Turkey: A Glimpse of America’s Future

Guest Post by Bill Bonner

POITOU, FRANCE – Coming into focus is a fuller picture of the worldwide financial crisis.

This week, we began looking at Turkey, but only because Donald Trump sent an extraordinary tweet last Friday.

In it, the president broke with tradition and common sense in a remarkable way. He used a crash in the Turkish lira to justify a new attack in the trade war.

Instead of soothing words that might have calmed the crisis situation, his tweet made it worse. And instead of coming to the aid of an ally in difficulty, he piled on.

We had never previously spent even two minutes thinking about Turkey or its finances. But then, after the president roused our curiosity, we saw what we think was a glimpse of the future.

In it, we see huge defaults… stock crashes… chest-pounding… threats and counterthreats… populism… betrayal… trade wars… and currency wars… as the world reckons with $115 trillion in excess debt.

Back to that in a minute…

Earthy Language

Yesterday was the Feast of the Assumption. France is overwhelmingly Catholic, so the occasion was marked by remembrances all over the country.

We were invited to join a procession at a nearby château. The place was magnificent, high on a cliff, overlooking the valley of the Benaize river.

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View of the Benaize valley from the castle ramparts

When we arrived, a small group was already offering prayers to a small statue of the Virgin. Singing followed, then more prayers, and then the faithful began a procession, carrying the statue in front of them.

We were a little shocked by one of the verses, in which Mary gave Christ to the world “from her ‘entrailles’ [bowels].”

The French tend to be earthy and direct in their language. We had a maiden aunt for whom “freshen up” was the polite way to say “go to the bathroom.”

But in France, if you’re in a restaurant and ask for the “bathroom,” the waiters will be surprised. Why would you want to take a bath in the restaurant? It is the toilet you want.

Likewise, the children of a second marriage are referred to as coming from “the second bed,” which is a little too vivid for Anglo-Saxon imaginations.

But back to the procession… We made our way down a narrow path to a grotto in the valley below. There, the Virgin was placed among candles with a small fire in front, while the prayers, incantations, and hymns continued.

The path was steep, and it was easier going downhill than up again. Some of the old people found it hard to get back up out of the valley to the château on the high ground.

There, a priest, dressed in a beige, hooded outfit, said a benediction. The ceremony over, we quickly forgot all about the grieving Mary, and sat down to enjoy a gay picnic with our neighbors.

Number 79

But let’s depart from the Benaize valley and refocus our attention on the subject of today: Turkey… and the collapse to come.

Turkey has only 1% of the world’s GDP, and less than 5% of America’s. Small potatoes, in other words. But a great wall always develops a small crack before it falls down.

The great wall we are looking at is one built by $250 trillion of debt, laid up, a billion here, a billion there, over the last 30 years.

The foundation stones were put in place in 1971, when the final tether between gold and the U.S. dollar was severed… and the greenback was cut off from the real world of time and resources.

Previously, borrowings were more or less limited by savings; savings were more or less limited by earnings; and earnings were more or less limited by the number of hours in the day.

There was plenty of room for excesses and extraordinary popular delusions in the pre-1971 world. But there was also a feedback loop that tended – however imperfectly – to prevent things from getting too far out of whack.

At the end of the day, so to speak, mistakes were corrected.

That feedback loop was made of gold. Number 79 on the periodic table, the quantity of gold couldn’t be readily increased.

Credit may be created by the financial industry. But it is Main Street output that services debt. And as long as money was linked to gold, neither cash nor credit could get too far ahead of the real goods and services the economy could produce.

Infinite Money

But then, in 1971, Nixon cut the final thread between gold and the dollar. And the cornerstone of today’s great wall of debt was laid.

After the foundation was in place, it took a few years for people to realize what they had to work with – an almost unlimited supply of credit.

“Money” could be created by the central banks, and magnified by the financial industry at will, earning fees for the bankers and boosting the assets of the wealthy.

Once people realized that “money” could be gotten readily, their inhibitions about spending it gradually fell away.

“Deficits don’t matter,” said Dick Cheney. “It would be a good thing if we didn’t have [a federal debt ceiling],” chimed Ben “Courage to Act” Bernanke.

“And don’t worry about the stock market,” added Alan Greenspan (or words to that effect). In 1987, he made it clear that the world’s most important equity market would not be allowed to correct excess debt or speculation.

That was the meaning of the “Greenspan Put.” If stocks went down, the central bank would push them back up again.

