The Height of Idiocy

Guest Post by Doug Casey

height of Idiocy

“The only element in the universe more common than hydrogen is stupidity.”

– Einstein

I’m not a fortune teller. In fact, the only things anybody knows about predicting – even if you gussy the concept up by calling it “forecasting” – are 1.) Predict often and 2.) Never give both the time and the event.

The worst offenders are those who pretend they know where the economy’s headed.

Statistics – so often the basis of conjecture with regard to the economy – are so subject to interpretation, and so easy to take out of context, that most of the time they’re best used as fodder for cocktail party conversations.

Still, as potentially wrong-headed and tendentious as the subject is, “the economy” is occasionally worth talking about simply to establish a clear point of view.

In fact, I place the phrase “the economy” in quotes because I don’t even accept the validity of the concept, nor that of “the GDP”; they’re both chimeras.

The idea of GDP gives the impression that it is not individuals that produce goods and services, but rather a machine called “the economy.” This leaves the door open to all manner of nonsense, like the assertion that what may be good for individuals may not be good for the economy, and vice-versa.

For instance, an advance in the GDP doesn’t necessarily mean increased prosperity: What if the government embarked on a massive pyramid building program, an archetypical example of public works? GDP might rise, but it would add absolutely nothing to the well-being of individuals. To the contrary, the building of the pyramid would only divert capital from wealth-generating activities.

On the other hand, if a scientific breakthrough was made which cut energy consumption by 80% for the same net output, or magically eliminated all disease, the GDP would collapse because it would bankrupt the energy and health industries.

But people would be vastly better off.

Entirely apart from that, the whole idea of GDP gives the impression that there actually is such a thing as the national output.

In the real world, however, wealth is produced by someone and belongs to somebody. We’re not ants or bees working for the hive. The whole idea of a GDP just allows the “authorities” to bamboozle people into believing they can actually control “the economy,” as if it were some giant machine.

The officials pretend to be the Wizard of Oz, and Boobus americanus is trained to think they’re omniscient. Thus whenever the rate of growth slips “too low,” officials are expected to give “the economy” a suitable push. Conversely, whenever “the economy” is growing too fast, the officials are supposed to step in to “cool” it.

It’s all an embarrassing and destructive charade.

Nonetheless…

I remain of the opinion that we’re headed into the biggest economic smashup in history.

That’s an outrageous statement, and it’s always dangerous to say something like that. After all, the longest trend in motion is the Ascent of Man, and that trend is unlikely to change; indeed, it’s likely to accelerate. And it’s usually a mistake to bet against an established trend.

Furthermore, science and technology will continue advancing, people will continue working and saving, entrepreneurs will continue to create. And downturns in the economy have always been brief. There’s a good case for staying bullish.

Even most of those who talk of a recession tend to write it off as either a simple reversal of recent “irrational exuberance,” or a passing change in people’s psychology, or a temporary shock. Unfortunately, it goes much deeper than that. Those things have very little to do with what recessions are all about.

A recession, according to the conventional parlance, is a period when economic activity declines for two or more quarters. That’s a description of what happens, but it’s really not very helpful, much like saying a fever is a period during which your temperature is above 98.6 F. A better definition of a fever might be a period when the body’s temperature is elevated as a consequence of fighting an infection, in that it gives you some insight into the cause as well as the effect.

That’s why I prefer to say a recession is “a period of time when distortions and misallocations of capital caused by the business cycle are liquidated.”

What causes the business cycle? Excess creation of credit by a central bank (e.g., the Fed). The injection of artificially created money and credit into a country’s economy gives both producers and consumers false signals, causing them to do things which they otherwise would not do. The longer the upswing of a business cycle continues, the longer and more severe the down cycle will be.

A depression is just a really bad recession.

One thing that – contrary to popular opinion – can help get an economy out of a recession is a large pool of savings; savings give people the money to invest in new production, as well as the money to buy that production.

That’s why it’s the height of idiocy for pundits to talk about how patriotic it is to go out and shop. It can only deplete the capital that will be needed in the future, and deepen the bottom with more bankruptcies, stealing consumption from the future.

