The Trend is Not Your Friend

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

The be-Muellered, bothered, and bewildered American public may find US-China trade talks about as interesting as a rain delay in an Orioles-Chisox game, but the Friday collapse of negotiations may be marked by historians as the day that the global economy died. The Big Box blue-light-special orgy of bargain shopping ran about thirty years, with China exuberantly pumping out cheap consumer goods to feed the US beast-of-Mammon. Americans happily payed for it all with IOUs based on long daisy chains of previous IOUs. Tom Friedman of The New York Times said it would last forever. Alas….

The paradigm kicked off for one simple reason: energy flows dictated capital flows. By the mid-1980s, the non-OPEC world was once again swimming in oil from the last great bonanzas of the oil age: The Alaska North Slope and the North Sea. Twenty years later, they were running down. Meanwhile, the USA had fecklessly “offshored” its factories in the mistaken belief that we had entered a shimmering new digital economy of virtual business were nobody had to make real stuff. China became the world’s workshop and the USA became the world’s financial bucket-shop, churning out endless swindles and frauds. The predictable result was financial crisis of 2008, which coincided with oil prices rising to over $140-a-barrel (and six months later they crashed, with the economy, to under $30-a-barrel).

The “recovery” from that was based on Wall Street’s premier swindle: the shale oil “miracle,” based on high-risk lending to companies that couldn’t make a red cent even while accomplishing the majestic stunt of exceeding America’s old 1970 oil production peak of around 10 million barrels-a-day (now at around 12 million). Notice, too, that the final push to 12-million barrels occurred during the last two years: thus, Mr. Trump’s miracle economy. All that, to paraphrase the immortal words of Mr. Dylan, balances like a mattress on a bottle of wine.

The China-US trade impasse, if it stands for even a few months, will crash the US economy again and it will also crash the price of shale oil back to levels that destroy oil companies. You understand, of course, that the rise of shale oil was amazingly swift, ten years, and that its fall will be similarly fast and furious. The feds may have to either bail it out or nationalize the whole shootin’ match — and that will end up as just another rat-hole we pound sand into, along with our long-running campaign to build failed states overseas. Translation: not so good for the value of the US dollar.

We’re moving into a summer of grave discontent. I don’t believe that China-US trade relationship can be repaired. The disturbances we have set in motion will surely unleash the wicked animus against the USA that has been building among other nations since before 9/11/01. Even the Europeans, our old pals, have soured on us. The war hawks are steering our ship-of-state into reefy waters. The dithering Federal Reserve (America’s central bank) has painted itself into a corner with years of interest rate suppression and market manipulations. Bad weather in the American breadbasket portends rising food prices for us, and less to export (or give away) to the really hungry corners of the world. Less food makes for belligerent nations.

There is already enough tension in the world as it faces not just the end of a global trade fiesta, but a world-wide synchronized economic depression. This is the one from which there will be no “recovery” but only adaptation to lower standards of living and new arrangements for getting by. In other words, the contraction will be permanent. Our fantasies about the super high-tech nirvana of endless leisure with sex robots will dissolve with it. The dark apprehension of all this has already produced a psychotic break in US politics. We now live in a land where Nabisco uses transsexuals to sell Chips Ahoy cookies .  Next to us, the old Weimar Republic looks like a Boy Scout camporee.

This economic meltdown will play into the worst insecurities of Mr. Trump, the Golden Golem of Greatness. His domestic political antagonists long ago declared all-out war on him. The perpetually rising stock market was all that tempered his behavior in the face of that obloquy. With the economy fizzling, he will fight back Golem-style, like a demon from the underworld. But for all of Mr. Trump’s Teutonic neuroticism, he holds an advantage in that battle: the documented facts appear to show that he was unfairly persecuted for two years by opponents who outsmarted themselves in actually breaking the law, and they are on the run before a gathering juggernaut of referrals for indictments. The craziness of their desperation is now on view for all to see in the antics of the House committees.

All this raises the question: can this country hold itself together? Mr. Trump would be a most unlikely figure to provide the necessary moral support. He’s no Franklin Roosevelt reassuring the immiserated masses with fireside chats over the radio, and he sure ain’t Fiorello LaGuardia, reading the Sunday funnies to people out of work and out of luck. But never forget that history is a trickster. Even the profoundly flawed sometimes strangely find themselves on the hero’s journey.

