The
Greater Depression
by
Doug Casey
by Doug Casey
It's
been said that if you spend 15 minutes a year thinking about the
economy, you're wasting 13 minutes. That's generally true. But as
an amateur historian, I can't help myself. And I'm forced to believe
that this is a time when the subject is worth some real thought.
My
view is that the longest, and certainly most important, trend in
history is the ascent of man. I have little doubt that it will not
only continue but accelerate. But that doesn't mean there won't
be nasty setbacks along the way. As I have said before, possibly
the best definition of a depression is a period when most people's
standard of living drops significantly. You can also define it as
a period when distortions in the economy and misallocations of capital
are liquidated. The distortions are almost always the result of
government intervention in the economy, through things like taxes,
regulation and currency inflation.
Those are the factors that caused the unpleasantness that began
in 1929. Since the government is exponentially more powerful and
invasive today than it was in either the 1920s or the 1970s, I expect
the consequences will be much worse this time around. Things could
have come unglued, and almost did, back in the 1970s. I don't see
how we'll dodge the bullet this time. Although that's not really
a good analogy, for reasons we don't have time to explore in depth,
a depression is probably inevitable this time.
The
only serious question in my mind is whether it will be essentially
deflationary in nature, as it was the case in the U.S. in the 1930s,
or inflationary like in Germany in the 1920s. My guess is the latter
because the government is so much more powerful today. Or it could
actually be both at once, in different sectors of the economy.
How?
Inflation
could drive interest rates to 20%. This would collapse the bond
and real estate markets, wiping out trillions of dollars of purchasing
power – which is deflationary. Meanwhile, that same inflation doubles
the cost of food and fuel. In other words, the opposite of what
we've mostly had for the last generation, when we had "good" inflation
in stocks, bonds and property, but stable or dropping prices in
"cost of living" items. This time the pattern could reverse, which
would be a nightmare for most people.
And
as people become more focused on speculation in a generally futile
attempt to stay ahead of financial chaos, they inevitably divert
effort from economic production, which will decrease the general
standard of living even more.
The
situation isn't made easier by the possibility that we're facing
Peak Oil – the start of a secular decline in world oil production.
Or the fact that Americans, both individually and collectively,
are deeply in debt and living on the kindness of strangers. The
problem with debt is that it artificially increases our standard
of living. But when we pay it off, especially with interest, it
reduces our standard of living in a very real way.
Wrap
this economic environment around the so-called War on Terror, which
is rapidly morphing into the War on Islam, which could easily turn
into World War III, and you're looking at the perfect storm. The
odds of a major conflagration are very high, and it's not being
adequately discounted. If Bush starts a war against Iran, or if
another incident like that of 9/11 occurs, or even if the trend
of the last five years accelerates, the U.S. is going to be locked
down like one of its numerous new federal penitentiaries. And that
will be accompanied, and compounded, by mass hysteria among Boobus
Americanus.
At
that point, your investment portfolio will be among your lesser
concerns. People forget that, in every country and time, there's
a standard distribution of sociopaths and misdirected losers. In
normal times, they seem like normal people. But when the time is
right, they show their colors, and they love to get jobs with the
government, where they can lord it over their betters.
You
may be asking yourself: Is the Greater Depression really inevitable?
How bad will it be? Is there another side to the argument? Can it
be avoided?
I
suppose it's not absolutely inevitable. Perhaps friendly aliens
will land on the roof of the White House and present the government
with a magic technology that can undo all the damage it's done.
But we live in a world of cause and effect where actions have consequences.
That being the case, I expect truly serious financial and economic
trouble. And the government will make it vastly worse by trying
to "do something" instead of recognizing itself as the cause and
backing off. I don't see any way out.
How
bad will it be? In historical terms, the last depression was relatively
short and mild. The longest depression on record was the Dark Ages.
Residents of the old USSR and Mao's China suffered through a depression
that lasted decades. I'm not predicting it will be that bad, if
only because the U.S. has basically much sounder traditions and
institutions and vastly more accumulated capital. But it's hard
to overestimate how serious this could be. I sometimes joke that
it will likely be worse than even I think it will be.