How? By making more ersatz credit available on even friendlier terms.

And so it was… off to the races!

Communists… crackpots… people who lived in caves and had yet to stand fully upright… were suddenly able to cadge millions from lenders who never earned the money, never saved it, and never really worried much about losing it; after all, there was plenty more where that came from!

Why else would any sane person lend money to a Turk… an Argentine… or Elon Musk?

Why else would anyone lend at negative rates? If you lend at 20%, it takes only five years to break even. If you lend at 10%, it takes 10 years. And at 2%, it takes 50 years. The lower the rate, the more future you need.

But at negative rates, the future becomes meaningless. You’ll never break even.

Ever.

Missing Future

This is not the real world; this is the phony world concocted by the U.S. dollar and its quack managers.

That is also why lenders – apparently compos mentis, wearing no ankle bracelets, and with no court orders putting their affairs in others’ hands – bought Argentine bonds with 100-year maturities.

One year? One hundred years? It didn’t matter… The future had gone missing.

That’s what happens when a money system gets perverted by fake money. Normally, you do things in anticipation of the consequences.

You save for a rainy day. You turn down a second dessert because you know you will have to get on the scale tomorrow. You leave the pretty woman next door alone because you know her husband has a license for concealed carry.

Actions have consequences! Tomorrow comes. And the neighbor comes looking for you.

The fake dollar distorted the connection between actions and consequences. People could reap what they had not sown. They could invest savings no one had ever earned. They could borrow – big time! – knowing the future (when they would have to pay it back) would never come.

But in the real world, the future does show up… eventually.

And it rolled into the ancient capital of the Eastern Empire last week.

The Turkish lira fell as foreign investors fled and the sun rose over the Bosporus. And Donald Trump added insult to injury with further trade barriers.

Turkey has a GDP of only $900 billion. It has external debt of only $500 billion. These numbers are so small – compared to a $90 trillion world economy… and $250 trillion of debt – that investors shirk it off.

The problem is “contained,” they say, echoing those famous words of Ben Bernanke in September 2007.

Then, it was Lehman Brothers that was in trouble. That crack was tiny, too; Lehman had only $619 billion in debt.

Then, too, there seemed little reason to worry. Ben Bernanke had taken over from Alan Greenspan. The Greenspan Put had become the Bernanke Put. The future could jolly well wait.

And Bernanke did come through. With nearly $4 trillion in extra central bank credit, he succeeded in reviving the wildest fantasies of the bubble era… But not before the wall had come down and the stock market had been crushed under the rubble.

More to come on how Turkey… China… and the USA will reckon with unpayable debt.

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18 Comments
pyrrhus
pyrrhus
August 16, 2018 4:33 pm

As usual, Bonner is clueless…Erdogan is a moslem fanatic who says he wants to revive the Ottoman Empire, and has destroyed his country’s economy. Obama tried to overthrow him in a bungled coup, so he hates the West….Exactly what was Trump supposed to do about any of this?

22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
22winmag - Q is a Psyop and Trump is lead actor
  pyrrhus
August 16, 2018 8:24 pm

Germany has been saddled with millions of Turkish welfare ghetto trash for longer than many of have been alive. The less the USA is entangled with shithole nations like Turkey, the better.

Steve
Steve

Germany wanted the cheap labor. Sounds familiar doesn’t it?

whiskey tango foxtrot
whiskey tango foxtrot
August 16, 2018 5:05 pm

I hear the Turks are using dollars to blow their nose. From here on I take my change in coin.
Or as my old man used to say. “Put that down. You don’t know where that thing’s been”.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
August 16, 2018 5:49 pm

If the European Elites think they can just slice up and dine on Turkey like they did spineless Greeks, they will be dead wrong. This time the joke is on the EU Banksters who can eat their losses. Turks are not going to negotiate away one grain of one beach. Europe can send their integrated sissy army to Turkey and they will be torn to pieces by a Fire Breathing Muslim Monster that will tear Brussels a new ass hole that makes the Battle of Gallipoli look like a success. Forget Diplomats and trades; try to screw Turkey and Europe will reap huge fires, countless bombs & bullets, slit throats and European blood pouring in streets.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
  robert h siddell jr
August 16, 2018 9:29 pm

You’re tootin’ right about the Turks- they think nothing of having 10,000 man human wave attacks with 90% mortality if they think they have a chance of defeating the enemy, and the survivors would be making ear necklaces of their enemy to show their grandpa back home. The Greeks are indeed spineless, but you know if there is a 1 in a billion chance that Greece could do something that would start World War III, they would do it in a heartbeat with a smile.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
August 16, 2018 7:37 pm

The Bretton Woods agreements have feuled Dollar global hegemony after Nixon closed the gold window in 1971. The agreement that stated OPEC would sell barrels of oil to buyers solely in U.S. dollars…this is why U.S. debt has been so attractive an investment since the 70s…but times are a changing as was evident with Russia’s and Turkeys dumping of held U.S. treasuries throughout this year…wonder if China has been secretly dumping some of its holding as well?

