Will Everything Change In 2020-2025 Or Will Nothing Change?

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Any domino-like expanding crisis will unfold in a status quo lacking any coherent response.

Longtime readers know I’ve often referenced The Fourth Turning, the book that makes the case for an 80-year cycle of existential crisis in U.S. history.

The first crisis was the constitutional process (1781) following the end of the Revolutionary War, whether the states could agree on a federal structure; the 2nd crisis was the Civil War (1861) and the 3rd crisis was global war– World War II (1941).

According to this proposition, we’re fast approaching an existential crisis that could upend the status quo in a fundamental fashion.

While there is a great deal of historical evidence for cycles, predicting a major transition based on previous cycles is obviously a guess rather than a certainty.

So will everything change in 2020-25, or will the present simply extend another five years? We have to start by defining what qualifies as fundamental change. In my view, if the current distribution of income, power and ownership of capital remains unchanged, nothing of import has changed.

There might be dramas playing out in the political theater, but if the asymmetrical distribution of income, power and wealth doesn’t change, then the dramas are merely another form of distraction / entertainment.

The other type of change that qualifies as fundamental is the breakdown of the structures of everyday life: the distribution, cost and availability of food, fresh water, energy, healthcare, income and basic security.

One way to measure the vulnerability of any society to breakdown or a fundamental reshuffling of income, wealth and power is to examine its buffers–the resiliency and reserves of the core systems.

I often reference buffers, as these are largely invisible to everyone who isn’t intimately familiar with the workings of each system: the reserves that can be drawn upon in crisis, the redundancies, the staff and management training to handle crises, and so on.

Two examples that are often referenced are the supplies of gasoline in service stations and the food in supermarket shelves and coolers. Each commodity–food and fuel–are largely “just in time,” meaning that the supply and distribution system is a long, complex chain with minimal buffers, as the systems have been optimized for efficiency not resilience.

Any disruption in any link of the supply chain will break the entire chain.

The ultimate buffer for any nation-state is its currency, a.k.a. “money.” If its currency still acts as a store of value globally, the nation in crisis can issue more money to buy whatever is needed to alleviate the crisis.

If trust in the value of the money has been lost by over-issuing new currency, this buffer has been depleted.

Social and cultural buffers are more difficult to assess. Deeply corrupt societies may find that the public’s patience with the abuses of power that manifest as endemic corruption has thinned to the point that mustering the police and army no longer protects the status quo.

Natural systems also have buffers, and the industrial civilization we inhabit takes a variety of natural resources–fuels, fresh water and fertile soils–for granted, assuming that brute force (more chemical fertilizers, more wells, more fracking, etc.) will guarantee ample supplies of these essentials.

Financial systems have multiple points of resilience or fragility. If we take the 2008 Global Financial Meltdown as an example, the Federal Reserve created or backstopped / guaranteed an astonishing $27 trillion out of thin air to restore trust. (The first tranches totaled $16 trillion.)

It worked a decade ago, but saving the banks does not necessarily restore the “animal spirits” of borrowing more money to chase assets higher, and it certainly doesn’t boost investments in productivity, the ultimate source of broad-based prosperity.

It also doesn’t create more income for heavily indebted borrowers, and with interest rates globally at or near zero (or even lower), there is very little room to lower the cost of servicing existing debt.

It certainly feels as if financial “fixes”–making it cheaper to borrow and refinance existing debt–have run their course, and have entered the fatal decline of diminishing returns: every additional dollar of debt adds less and less real growth to the economy.

I’ve also referenced institutional sclerosis and the rising wedge model of breakdown, in which costs and complexity continue edging higher while the output of the higher costs and complexity stagnate.

One example of how finance, politics and institutional fragility come together is public pensions, many of which are based on unrealistic financial projections of endlessly rising profits, capital gains and taxes.

We are now in the longest expansion in modern history, yet it doesn’t feel as robust as the expansions of the 1950s to early 1970s (les trente glorieuses, the “glorious 30” years of magical expansion 1945-1975) or the financialization/cheap oil boom of the 1980s or the Internet boom of the 1990s.

History informs us that crises that could have been handled with relative ease in the past, when buffers were wide and core systems were resilient, end up triggering a domino-like collapse of entire empires.

These phase shifts often follow periods of financial depression, drought or pandemic (the three often go together as people who get less to eat have compromised immune systems that are then vulnerable to epidemics) that erode the economy and core institutions.

If we put all this together, it seems we are facing a much different type of crisis this time, one in which the core systems of the economy and society have become increasingly fragile behind the thin facade of stability, and are thus more vulnerable to disruption.

The crisis of 1781 was essentially a struggle to balance the forces of state and federal power, a balance that already included the divisive issue of slavery.

By 1860, the political compromises that had duct-taped the Union without actually resolving the great divide between slave and free states collapsed, and the issue was resolved by war.

In 1941, a U.S. possessive of its relative isolation was forced to choose between an increasingly precarious isolation and a decisive battle with the Nazi Reich and the Japanese Empire.

What might change in 2020-2025? Perhaps nothing, if all the duct-taped “fixes” for the increasing asymmetries of income, wealth and power hold, and food, fresh water and energy remain cheap and abundant.

But it feels as if the resiliency of society, governance and the economy have thinned to the point that any one domino falling might knock down many others, leading not to a specific crisis such as war or a political struggle, but a generalized failure of the entire status quo: a collapse of indebtedness, a collapse of overly complex and unaffordable institutions, a sharp drop in the purchasing power of fiat currencies, a loss of faith in political processes, a collapse of trust in technocratic expertise and the mass media, and possibly scarcities of essentials that could drive prices much higher.