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35 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 13, 2019 10:53 am

“Teutonic neuroticism…”

Best case of projection ever.

Drud
Drud
  hardscrabble farmer
May 13, 2019 9:22 pm

Yes, but “another rat-hole we pound sand into” is multi-layered brilliance.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 13, 2019 11:16 am

Jim paints a realistic picture of a very dim future, like he did last week and the week before and the week before and the week before and the week before and…

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
  Anonymous
May 13, 2019 1:01 pm

No, he points out that it got worse with the collapse of trade talks…

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  pyrrhus
May 13, 2019 10:54 pm

He’s quite wrong about that. We are in the cat bird seat, not the Reds. We can make everything here again, more efficiently than before and with Mexico and Canada involved our supply chains are much shorter and benefit our immediate neighbors greatly which reinforces our position.
China does not have one friggin’ thing we need that we can’t make better here. Since they spy on everybody and steal IP and trademarks and trade secrets we should treat them like the syphyllitic whore they are. Trump is also 100% right that anybody using Huawei or any Slope tech in their 5G infrastructure is persona non grata for any relationship requiring digital communication.

mulga mumblebrain
mulga mumblebrain
  Harrington Richardson
May 14, 2019 9:29 pm

Do you think that your racist Sinophobia might just be a little deranged?

Old Toad of Green Acres
Old Toad of Green Acres
May 13, 2019 11:25 am

Black flies are just coming out here.
The trannies are reading books to elementary kids, even the libtard neighbors are home schooling.
Looking good from here so far.
Can even venture a guess that the future is looking bright.
Time to put the screen door on.

Grog
Grog
  Old Toad of Green Acres
May 13, 2019 11:36 am

The Future’s so Bright…

[youtube

Gloriously Deplorable Paul
Gloriously Deplorable Paul
  Grog
May 13, 2019 11:58 am

Now the future’s so bright I gotta wear night vision goggles.

Ottomatik
Ottomatik
May 13, 2019 11:39 am

It occurs to me that the failed tariff negotiations have fallen in line with planetary election alignment.
2020 is officially over, just the macabre media machinations left to watch.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 13, 2019 11:51 am

So even Kunstler could buy into the fact that the “profoundly flawed” Trump is the Grey Champion of our times.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
  Anonymous
May 13, 2019 1:02 pm

Yes, interesting…

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  Anonymous
May 13, 2019 11:06 pm

There has only been one “perfect man” and he was murdered by politicians and the hierarchy of his religion. Trump is flawed like all men but has his shit wired way tighter than any who oppose him. I can easily subscribe to the idea of him being that Grey Champion. “Profoundly flawed” is a gross overstatement.
I can’t wait to see all these limp dick Deep Staters groveling for mercy. Grand juries will be empaneled shortly and I expect the first indictments before July 4.

jimmieoakland
jimmieoakland
May 13, 2019 11:54 am

“Our fantasies about the super high-tech nirvana of endless leisure with sex robots will dissolve with it. ” Hey, Jim, you could have left us with a little hope.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
May 13, 2019 12:07 pm

Someone finally used the word “Mammon”.

“Mammon /ˈmæmən/ in the New Testament of the Bible is commonly thought to mean money, material wealth, or any entity that promises wealth, and is associated with the greedy pursuit of gain. “You can not serve both God and mammon.”

And this is why I believe greed is, ultimately, more destructive than envy.

KeyserSusie
KeyserSusie
May 13, 2019 12:58 pm

Am I wrong in thinking the trade war is just another name for tit for tat taxes? On the little guys and mass consumers? To benefit the usual suspects?

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  KeyserSusie
May 13, 2019 11:09 pm

Yes, you are misled. These tariffs go into the treasury, not the pockets of the fuqueres who tried to get richer by sending jobs and factories overseas. It squeezes them and may even cause them to move back at least to North America if not the US.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
May 13, 2019 1:59 pm

Kunstler’s “thing” has always been energy and all it would take to roll in Kunstlerland would be to see Iran shut down the strait. Then the sparks would fly.

lisa
lisa
  NickelthroweR
May 14, 2019 11:31 am

that will happen. be ready to be not surprised.