The BRICS will absorb Turkey into the One Belt One Road initiative and be used as a springboard into the Eurozone for Chinese products…to counterbalance the tariffs and provide new markets for Chinese goods for when the acceleration of dollar dumping ensues and when the Dollar, almost overnight, Will leapfrog the Yuan in the global race to the bottom being pushed by the fractional reserve central banksters

Mark
Mark
  PlatoPlubius
August 16, 2018 11:28 pm

Wonky but interesting:

Econimica

No Seller, Let Alone China, Can Disrupt US via Selling US Treasury’s…But the “Why” Ain’t Good

https://econimica.blogspot.com/2018/08/economic-fear-mongeringchina-to-disrupt.html

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
  Mark
August 16, 2018 11:48 pm

The treasuries and securities were just the tip of the iceberg. They now have trillions of cash dollars they want to use against US and buy friends globally. They want to harm our trade; they dominate oil and gold. The NeoCons have made us a host of bitter enemies.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
  robert h siddell jr
August 17, 2018 6:48 am

China has 2 big problems that they’ve always had. One problem is perennial-feeding their people. The second problem is the one country that will immediately respond to China’s grab of power- Imperial Japan.

PlatoPlubius
PlatoPlubius
  Mark
August 17, 2018 12:30 am

And the crazy thing is the FED has announced this hahaha….Quantitative tightening aka offloading all the u.s. govt debt it purchased as buyer of last resort under Quantitative easing…
It seems like the life support plug out into place after the 2008 flatlined is being slowly turned off if that’s even humanly possible.

Even scarier as you said.

All its going to take is one black swan

CCRider
CCRider
August 16, 2018 8:42 pm

The Trumpster has painted himself into a corner. If he had kept with his campaign position that we were in “one big, ugly bubble” and assigned the blame where it truly belongs, the Fed, he could have inoculated himself from the consequences of the inevitable fall and he’d have painted the fed into that corner instead. Instead he took the low hanging fruit and claimed himself as the final determinate of economic activity. So maybe all those blinking red lights (see Peter Schiff) don’t matter. Maybe the flattening of the yield curve now doesn’t matter. Maybe all those tanking markets overseas doesn’t matter. Maybe that we typically have economic slow downs every 8 years or so and we’re now in the 10th year of ‘recovery’ don’t matter. And maybe it does.

You’re either acting on principle or you’re playing THEIR game.

Mark
Mark
  CCRider
August 16, 2018 11:30 pm

Rut Roh…

“Flattening of the yield curve is happening so slowly no one noticing the 2s-10s gap is now 24 bps. Meanwhile yields on 30s are back to 3.02% & falling. Trump and media are talking pickup in US growth, but global institutional investors not buying it, and see trouble in the rest of world.”
Dr. Harald Malmgren

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
August 16, 2018 9:38 pm

Erdogan is a Madman and don’t be surprised if they instigate a war with the Greeks. Many Greeks believe that there will be one great last war between Greece and the Turks where in the end they will be practicing the Divine Liturgy again in Hagia Sophia. Considering the proposed maps of Turkish borders that Erdogan is talking about on their TV, I’d say that war will be sooner rather than latter.
comment image

Mark
Mark
  Coalclinker
August 16, 2018 11:36 pm

Sounds like all somebody has to do is shoot an Archduke and its off to the trenches!

Johnny Gee
Johnny Gee
August 17, 2018 8:52 am

Our ALLY Turkey? These were the guys who surrounded our bases with troops last year. Cut the power, and tried to keep us from removing the nuclear weapons on site as they moved their troops closer to the base? I’d hate to see people he describes as enemies.

Stucky
Stucky
August 17, 2018 11:13 am

YAWN!

Jeebus Henry Krist, every time another country goes into the shitter there’s an article that THAT COUNTRY is America’s future.

I could swear that just last week I read that America’s future is Venezuela!

Only 231 more countries to go ……