That’s why the Fed’s artificially low interest rates is such a bad idea; it encourages people to save less and borrow more. This engineered decline may well, after a certain lag time, cause a cyclical upturn – but it will only aggravate the underlying problem, guaranteeing yet a bigger bust.

This isn’t just an American problem, because the U.S. is truly the engine of the world’s economy. But a lot of the drive behind the engine is the gigantic trade deficit. The hundreds of billions the U.S. sent abroad in the last year alone, after over a decade of increasing deficits, has caused a lot of capital investment that will become uneconomic, and created a lot of economic activity that will come to a screeching halt when that deficit inevitably reverses.

The whole world is levered on what happens in the U.S.

The effect in economies around the world will be devastating. The Smoot Hawley tariff of 1930, which acted to collapse world trade, greatly exacerbated the last depression. It could be that economic conditions in the U.S. alone could do it this time, without the overt “assistance” of the government.

I don’t believe we’re looking at just another cyclical downturn this time. We could be – but I don’t think so.

Of course, since the dollar is by far the biggest market in the world, constituting the reserves of almost every government on the planet, the de facto currency of probably 50 countries, and the savings of hundreds of millions of people around the world, when it collapses, it will cause a financial earthquake, Magnitude 10.

Use any rallies as selling opportunities. Diversify your assets out of the U.S. Build a good position in gold. Buy gold stocks with speculative capital. Get your debt, if any, down to comfortable levels.

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7 Comments
Dr. Zedder Strangelove
Dr. Zedder Strangelove
October 5, 2022 7:24 pm

Lesson Number #1. To save money(wealth). Produce more than you consume.
Lesson Number #2. To get a free ride. Consume as much as you can. Save Nothing.
Lesson Number #3. Lesson Number #2 will be bailed out. Using the wealth of Lesson #1.
Become Your Own Debt Slave By Using Government To Steal From Others.
“BYODSBUGTSFO” Joe Biden

Ken31
Ken31
  Dr. Zedder Strangelove
October 6, 2022 2:13 am

It is in Revelation. There is no shame from taking what of Babylon you can get without violating the Law. The Law still requires us all to work.

Marky
Marky
October 5, 2022 8:53 pm

tendentious?

It would have been much more lucid to have accoutered the word “bias contrary to instigation of a dictionary. How pretentious and utterly vexatious it condescended.

Marky
Marky
October 5, 2022 9:08 pm

if a scientific breakthrough was made which cut energy consumption by 80% for the same net output, or magically eliminated all disease, the GDP would collapse because it would bankrupt the energy and health industries.

Yes people would be free of the shackles of their power and why truth must be silenced, knowledge must be hidden, conflicts, disease and their solutions must be created to maintain wealth, control and its illusion . Quite the paradox

Ken31
Ken31
  Marky
October 6, 2022 2:16 am

Almost everything we know is a lie, because this hiding of knowledge game is so very old. The information age threatens to undo 10000 years of work, so they are using vast resources to subdue it.

Ken31
Ken31
October 6, 2022 2:11 am

There are a few who understand “the economy”. They are insiders with the keys to the kingdom. For everyone else it is very deliberately opaque. Even these insiders are subject to the whims of the mob, which is the entire point of “the great reset” better understood as the great enslavement attempt. They do not think it is “fair” that there should be unpredictable variables in their game.

Jdog
Jdog
October 7, 2022 4:46 pm

Economic cycles are not caused by credit, but they are intensified by them. We had credit cycles long before rampant credit was part of our everyday economy. Economic cycles are a natural result of mankind’s ego and his propensity to lie to himself.
It does not take too many prosperous years to convince most people they are wealth geniuses who are incapable of making bad decisions. At this point their ego is likely to override their good judgement and allow them to believe they are capable of taking bigger chances than they would otherwise. It is also their ego that pushes them to live above their income and that they deserve to have things they may not be able to really afford.
The biggest difference between a person who grows their wealth throughout their life, and one that repeatedly suffers economic setbacks is their philosophy about the purpose of money. One believes money is a tool to make more money, and the other believes it is a means to get the material things they desire.