The
global economy is toast. All that's left is the distribution of the
burned bits.
The six one-offs that drove growth and pulled the
global economy out of bubble-bust recessions for the past 30 years
have all reversed or dissipated. Absent these one-off drivers, the
global economy is stumbling off the cliff into a deep recession
without any replacement drivers. Colloquially speaking, the global
economy is toast.
Here are the six one-offs that won't be coming
back:
1)
China's industrialization
2) Growth-positive
demographics
3) Low interest rates
4)
Low debt levels
5) Low inflation
6)
Tech productivity boom
Cutting to the chase, China bailed
the world out of the last three recessions triggered by credit-asset
bubbles popping: the Asian Contagion of 1997-98, the dot-com bubble
and pop of 2000-02, and the Global Financial Crisis of 2008-09. In
each case, China's high growth and massive issuance of stimulus and
credit (a.k.a. China's Credit Impulse) acted as catalysts to restart
global expansion.
The boost phase of picking low-hanging fruit via
rapid industrialization boosting mercantilist exports and building
tens of millions of housing units is over. Even in 2000 when I first
visited China, there were signs of overproduction / demand
saturation: TV production in China in 2000 had overwhelmed global and
domestic demand: everyone in China already had a TV, so what to do
with the millions of TVs still being churned out?
China's model of
economic development that worked so brilliantly in the boost phase,
when all the low-hanging fruit could be so easily picked, no longer
works at the top of the S-Curve.
Having reached the
saturation-decline phase of the S-Curve, these policies have led to
an extreme concentration of household wealth in real estate. Those
who favored investing in China's stock market have suffered major
losses.
This is the problem with overproduction as a model of
endless growth: it eventually overwhelms demand and the income needed
to pay for it.
Where China's workforce was growing during the
boost phase, now the demographic picture has darkened: China's
workforce is shrinking, the population of elderly retirees is
soaring, and so the cost burdens of supporting a burgeoning cohort of
retirees will have to be funded by a shrinking workforce who will
have less to spend / invest as a result.
This is a global
phenomenon, and there are no quick and easy solutions. Skilled labor
will become increasingly scarce and able to demand higher wages
regardless of any other factors, and that will be a long-term source
of inflation. Governments will have to borrow more - and probably
raise taxes as well - to fund soaring pension and healthcare costs
for retirees. This will bleed off other social spending and
investment.
The era of zero-interest rates and unlimited
government borrowing has ended. As Japan has shown, even at
ludicrously low rates of 1%, interest payments on skyrocketing
government debt eventually consume virtually all tax revenues. Higher
rates will accelerate this dynamic, pushing government finances to
the wall as interest on sovereign debt crowds out all other spending.
As taxes rise, households are left with less disposable income to
spend on consumption, leading to stagnation.
At the start of the
cycle, global debt levels (government and private-sector) were low.
Now they are high. The boost phase of debt expansion and debt-funded
spending is over, and we're in the stagnation-decline phase where
adding debt generates diminishing returns.
The era of low
inflation has also ended for multiple reasons. Exporting nations'
wages have risen sharply, pushing their costs higher, and as noted,
skilled labor in developed economies can demand higher wages as this
labor cannot be automated or offshored. Offshoring is reversing to
onshoring, raising production costs and diverting investment from
asset bubbles to the real world.
Higher costs of resource
extraction, transport and refining will push inflation higher. So
will rampant money-printing to "boost consumption."
The
tech productivity boom was also a one-off. Economists were puzzled in
the early 1990s by the stagnation of productivity despite the
tremendous investments made in personal and corporate computers, a
boom launched in the mid-1980s with Apple's Macintosh and desktop
publishing, and Microsoft's Mac-clone Windows operating system.
By
the mid-1990s, productivity was finally rising and the emergence of
the Internet as "the vital 4%" triggered the adoption of
the 20% which then led to 80% getting online combined with
distributed computing to generate a true revolution in sharing,
connectivity and economic potential.
The buzz around AI holds that
an equivalent boom is now starting that will generate a glorious
"Roaring 20s" of trillions booked in new profits and
skyrocketing productivity as white-collar work and jobs are automated
into oblivion.
There are two problems with this story:
1) The
projections are based more on wishful thinking than real-world
dynamics.
2) If the projections come true and tens of millions of
white-collar jobs disappear forever, there is no replacement sector
to employ the tens of millions of unemployed workers.
In the
previous cycles of industrialization and post-industrialization,
agricultural workers shifted to factory work, and then factory
workers shifted to services and office work. There is no equivalent
place to shift tens of millions of unemployed office workers, as AI
is a dragon that eats its own tail: AI can perform many programming
tasks so it won't need millions of human coders.
As for profits,
as I explained in There's Just One Problem: AI Isn't
Intelligent, and That's a Systemic Risk, everyone will have the same
AI tools and so whatever those tools generate will be overproduced
and therefore of little value: there is no pricing power when the
world is awash in AI-generated content, bots, etc., other than the
pricing power offered by monopoly, addiction and fraud - all extreme
negatives for humanity and the global economy.
Either way it goes
- AI is a money-pit of grandiose expectations that will generate
marginal returns, or it wipes out much of the middle class while
generating little profit - AI will not be the miraculous source of
millions of new high-paying jobs and astounding profits.
What we
now have is a hyper-centralized, hyper-connected (i.e. tightly
bound), hyper-globalized and hyper-financialized global economy of
extreme fragility, over-indebted and hollowed out by speculation,
fraud, corruption, leverage, sclerosis and by an unbreakable
addiction to doing more of what's failed spectacularly.
The
downside slide into recession and polycrisis-collapse is not as fun
as the boost phase. Concentrating assets, capital, control, debt and
leverage also concentrates risk, which eventually leaks through the
illusion of resilience and melts down the entire economy.
In a
word, the global economy is toast. All that's left is the
distribution of the burned bits. Those who end up with collapsing
currencies experience hyper-inflation, and those who manage to wallow
in deflation experience stagnation as the best-case scenario. In all
cases, the pool of creaky policies from the 1930s that will actually
work has dried up; all the "fixes" that were solutions in
the past are now accelerating the slide into a post-bubble recession
with no visible exit.
from the blog of Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com on August 11, 2024
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