The
Lint Age
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
When Ben Bernanke
gave his speech to the London School of Economics on Tuesday, our
reporter was on the scene. Terry Easton put a tough question to
America's central banker: aren't your interventions just making
the situation worse, he wanted to know.
Amid the blah...blah...blah...of
Bernanke's response was this:
"The tendency
of financial systems to boom and bust ...is a very long-standing
problem... but I think it's very important for us to try to put
out the fire...then you think about the fire code."
In his 1988
book, The
Collapse of Complex Societies, Joseph Tainter argued that
all societies – like all organisms – are doomed. Tainter studied
ancient Rome as well as the Mayan civilization. He noticed that
problems always blaze up. Each one – whether climatic, political
or economic – rings the firehall bell. And each solution – and readers
may substitute the word "bailout" for solution – brings more challenges
and takes more resources. Finally, the available resources are worn
out.
Tainter observes
that when the costs become high enough, people seem to give up.
By the end of Roman era, for example, the burdens of empire were
so heavy that people sold themselves into slavery to get free of
them. So many people did so at one point that the authorities had
to come up with another solution; they outlawed the practice. Henceforth,
Roman citizens were required by law to remain free!
Another philosopher,
Giambattista Vico, writing in the 18th century, put the beginning
of the decline of Rome roughly at the time of the Great Fire during
Nero's reign. Nero, partly to pay for his post-fire reforms and
reconstruction, began taking the gold and silver out of the coins.
All civilizations go through three stages, Vico said – divine, heroic,
and human. The divine period is ruled by the gods. The heroic period
is adorned with victories and statues. Then, comes the human era.
(Here, we permit ourselves to add a footnote to Vico's oeuvre: the
coin of the realm in early periods is the gods' money – gold. Later,
people switch to money of their own invention – the kind of money
you make from trees.) This last stage, says Vico, is when popular
democracy arises, along with rational thinking and what Vico delightfully
calls the "barbarie della reflessione" [the barbarism of reflection].
In earlier eras, people do what their gods and leaders ask of them.
In the final era, they ask, "what's in it for me?"
Even as late
as the early 60s, John F. Kennedy could still appeal to heroic
urge without drawing a laugh. "Ask not what your country can do
for you," he said in his inaugural address, "ask what you can do
for your country."
But 11 years
later, Richard Nixon, like Nero before him, began the process of
debasing the country's money. That was a solution too; the United
States had spent too much. Nixon could worry about the fire code
later. First he opened up with the fire hose; he defaulted on America's
promise to exchange dollars for gold at the statutory rate.
Barack Obama
tried a Kennedyesque appeal to civic high-mindedness last week.
We need to "insist that the first question each of us asks isn't
'what's good for me' but 'what's good for the country my children
will inherit,'" said the president-elect. But now, like Doric columns
in a trailer park, the words are ornamental, not structural. They
are the homage that one age pays to a better one.
We are in the
21st century now. Barbarous reflections rise up like swamp gas.
The whole place stinks of them. Bernanke and Obama offer solutions.
But their plans to save the world from a correction are little more
than a swindle. They offer to bail out the mistakes of one generation
with trillions of dollars' worth of debt laid onto the next.
"Regarding
the current financial meltdown," writes Rony Teitelbaum, "it is
very clear that two main factors underlie the political reactions
to the crisis, the first being pressure originating from ties between
the financial and the political elect, manifested by taxpayer bailouts
of large institutions that continue to deliver bonuses to the executives
and donate to political campaigns. For those of us who are not blind,
these are clear signs of political corruption which would have made
the worst Roman emperor blush. The second factor is political pressure
originating from the mass public. The kind of solutions offered
so far, and I may add which were received with very warm enthusiasm,
were tax rebates and gasoline tax holidays. These are actions aimed
at a public who "impatiently expected quick and obvious results,"
to quote Cary's description of Roman society in AD300. (A History
of Rome)."
Circa 2009,
there is hardly a soul in the entire world who has not been corrupted
by the barbarie della reflessione of the late imperial period. Both
patricians and plebes are for bailouts. Both business and labor
back stimulus programs. The taxpayers and the politicians who rule
them are of one mind. Liberal, conservative, rich, poor, Republican,
Democrat all speak with a single voice: "Screw the next generation!"
The golden
age is over, in other words. In the space of 40 years it passed
from gold, to silver, to paper...and is now somewhere between plastic
and navel lint.
January
20, 2009
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
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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