History suggests these systems are all interconnected and interdependent (i.e. tightly bound systems), so the collapse of one system triggers crises in all the systems it is connected to.

The possibility of such a cascading crisis of the entire status quo isn’t even on the radars of the government, media, academia, corporations, etc. There are indications that the Pentagon has contingency plans that recognize the fragility of global systems, but at this point any domino-like expanding crisis will unfold in a status quo lacking any coherent response.

*  *  *

This essay was drawn from Musings Report 27. The Musings Reports are emailed weekly to subscribers and patrons at the $5/month or higher level.

Pathfinding our Destiny: Preventing the Final Fall of Our Democratic Republic ($6.95 ebook, $12 print, $13.08 audiobook): Read the first section for free in PDF format. My new mystery The Adventures of the Consulting Philosopher: The Disappearance of Drake is a ridiculously affordable $1.29 (Kindle) or $8.95 (print); read the first chapters for free (PDF). My book Money and Work Unchained is now $6.95 for the Kindle ebook and $15 for the print edition. Read the first section for free in PDF format.

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16 Comments
EC
EC
September 4, 2019 5:23 pm

Maybe 330 million brain surgeons in America really do need to carry a cell phone in case of an emergency. Maybe we really do need to carry a case of water in 16 oz plastic bottles in our 35 mpg vehicles. Maybe we do need to drive 2 to 50 miles everyday to go somewhere to do something really important. Maybe we do need to suction every last drop of oil from the planet so we can heat or cool our house to a comfortable 68 – 72 degrees year around. Maybe we do need that lawn and pool to give the public evidence of our Americaness, our badge of belonging.

Maybe the future holds even more luxuries to enjoy, to mold our environment into a heaven on earth with portable toilets, portable water, portable food, portable communication devices, portable homes, portable jobs, portable everything.

Or maybe the future holds a concentration camp with ruthless guards to quash and quell any complaining. Hungry? Here’s two lashes across the face to help with that. Miss your cell phone? Here’s a hammer to go break a ton of rocks into gravel. Sexually undecided? Here’s a shovel to clean out the shit in the latrines.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  EC
September 4, 2019 5:37 pm

Gotta love those ‘what will the future bring?’ articles. Who knows, who really cares because its all conjecture, idle conjecture and don’t mean nothing except buy my book read my blog send money yada yada…

EC
EC
  Mygirl...maybe
September 4, 2019 5:44 pm

About as credible as an atheist writing an article on faith.

EC
EC
  EC
September 4, 2019 6:41 pm

About as astonishing as a liar trying to parse the difference between lying and being just plain wrong.

22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
  EC
September 4, 2019 6:03 pm

I’m leaning towards concentration camps, but who will guard

the guards who guard the guards?

EC
EC

Dykes on bikes.

John Galt
John Galt
  EC
September 4, 2019 11:15 pm

Maybe we need low iq brown people to immigrate here by the millions illegally so they too can live the high life and use up more resources to kill the environment that these leftist are so conspcerned about along with a carbon tax.

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
September 4, 2019 5:38 pm

…”but a generalized failure of the entire status quo: a collapse of indebtedness, a collapse of overly complex and unaffordable institutions, a sharp drop in the purchasing power of fiat currencies, a loss of faith in political processes, a collapse of trust in technocratic expertise and the mass media, and possibly scarcities of essentials that could drive prices much higher.”

Maybe…..chaos?

annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum <<<<—– the plan

"The possibility of such a cascading crisis of the entire status quo isn’t even on the radars of the government, media, academia, corporations, etc."

that 'possibility' is not on the radar….. it's in their crosshairs

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  ordo ab chao
September 5, 2019 8:52 am

“Maybe…..chaos?”

Ya think?

22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
22winmag - Unreconstructedsouthernerbygraceofgod
September 4, 2019 6:38 pm

The USSA follows after Rhodesia and South Africa, or does it?

https://www.bestgore.com/murder/video-current-gang-war-escalate-cape-town-south-africa/

Overthecliff
Overthecliff

Unjust like St. Louis.

Ben A. Round
Ben A. Round
September 4, 2019 7:37 pm

So something might happen, or it might not?

Vote Harder
Vote Harder
September 4, 2019 9:04 pm

When the democrats said shortly after Trump’s election that they wanted to use the 25th amendment to unseat Trump I thought they were crazy and not Trump. I now believe there may be some truth in that. What a fukking idiot!

Trump VS. the Meteorologist:

Trump clings to idea Alabama faced big threat from Dorian

https://apnews.com/416144d854fb4302a9f34cccae81b0e0

Idiots everywhere
Idiots everywhere
  Vote Harder
September 4, 2019 11:19 pm

If djt tries he is ridiculed if he ignored bama and it hit he would be ridiculed. These leftist are retards.

TC
TC
September 4, 2019 10:50 pm

There’s a scene in the movie Goodfellas where the restaurant owner needs a favor, so the mob boss takes him on as partner. The boss then runs up every possible credit line he can get, buying food, supplies, whatever then running it right out the back door reselling for a discount. Once all the credit lines were tapped, and the restaurant didn’t have another dime to it’s name, they burned the place to the ground for the insurance money.

This is precisely what these elitist pedo assholes are doing to our country.

SMK
SMK
September 5, 2019 8:15 am

So if we’re in a fourth turning everything will change. If it doesn’t, then the fourth turning never came.