Either continue on the State-cartel path of complexity and rising costs that leads to a death spiral, or re-energize the forces of the market and community.By Charles Smith
We are
constantly told all our problems are too complex to be addressed with simple
"big idea" solutions. Complex problems require complex solutions,
we are assured, and so the "solutions" conjured by the Central
State/Cartel Status Quo are so convoluted and complex (for example, the
2,319-page Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act or the
2,074-page Obamacare bill) that legislators say they must "pass the bill
to see what's in it." (What If We're Beyond Mere Policy Tweaks? February
6, 2012)
The real "solution"
is to see that complexity itself is the roadblock to radical reformation of
failed systems. Complexity
is the subterfuge the Status Quo uses to erect simulacra "reforms"
while further consolidating their power behind the artificial moat of
complexity.
Nature is complex, but it operates
according to a set of relatively simple rules. The interactions can be complex
but the guiding principles can be, and indeed, must be, simple.
Big Idea One: Radically lower
the cost basis of the entire U.S. economy. The cost basis of any activity is
self-evident: what are the total costs of the production of a good or service?
The surplus produced is the net profit which can be spent on consumption or
invested in productive assets (or squandered in mal-investments).
We can understand surplus by way of simple examples. If it costs two barrels of oil to extract one barrel of oil from a well, there is no surplus at all to this activity; rather, it is a losing proposition. If it costs $100 to plow, plant, nurture and harvest $50 of crops, there is no surplus generated by this economic activity.
Anyone pursuing these kinds of
zero-surplus activity will soon go broke and be eliminated from the financial
"gene pool" of investors.
Central States and cartels by definition face no market forces on their cost basis. Central States (governments) have no competition and so there are no market pressures to contain costs. As a result, governments are intrinsically incapable of radically reducing the cost basis of their activity.
Cartels (the sickcare
industry, the defense industry, etc.) by definition profit by fixing prices,
not by adapting to competition, and so rising costs are simply shifted to
consumers, with the aid of an over-regulating, moat-building
"complex" Central State.
Unproductive layers of
activity are essentially friction within the economy ( How
Much of Our Economy Is Essentially Friction? September 20, 2011), and as with a
machine, when the friction consumes all the surplus, the machine freezes up.
Greece is an excellent example of this dynamic.
As I explain in Resistance,
Revolution, Liberation, there are
three fundamental forces in society: the State, the market and community (i.e.
the non-market social order).
As friction from the State and
its crony-capitalist partners, the various cartels, inevitably rises, the
surplus left to distribute via entitlements or invest shrinks.
The State has two mechanisms
to counter this decline in surplus: it raises taxes on the productive
enterprises and people, and redistributes that money to less productive dependents
of the State via entitlements. Secondly, it prints money and redistributes the
new cash.
Both are short-term
expediencies that inevitably lead to collapse. Once taxes skim the economy's surplus for
consumption, there is not enough left over to invest in productive assets that
increase productivity. This triggers a death-spiral (positive feedback loop):
as productivity stagnates, so does the surplus generated by economic activity.
This leads to lower tax revenues, so the State raises taxes on the remaining
productive elements, further bleeding the economy of funds that could be
invested in future productivity gains.
Printing money debases the
purchasing power of the existing currency, and over time this destroys the
value of the currency and the wealth of those holding the currency. As people
retreat to gold and land, the liquid capital necessary to invest in new
ventures dries up, adding to the death-spiral described above.
In essence, the State and its
cartels raise the cost basis of getting by from $10,000 to $40,000 by letting
unproductive friction absorb all the economy's surplus. Layers of bureaucracy,
paperwork and outright fraud consume roughly half of the funds spent on
healthcare in the U.S.--not coincidentally, this aligns with the fact that the
U.S. spends twice as much per person on sickcare compared to our
developed-world competititors.(The
"Impossible" Healthcare Solution: Go Back to Cash July 29, 2009)
The State overcomes this by
raising taxes on the productive and printing money.The State's "solution" isn't to reduce
its own fiefdoms' spending or dismantle the high-friction cartels: it's to tax
or print $30,000 and send this money to those making $10,000, so they can
consume as much as those earning $40,000.
As noted above, consuming the
nation's surplus in consumption and friction starves the nation of
market-driven productive investment, which then leads to the death spirals of
lower productivity and rising unproductive friction.
The only way to lower the
actual cost basis of the economy is to reduce the role and power of the Central
State, dismantle its favored cartels and re-empower community and the market
forces of innovation and competition. The Central State and its cartels are
incapable of innovation or reducing costs because they dominate the market and
the community.
Community must play a central
role in lowering the cost basis. The market cannot address all problems, though
its ideological boosters wear blinders that demand allegiance to nothing but
the market.
Community gardens are
non-market social orders that enliven and empower communities and
neighborhoods, yet their "market value" is negative: on a strictly
cost basis, the food produced by agribusiness is cheaper on a
kilocalorie/dollar basis than the food raised by community members in their
garden. But this calculation is akin to reducing a human to a handful of ash
and valuing that person at the market value of the calcium and other minerals
in the ash.
Much of value in human life is
beyond the market. Agribusiness would rather the State send money to people so
they can sit at home "consuming" TV and media and then go out and buy
highly profitable packaged food that sickens their bodies and spirits. That is
the end result of an economy dominated by the State and cartels: a deeply and
perniciously pathological society and economy.
Market forces in housing see
the "solution" as wealthy Elites and corporations buying up all the
housing and then renting it to recipients of State aid for high rents. Co-ops,
co-housing and a host of other community housing solutions that radically lower
the cost-basis of housing are rejected because they don't generate large profits.
Their purpose is to lower the cost of housing while greatly enhancing its
liveability and non-market value--"assets" that the market simply
doesn't recognize unless they can be exploited for high profit margins.
This is why both the
non-market forces of community and the market forces of efficiency and profit
must share the economy if the cost basis is to be radically lowered. If people only make
$10,000 in the market economy, the State's solution is to redistribute or print
$30,000 so their consumption can equal that of people earning $40,000.
The solution I suggest is to
radically lower the cost basis of the economy so those earning $10,000 can live
simply and well on what they earn.
This solution does not compute
for the Central State and its protected cartels, as they would lose their
dominance over the economy. They have chosen the death-spiral for our future,
and that's what we'll get until we restore some equilibrium between the State,
the market and the non-market community.
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