Eternal
City, Chronic Trouble
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
DIGG THIS
No modern government
policy is so stupid that the Romans didnt think of it first.
A visitor to
the Eternal City, even if he has been many times before, feels his
jaw drop and his pulse rise. The city is still a magnificent ruin
a
vast memento mori recalling every absurdity and corruption known
to man. Here we begin ab ovo, as the Romans used to say with
the egg.
At the far
end of the Largo di Torre Argentina, for example, is the spot where
Julius Caesars body was ventilated. Poor Julius. His wife
warned him. His soothsayer warned him. Even his friends warned him
that something was up. Still, the man who had conquered Gaul and
brought Vercingetorix back to Rome in chains, and then triumphed
in the civil war against one of Romes greatest generals, Pompey,
dismissed his guards and walked into a cheap ambush by politicians,
one of whom was probably his own son. Tu quoque, fili mi,
[you too, my son] he said to Brutus as he was going down, after
the unkindest cut of all. But that is the amazing thing about the
Romans and modern man too; even when the traps are as obvious as
bailouts and Baghdad, they sashay right in.
And over there
at
the Domus Aurea, was Neros golden palace; a place that saw
such debauches as to make Britains royals perhaps with
the exception of that ancient Edward seem like archangels.
Neros mother was Caligulas sister, with whom she an
inappropriate relationship. She plotted against Caligula,
and when he was out of the way, married her uncle, Claudius. She
poisoned Claudius
and his son, Britannicus, too, so that her
own son from a previous marriage Nero could become
Emperor. Then, fearing that she was losing her grip on her son,
she seduced him. But by that time, he was so deep into carnality
with slaves, senators wives and castrated boys, that her motherly
charms couldnt hold him. So, she tried to kill him. He beat
her to the punch, sending his soldiers to skewer her. Tacitus reports
that she died in a theatrical way; strike my womb, she
told them.
Our beat is
money, not history. But today we pick through Romes huge trash
pile to try to learn something.
Everything
started to go wrong in the time of Marcus Aurelius, say most historians.
Soldiers returning from the Parthian war brought the first major
plague epidemic with them. There was a revolt in Egypt. And Germanic
tribes pushed across the Danube and the Rhine.
But the real
problem began much, much earlier, practically ab ovo. From the very
beginning, the Romans picked fights with the neighbours. The small
colony had a shortage of females, so the Romans carried off the
women of a nearby tribe. They was sobbin, sobbin,
sobbin
fit to be tied, as the song puts it. From
there, one local tribe after another was subdued. And each successful
campaign elevated the power and wealth of Rome and led, like antipasto
to primo platti, to the next campaign.
As a business
model, Romes strategy was obviously flawed; like a credit
bubble, it required constant expansion. Still it was nice in the
beginning. The early days of the Roman Empire were like the early
days of the British Empire or the American Hegemony. Expansion opened
up new markets and brought in new supplies of raw materials at better
prices. Not only was there booty; there were also slaves.
Nothing fails
like success. The slaves had an effect on the domestic labour market
of the time not unlike Chinese and Indian peasants on todays
labour rates. The price of free labour fell. Another familiar consequence
was an increase in speculation and what we would call financialisation
of the economy. Instead of farming themselves, ambitious Romans
outsourced, setting up huge agricultural estates all over the empire,
which were operated by slaves. This had a further effect of lowering
prices on farm products. Small, independent landowners couldnt
compete. They went to the cities. Or, they joined the army.
Eventually,
Roman expansion reached its limits under Trajan. Then, the military
machine gradually changed from a profit-making institution manned
by Romans, to an expensive peace-keeping force staffed largely by
barbarians. Worse, the clattering of chains was no more to be heard
in the Delian slave market. Now the problems really began. The government
had begun distributing free bread, in order to keep the urban mobs
quiet, a program similar to todays tax rebate cheques. Already,
under Augustus, one in five people in Rome depended on the dole.
Then, Romes balance of trade grew increasingly negative. This
gave rise to something else that will be familiar to us: inflation.
Nero took 10% of the silver out of the denarius. Then, under Marcus
Aurelius, it was down to 75%. Finally, by the third century, the
denarius was made of brass, with a silver coating. Consumer prices
soared. Diocletians solution was very similar to what Richard
Nixon would do many years later The Edict of Prices, a system
of price controls.
With
no more slaves shuffling into the city, Rome turned to its remaining
small farmers. First, it subsidised the farmers with the
alimenta like our own crop support programs.
Then, desperate for food, it requisitioned grain and cattle from
them directly
and forced the farmers to stay with their land,
like serfs. The farmers situation became so miserable they
began to sell themselves into slavery. This traffic became so heavy
that the government banned the practice in 368AD.
Modern politicians
and central bankers have nothing on their ancient forebears. Bailouts
monetary
stimulus
subsidies
giveaways the Romans had a solution
for every problem. And every solution brought new problems
until
the weight of them crushed the whole empire.
May
9, 2008
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2008 Bill Bonner
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