We have been careful to avoid detailed or specific predictions of what is going to happen during the 2008 Depression. Certain symptoms, like the housing price and tax receipt collapses, are 'baked into the cake.' In this post, we will look at some macro-scaled trends of this Depression, and what shapes they may take in coming years.
The first trend is a monetary crisis. This Depression, like every other, involves economic contraction. This was brought about by too many people and organisations assuming more debt than they could feasibly service. As these debtors inevitably began to default, the world economy began to contract. This process will continue until all untenable debt world-wide has defaulted or been renegotiated.
This unstoppable contraction is putting considerable pressure on all monetary systems. The world-wide paper money experiment is unable to cope in its present form with this force, and is in a state of crisis. Central bankers are aligning their respective policies to inflate the money supply in an attempt to combat the economic contraction. They may succeed in creating consumer price inflation, but they will not be successful in arresting the ongoing contraction.
This phase of the 2008 Depression does not necessarily spell the end of the paper money experiment, but it guarantees at least one large and unpredictable shift in policy. Whether this will cause rising consumer prices or falling consumer prices is unimportant to the macro trend. Suffice it to say that money as it is known today will be rapidly changing in the near future.
The second trend, which will serve to reinforce the contraction of the world economy, is that of increasing energy scarcity. Peak oil, long considered a crackpot theory, is indeed a reality: production of light sweet crude oil, the most potent and versatile natural energy source, peaked in 2004 and has begun an irreversible decline. There is no way to reverse this trend... but we will save more detailed discussion for a later post.
As energy becomes increasingly scarce, the world economy will increasingly contract. What energy is available will be increasingly diverted towards high-value-added processes. The world economy has hit the wall of falling energy availability, and will be forced to adapt to the new energy reality.
These two macro trends -- monetary crisis and energy scarcity -- are ones to be very aware of in the coming years. The 2008 Depression will make working against these trends ruinous. It would be wise to avoid institutions and investments which ignore these trends, or simply assume these trends will be managed without ill effect. If one recognises these trends are not temporary, one can plan more effectively for the future.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
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