by
Charles Hugh Smith
The dream of every
conventional reform movement is to rid the system of its dysfunctional features
while preserving the Status Quo.
But
what the reformers don't understand is that the Status Quo is dysfunctional not
because of bad policies or a few corrupt officials--it is corrupt and
dysfunctional from the ground up.
Dismantle
the dysfunctional parts and you've dismantled the entire Status Quo.
This
is why it is so difficult for countries to reform their dysfunctional regimes.
Consider China, everyone's favorite example that trees can indeed grow to the
sky and beyond:
Reform unlikely, says
China expert Roderick MacFarquhar (via Maoxian)
MacFarquhar, a professor of history and political science at Harvard University, said the vested interests of the political elite were so entrenched in a corrupt system that an overhaul would amount to dismantling the regime.
Despite hopes the regime can peacefully transform itself into a democracy with rule of law, MacFarquhar said he could not see such a transition, which would require the ruling elite to give up its power and privileges
Although a political system's inertia often meant a fragile regime could exist for years, MacFarquhar said unpredictable circumstances could trigger its collapse. "You don't know what can unseat a fragile system," he said.
Doesn't
this apply not just to China but to Greece, Spain, Italy, the E.U. itself, the
U.S., Japan and a host of other developed nations all depending on financial
slight-of-hand "extend and pretend" to prop up the dysfunctional
Status Quo?
In
every case, eliminating the source of the rot and corruption would topple the
increasingly fragile regime. In the case of China, corruption isn't a feature
of the regime: it is the regime.
In
the U.S., financialization isn't a corrupting feature of our financial system:
it is the system.
In
the E.U., catastrophically misguided central planning isn't a feature of the
Eurozone: it is the Eurozone.
In
Japan, a stupified government propping up a zombie banking system isn't a
feature of the Status Quo: it is the Status Quo.
Any
reform that actually excised the source of the moral rot, corruption,
malfeasance, fraud, malinvestment, moral hazard and self-serving vested
interests would bring the increasingly fragile Status Quo crashing down in a
nonlinear cascade of interlocking failed systems.
Here's
an example of how unsustainable systems fail: the housing bubble. I prepared this "domino
effect" graphic way back in July, 2006, when conventional wisdom held that
there was no housing bubble: Housing Dominoes Fall (July 26, 2006)
Just
as it was easy to predict the implosion of the housing bubble and the financial
system that created it, it is also easy to predict the collapse of the euro: The European Financial
Crisis in One Graphic: The Dominoes of Debt (October 24, 2011). It took about 2.5 years for the dominoes to fall:
You
cannot "reform" away the dysfunction of the Greek Status Quo without
dismantling the vested interests and the ruling Elites that benefit from the
Status Quo. The same can be said of the Status Quo everywhere from the U.S. to
China.
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