~L
~L
May 13, 2019 2:00 pm

Anyone who has skin in this game of trade sanctions w negative effects, well, put bluntly, that sucks.
Ripple effects will spread wide & far, for many, as ‘things’ just become too damn expensive, and will be sacrificed.
Suppliers who market those things will then have less discretionary monies to spend, so, The Broken Window Fallacy will be proven as a false means of stimulating economic activity, where all benefit.
Lower standards of living indeed.
Some will adapt ok, many already have.

It’s too bad that the vital necessities couldn’t somehow be judged, and exempted, separate from the toys & knick knacks.
The non-vital things that gobble up the cash of impulsive spenders…that can be a healthy pare-back.
Most cheap clothing fits here.

The resale stores and garage / estate sales routinely have piles of junk that Granny couldn’t help herself buying, accumulating decades worth, finally selling for pennies on the dollar, or getting donated, after she passes, and the heirs just want to be rid of it all.

Americans are drowning in it.
They’ll soon get a taste of what the great-great grandparents experienced, circa 1929-1939, eh?

Ignore truthful history at one’s peril, as it rhymes, & repeats.
Dog Eat Dog is coming.
Whole new meaning to Food Fight

Intensity in way more than 10 cities.
Tighten your belts.
Rough ride ahead.
Good Luck, platform advocates.

Stucky
Stucky
May 13, 2019 2:03 pm

Has Trump come up with an insulting nickname for Chinese President Xi Jinping?

No? Then things are just fine!

I’ll start worry if Trump call him President Jizzing … or, whatever.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  Stucky
May 13, 2019 11:11 pm

“Jizzing”. LMAO!

We Shall Live in Interesting Times
We Shall Live in Interesting Times
May 13, 2019 3:00 pm

Don’t sweat the small stuff. The Chinnee leadership group is standing in deep doo-doo, or if you want to say it nicer, they are caught between a rock and a hard place. They moved a large percentage of the Chinese population into cities and promised them the good life. All the Chinese people are actually experiencing the good life and eating all they want every day for just about the first time in the 4,000 to 6,000 years of Chinese history. If they start going hungry in large numbers, violent revolution is just around the corner. Unofficial news sources say that hundreds of small, unorganized demonstrations are harshly suppressed every year. What happens when tens of thousands of demonstrations, riots, insurrections, or whatever you want to call them, happen in every city?

The production of grains and soybeans in China is suffering from lingering low temperatures and flooding, same as here. A very large percentage of their pig herds have been killed and buried in a futile attempt to stop the Swine Flu epidemic. Chinese folks do love their fried pork, and are importing pork like crazy from the DSSA, but many woks will be only half full for the next few years. The Han people have grown accustomed to being able to “Wok Around the Clock”. A small fly in the ointment is that pigs eat lots of grains and soybean meal, just like people. So China needs to import lots of grains and other ag products, but the world production of ag products is dropping.

You all know about the projected drop in ag production here due to extended winters and yearly flooding, but there are problems elsewhere that create problems with ag production. Ukraine was considered the “breadbasket” of the Soviet Union, but no more. Internal war with the Donbas region, bureaucratic incompetence, and the greed of competing oligarchs have destroyed Ukrainian grain production. The productive regions of South America are having their problems, too, due to drought, other bad weather, and a blizzard of regulations from socialist governments.

When Hundreds of Millions of ethnic Han began suffering serious starvation, two outcomes are likely. Nobody knows which scenario will play out, so the Chinese leadership is working frantically to effect a soft landing to the coming crisis. Why else would they buy-up the formerly productive farmlands of Zimbabwe, South Africa, and other failed African states?

The first scenario involves China dissolving into internal warfare and competing warlord states will arise. They will slaughter the current leadership. They would like to come to the DSSA and slaughter all of us, but logistics will be too difficult, so they will settle for killing all the Communist Party cadre who led them astray.

The second scenario involves the majority of the Han rallying behind their leadership and launching wars of conquest and plunder against any of the neighboring states that are in marching distance. The Chinese have had their eyes on the riches of Siberia for a long time and are slowing infiltrating into the southern reaches of Siberia even now. With a population of 1.1 Billion, China can stand to lose 200 or 300 Millions of soldiers without blinking an eye.

