We have learned nothing since 1999 except the Central State and Central Bank will intervene in the market to bend price and risk to serve the Status Quo.
If we learn
nothing, then we deserve to lose. This is not a popular concept in America at this point in its
history, when monumental errors are denied, excused, rationalized or quickly
absolved by those who committed them.
As a small-fry
investor, when I veer away from my discipline and system, I predictably lose
money. As I sift the ashes of the trade, I always remind myself: if I learn
nothing from my studies and experience, then I deserve to lose.
What exactly has
America learned since January 1, 1999, 13 years that included two stupendous
financial/credit bubbles, two hot wars and an explosion in public and private
debt? If we
examine the policy changes and institutional changes since the 2008 global
financial meltdown, then we have to conclude that we've learned a very few
things:
1. We've learned
that the way to "repair" the catastrophic damage of a financial
bubble bursting is to inflate another financial bubble in another asset class.
2. Systemic
incentives will be put in place for everyone to speculate in the new bubble,
with two important caveats: the Financial and Political Elites will get to play
the game with moral hazard, i.e. their
gains will be private and their losses socialized, and second, these Elites will not be governed by the rule of law; blatant systemic fraud and embezzlement will be ignored or forgiven.
gains will be private and their losses socialized, and second, these Elites will not be governed by the rule of law; blatant systemic fraud and embezzlement will be ignored or forgiven.
In other words,
some are more equal than others when it comes to the founding precept
"everyone is equal before the law."
3. The Central
Bank (the private Federal Reserve in the U.S.) will sacrifice purchasing power
to lower interest rates and flood the economy with liquidity, i.e. nearly-free
money for Power Elite speculation and leverage to inflate the new asset/credit
bubble.
4. The Central
State will address all post-bubble problems by borrowing and squandering
trillions of dollars to prop up the Status Quo and transfer Financial Elite
losses to the public/taxpayers.
5. These
"solutions" are part of a broader strategy of
"problem-solving" that can be summarized as "doing more of the
same." If doing more of the same doesn't work, then do even more of the
same until you resolve the "problem" by bending the market to your
will.
6. To create the
perception that the Power Elites have actually solved the structural issues
rather than just paper them over, then minor "reforms" will be passed
that tweak the parameters of the Status Quo without actually changing the power
structure: who owns most of the national wealth and income stream, and who
controls the political process that diverts an increasing share of the national
income stream to State fiefdoms and corporate cartels.
We can find an
analogy to these "lessons learned" in a spoiled teenager who refuses
to study and is failing but discovers that cheating can "save the
day" with much less effort than actually learning. We as a nation have learned how to cheat, and
now we think that learning how to cheat and create the perception that we've
actually learned something can be substituted for making the necessary
sacrifices to actually learn something.
When the
cheating controls the marketplace to prop up asset prices and mask systemic
risk, then we are in effect giving ourselves "straight A's" even
though we have torn up the test, i.e. how our policies work in a transparent,
open marketplace.
Thirteen years
of cheating have created a dangerous confidence that we can keep cheating by
controlling the market forever. The problem for the Central State and Central Bank is that
socializing the market via cloaked intervention is qualitatively no different
than direct command-economy control as practiced by the former Soviet Union:
the real market cannot be destroyed, it can only be pushed underground.
This is why the
black market flourishes in command economies.
In the U.S., the
market has been manipulated and suppressed but there is no black-market outlet
for reality. As a result, the market will reassert itself in the one market
that is allowed, overpowering the State and Central Bank manipulation.
What we have
learned in the past 13 years is the market can be suppressed and controlled
forever by a dominant State and Central Bank. But markets cannot be suppressed
forever, any more than risk can be eradicated, and so that lesson will have to
be unlearned.
The spoiled teen
can get through high school by cheating, but eventually he/she will have to
navigate reality without the benefit of having learned anything except how to cheat.
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