Getting
back to whether it's truly inevitable, it's a question of degree.
The recession of the late 1970s and early 1980s involved a terrible
stock market, 15% inflation with interest rates to match, 10% unemployment
and a near war with the USSR. But the country not only hung together,
it went on to a tremendous rebound. My guess is, however, that the
last 20 years of good times will later be viewed as an economic
Indian Summer before a harsh winter.
The
good news, of course, is that no matter what the economic conditions,
technology – which is the mainspring of human progress – will keep
advancing. And many individuals will continue innovating, saving
and improving conditions for themselves and their associates. Also,
it's entirely possible to go through even the worst of times and
not get hurt. Indeed, to profit from them. If the price of a house
you want now but can't afford falls 75% (as outrageous as that may
sound at the moment) while your own investments in the high-quality
gold stocks we follow in our International Speculator quadruple,
you're much better off. That house now really only costs you one-sixteenth
of what it did before. Of course it's a problem for the guy who
has to sell his house... but I always prefer to look at the bright
side of the equation. There's time now to structure your affairs
so that you're on the right side of the trade.
Keep
your eyes peeled for signs that indicate it's about to get ugly.
One obvious indicator to watch is how the price of gold is running.
Gold is the only financial asset left in the world that's either
safe or cheap. It's also underowned and largely unrecognized, which
is why the smart money has been moving into it.
Then
there's the CPI itself – although I don't think it's very accurate,
in that all the adjustments, exclusions, weightings and what-nots
the government has insinuated into it over the years makes the CPI
as much of a floating abstraction as the dollar itself. It's funny
how the government plays with figures for fear of hurting confidence.
They believe the economy rests mainly on confidence, which, ironically,
in today's world, is true. Unfortunately, confidence can blow away
like a pile of feathers in a windstorm – and we have a class-5 hurricane
coming. If the economy were sound and people for some reason lost
confidence, the currency and the banks would be unhurt, and the
next day things would go back to normal. But that's not the world
we live in. So, higher CPI numbers are another thing that could
destroy confidence and supercharge the gold price. They're coming.
Higher
interest rates, which we're already seeing, will inevitably burst
the real estate bubble, which is floating on a sea of mostly adjustable-rate
debt, a lot of it interest-only or even with negative amortization.
Higher rates will also crush bonds and probably stocks. And they'll
devastate the economy since everybody is deeply in debt. However,
I feel the Fed will keep short-term rates – which are really the
only ones they control – as low as possible for as long as possible.
For one thing, they don't want a recession, which this time could
snowball into the Greater Depression. For another, my guess is that
they want to gradually depreciate the dollar against other currencies,
in part to decrease the chronic, massive trade deficit. And because
increasing the number of dollars makes people think they're richer
than they really are, it can stimulate some additional spending...but
these days that spending is mostly done on credit, so it is only
illusionary.
The
biggest single problem, however, is that there are trillions of
U.S. dollars outside of the U.S. Unlike Americans, foreigners have
no reason to hold them. And at some point very soon, perhaps when
the Fed finally hits the wall on its ability to raise rates, these
overseas dollars are going to start flooding back home, while the
products and titles to real wealth flow out of America.
Therefore,
when the trade deficit starts turning around – which most people
will think is a good thing – that will be the real tip-off the game
is over. Trillions coming back to the U.S. will skyrocket long-term
interest rates and inflation. The dollar will go into freefall.
But
although I think these are the things to watch, to my way of thinking
it makes no sense to wait until the stampede starts to try to get
out the door. If you haven't done so already, take advantage of
the current correction in gold to begin repositioning your portfolio
for what's next.
June
8, 2006
Doug
Casey (send him mail) is
the author of the best-selling Crisis
Investing
and The
International Man and editor and publisher of the International
Speculator. This first appeared on Bill Bonner's
Daily Reckoning.
Copyright
© 2006 Doug Casey
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