If Trump holds on long enough, and the Chinese leadership can stand a small loss of face, the Chinese Communist Party leadership will relent and make an agreement favorable to the oligarchs of The Empire. However, if the farmers here scream loud enough at Trump, he will, like General Jubilation T. Cornpone, snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

The blind who will not see
The blind who will not see
  We Shall Live in Interesting Times
May 13, 2019 3:12 pm

We can always just mandate the production of higher percentage ethanol fuels.
That will fix everything.

Stucky
Stucky
  We Shall Live in Interesting Times
May 13, 2019 3:14 pm

Fantastic BALANCED response!!

The news seems to be heavily focused on how fucked America will be …. BUT very few tell the whole story; that China will be fucked also.

We Americans can do without a LOT of the cheap shit crapfuk stuff the Chinee peeps send us. Let’s see what happens when 1.3 Billion Chinee peeps start going hungry.

We Shall Live in Interesting Times
We Shall Live in Interesting Times
  Stucky
May 13, 2019 5:21 pm

Plaudits from the great Stucky! This poor scribe is both honored and humbled. I will light a joss stick in thanks for your generosity when next I visit the temple of revered ancestors.

I have such respect for your writing abilities that I give you permission to edit and improve my poor thoughts and then post for further discussion, if you so desire.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  Stucky
May 13, 2019 11:24 pm

We cannot forget the Three NO’s. No Banks, No water, No women. They will be fucked and in addition have nothing TO fuck. Maybe they will save their economy by building those concubine robots we hear so much about?

mulga mumblebrain
mulga mumblebrain
  Harrington Richardson
May 14, 2019 9:36 pm

Perhaps they will follow your example, old boy, and fuck themselves.

Ivan
Ivan
  Stucky
May 14, 2019 12:39 am

Let’s call it trash and trinkets from walmaart

mulga mumblebrain
mulga mumblebrain
  Stucky
May 14, 2019 9:35 pm

Wishful and nassty thinking, my racist, Sinophobe, acquaintance. ‘Whistling past the grave-yard’.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  We Shall Live in Interesting Times
May 13, 2019 11:20 pm

Great comment. I would suggest Trump keeps the ag sector in line as the ag products China is boycotting can be mitigated with a few subsidies that amount to little more than a rounding error in an economy the size of ours. Plus, as a face saving move, China IS buying a lot of our ag stuff via third parties. There is a hell of a lot of activity at the grain elevators I pass regularly for this time of year and the BNSF and Union Pacific are running like I have never seen around here.

We Shall Live in Interesting Times
We Shall Live in Interesting Times
  Harrington Richardson
May 13, 2019 11:45 pm

Same here. The Co-Op’s are selling that crap to someone. They are even selling the semi-rotten stuff that was stored on tarps stretched on the ground and covered with other big tarps. Apparently without good ventilation fans running constantly, the grain becomes too moist and deteriorates. One of the truckers hauling over to the railroad terminus told me that the local Co-Ops are allowed to mix a certain percentage of bad stuff in with the good stuff.

mulga mumblebrain
mulga mumblebrain
  We Shall Live in Interesting Times
May 14, 2019 9:33 pm

Racism makes the Exceptionals go stark, raving, mad. That scenario of collapse followed by internecine slaughter fits the rotting corpse of the late, ingrate, USA far more closely than China.

Gaius Tacitus
Gaius Tacitus
May 14, 2019 1:39 am

We’re fucked

John Galt
John Galt
May 14, 2019 9:35 am

The feds may have this time found their inflation fix. They will be checking the canary in the inflation mine daily, soon. They need inflation, now and fast to curb their money printing effects. Monetary nor fiscal policy cant do it. Embargo’s and china selling off treasury’s will. Banks and insurance company’s are licking their chops. Recently 2m cattle died in the floods. Feed in the US needs to be planted by june 14th and only 9% is planted. Look for meat to skyrocket prices by year end. Buy your freeze dried meats NOW! Or face 5 years of massive inflation of meat and the new normal of double the meat cost because like gas after Katrina ($1.87 is now normal at $2.50). Meat at $4.89 ground now will be $14 and new normal will be $8.99 after year 5.