse than delusional. For example, since 1970, overall world wildlife populations have been reduced by 40% (land and sea) to 70% (river). Perhaps it’s time plot our course a bit more carefully, before those losses approach 100%.

The disease

The disease then is our blind adherence to growth at any cost. Its symptoms are the limits we are bumping into with increasing frequency along the way. They’re more numerous today than before the world’s central banks began their grand global money printing experiment and yet, like a quack doctor prescribing more Vicodin to mask a serious underlying malady, the central planners and their political overseers refuse to reconsider the situation.

As economist Herb Stein once said, “if something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” Someday, perhaps soon, the inexorable logic of simple math will force wrenching changes upon those who refuse to change on their own.

Which brings me to the title of this piece: Ready or Not. The unsustainable status quo will end, likely sooner than we want, whether we are prepared for it to or not.

Chris Martenson is is an economic researcher and futurist specializing in energy and resource depletion, and co-founder of PeakProsperity.com.

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12 Comments
overthecliff
overthecliff
October 9, 2014 8:36 am

Fusion is the answer to the math problem. Kind of a long shot though.

wip
wip
October 9, 2014 8:39 am

The unsustainable status quo will end…”

It will only end for most. For those at the top…?

Tommy
Tommy
October 9, 2014 9:24 am

Martenson is to politically correct to point out that the demographic problem is from the FSA, the driver behind the feral additions – either way, he should know he’s already a raciss pig for daring to use statistics to make a point.

Stucky
Stucky
October 9, 2014 9:28 am

The greater the USA population, the less debt per person. This is good. We need a population of 2 billion. Then the Good Times will roll in.

Oh yeah … for this scheme to work none of the Newbies qualify for Free Shit.

flash
flash
October 9, 2014 9:31 am

Wat we need is more diversity and less white privilege.Yes, that’s the ticket.

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“And why is it in particular the small minority of white, heterosexual males, and especially its most successful members that owes some extra-kindness to the vast majority of all other people? Why not the other way around? After all, most if not all technical inventions, machines, tools and gadgets in current use everywhere and anywhere, on which our current living standards and comforts largely and decisively depend, originated with them. All other people, by and large, only imitated what they had invented and constructed first. All others inherited the knowledge embodied in the inventors’ products for free. And isn’t it the typical white hierarchical family household of father, mother, their common children and prospective heirs, and their ‘bourgeois’ conduct and lifestyle – i.e., everything the Left disparages and maligns – that is the economically most successful model of social organization the world has ever seen, with the greatest accumulation of capital goods (wealth) and the highest average standards of living? And isn’t it only on account of the great economic achievements of this minority of ‘victimizers’ that a steadily increasing number of ‘victims’ could be integrated and partake in the advantages of a worldwide network of the division of labor? And isn’t it only on account of the success of the traditional white, bourgeois family model also that so-called ‘alternative lifestyles’ could at all emerge and be sustained over time? Do not most of today’s ‘victims,’ then, literally owe their lives and their current living to the achievements of their alleged ‘victimizers?’” Hans-Hermann Hoppe

The Self-Proclaimed Other

By William S. Lind
Regrettably, the colossal mess created by “multi-culturalism” affects all Europeans and Americans, Right as well as Left. I will say again what I have said before: in a Fourth Generation world, invasion by immigrants who do not acculturate is more dangerous than invasion by the army of a foreign state. In America, a similar invading army took to our streets last week, demonstrating against any attempt to stem the invasion. Few of the flags they carried were American.

What has to happen before the rest of us get the message?

http://www.dnipogo.org/lind/lind_4_04_06.htm

Dutchman
Dutchman
October 9, 2014 9:33 am

Population growth – all fucking Mexicans and Islamists – hell they are pumping out more chillins than the Negroes!

Mark
Mark
October 9, 2014 9:47 am

The solution to the energy problem is already here. It’s robotics that drive tractor trail or trucks or semis.

Semis should be banned during day light time and restricted to night time only on inter state highways. That leaves the inter state highway available for passenger cars only.

Government regulates the size of passenger to protect other passenger cars in event of accident .

Until then I’m not giving up my SUV .

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
October 9, 2014 9:58 am

I like the idea of raising the federal gasoline tax by $2 per gallon. Because it’s nice and regressive. Unfortunately, if we put it up for a vote it’d go down about 100,000,000:1 it’s about the only way to effectively tax the illegals and freeshitters. Think about it…

ragman
ragman
October 9, 2014 12:09 pm

Iska: How ’bout a flat 10% federal income tax and a 5% federal sales tax? That might work. Couple that with absolutely NO deficit spending and our economy would boom! Never happen, of course.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
October 9, 2014 1:38 pm

Ragman….how about no income tax and a small sales tax instead . All taxes collected via governmental force is theft.

Billy
Billy
October 9, 2014 2:15 pm

Ragman….how about no income tax and a small sales tax instead . All taxes collected via governmental force is theft. – Buck

This.

I despise income taxes. At best, it’s extortion. At worst, it’s armed robbery under color of law. Income tax was sold to the American public after Congress realized what a cash cow it was… they wanted to pay off the debt incurred for the Spanish American War, so they instituted a temporary income tax.

Couple years later, they used envy and classism to sell it to the American public… “It’s only the richest Americans being taxed, not YOU after all… and they made their millions off your labor! It’s only “fair” to tax them!”

Meaningful conversation about reforming the tax code cannot proceed until folks stop saying “But, how are we supposed to pay for (fill in the blank) without income taxes?!?” Property taxes too… paying “rent” on shit I hold title to is straight up BULLSHIT. The excuse that schools are funded primarily with property taxes is bullshit as well… if our schools were Tier 1 schools that turned out Nobel Prize winning physicists, chemists, geneticists, writers, statesmen, etc… I might not have the degree of hostility towards it as I currently do…

But to continue to pay rent on shit I ALLEGEDLY hold title to in exchange for what amounts to an army of button pushing mush-heads thoroughly indoctrinated into Marxist ideology is just… well… bullshit.

The zombie apocalypse cannot come soon enough…

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
October 9, 2014 8:16 pm

Wow … never thought I’d “hear” myself “saying” this, but on the subject of income taxes, I agree with Billy 100%.

I always liked the overall idea of the Fairtax … of basing taxes on consumption, rather than income.

Encourage people to be makers, not takers.