Are You Ready for the Coming Debt Revolution?
There is a spectre haunting America…and all the developed
nations of the world.
It is the spectre of a debt revolution.
We left off yesterday talking about how
the economy of the last 30 years — and especially that of the last six years —
has favoured the old over the young.
‘Rise up, ye young’uns,’ we as much as said, ‘you have nothing
to lose but your parents’ debts.’
We showed how the value of US corporate equity, mainly held by
older people, had multiplied by 28 times since 1981.
That was no honest bull market in stocks; it was a market sent
soaring by an explosion of credit.
But what did it do for young people whose only assets are their
time and their youthful energy?
Alas, the real economy has
increased by only five times over the same period.
A grim
and menacing spectre
And when you look more closely at work and wages, the spectre
grows grimmer and more menacing.
Average hourly wages have barely budged in the last 30 years.
And average household incomes have fallen — from $57,000 to $52,000 — in the
21st century.
But as our fingers came to rest yesterday, there was one
question hanging in the air, like the smoke from an exploded hand grenade: Why?
Was this huge shift — of trillions of dollars of wealth from
young working people to old asset holders — an accident?
Was it just the maturing of a market economy in the electronic
age?
Was it because China took the capitalist road in 1979?
Or because robots were competing with young people for jobs?
Nope…on all three counts.
First, old people, not young people, control government.
Ultra-wealthy campaign funders like Sheldon Adelman and the Koch
brothers were all born in the 1930s. The big money comes from wealthy geezers
like these, eager to buy candidates early in the season when they are still
relatively cheap.
Old companies fund most Washington lobbyists, too.
And old people decide elections: There are a lot of them…and
they vote. They know where the money is.
Second, the government — doing the bidding of old people —
restricts competition, subsidises well-entrenched industries, raises the cost
of employing young people, and directs its bailouts, cheap credit, and
contracts to the greybeards.
Third, the credit-based money system increases the profits and
prices of existing capital. It encourages borrowing and spending. This rewards
the current generation while pushing the costs into the future.
Grandparents
prey on grandchildren
None of this was an accident. None of it would have happened
without the active intervention of the old folks, using the government to get
what they could never have gotten honestly.
This is not the same as saying they were completely aware of
what they were doing and what consequences their actions would have.
We doubt the Nixon administration had any idea what would happen
after it tore up the Bretton Woods monetary system in 1971.
It was behind the eight ball, fearing foreign governments would
call away America’s gold.
Few in the White House realised they had made such a calamitous
mistake when the president ended the convertibility of the dollar into gold.
And yet it created a world in which parents and grandparents
could prey on their grandchildren…for the next 44 years.
And it’s still not over.
The new credit money — which could be borrowed into existence
with no need for any savings or gold backing — was just what old people needed.
We have estimated that it increased spending by about $33
trillion over and above what the old, gold-backed system would have allowed.
That spending lifted the value of the geezers’ assets and
increased their living standards.
Meanwhile, the average 25-year-old reporting for work in 2015
can’t expect a single dollar more in real hourly wages than his father did in
1980.
The total value of outstanding US corporate bonds was 17% of GDP
in 1981. Now, it’s $11.6 trillion — or 65% of GDP.
What did corporations use that money for?
Some of it went into capital investment that made companies more
productive and more profitable. But much of it went where you would expect it
to go: to buy back shares…to acquire other companies at inflated prices…and to
pay off executives as the value of their share options went up!
Who did this benefit?
Mostly people over 50.
Government debt is
even worse. Unlike most personal debt, it doesn’t go to the grave with the
person who borrowed it. It sticks around to burden the next generation — who
got nothing from it.
Federal debt in 1980 was less than $1 trillion. Today, it is $18
trillion. That money was used to fund federal programs — few of which provided
any benefit to young people.
An accident? A mistake?
Partly. But old people must have known what they were doing.
Their lobbyists asked for the spending. Their politicians voted
for it. Their companies enjoyed the revenues. And they pocketed much of the
money.
When the economy threatened a correction, they demanded more
credit on easier terms to keep the money flowing. And when their credit balloon
popped in 2008, they whined to the feds to protect their ill-gotten gains.
Honest capitalism? Not if they could prevent it.
Creative destruction? Not on their watch.
Pay for what you get? Not if they could put the bills on the
next generation.
Young people of the world, unite!
Regards,
Bill Bonner
Source: Daily Reckoning
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