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121107 - Clusterfuck Nation
The multi-dimensional meltdown underway in the finance sector
illustrates perfectly how the complex systems we depend on start
to wobble and fail as soon as peak oil establishes itself as a
fact in the public imagination.
Mainly what it shows is that we don't have to run out of oil -
or even come close to that - before the trouble starts.
Just going over the peak and heading down the slippery slope of
depletion is enough.Peak oil, it turns out, is also peak
money.Or should we say, peak "money?"
First of all, what is finance exactly?I'd bet that a lot of
people these days don't know, including many working in the
financial "industry", as it has taken to calling itself.
Finance, until very recently, was the means by which investment
was raised for useful economic activities and productive
ventures - in other words, the deployment of capital, which is
to say accumulated wealth.
Historically, this accumulated wealth was pretty meager.
There wasn't a whole lot to deploy and the deployment was
controlled by a tiny handful of people statistically greater
only than the number of Martians in the general population.
They operated as families or clans, and everybody knew who they
were: the Medici, the Rothschilds.
Even the Roman Empire was a kind of financial Flintstones
operation compared to what we see on CNBC these days. Not having
the printing press, the Romans had to inflate their currency the
old-fashioned way, by adding base metals to their gold coins.
Finance in the 200-odd-year-long industrial era evolved step-by-step
with the steady incremental rise of available cheap energy.More
to the point, the instruments associated with finance evolved in
complexity with that rise in energy.It was only about two-hundred
years ago, in fact, that circulating banknotes or paper
currencies evolved out of much cruder certificates that were
little more than IOUs
Once printed paper banknotes became established, and
institutions created to regulate them, the invention of more
abstract certificates became possible and we began to get things
like stocks and bonds, traded publicly in bourses or exchanges,
which represented amounts of Money invested or loaned, but were
not themselves "money".
Much of this innovation occurred during the rise of the coal-powered
economy of the 19th century. It accelerated with the oil-and-gas
economy of the 20th century, up into the present time.So, for
about 150 years - or roughly since the end of the American Civil
War - we've had a certain kind of regularized finance that
enjoyed continual refinement.
Even in the face of cyclical traumas, like the Great Depression,
currencies, stocks, and bonds retained their legitimacy if not
always their face value.
Russia was a bizarre exception.Crawling out of the mud of
medievalism relatively late in the game, Russia pretended to
abjure capital while still faced with the need to deploy it in
industry.
They solved this paradox conditionally by disqualifying the
Russian public from participation in any part of the industrial
economy except the hard work, and pretended to pay them in
promises for "a brighter future", which never arrived as long as
the Soviets remained in charge. (The Russian people repaid the
system by only pretending to work.
In any case, finance for the purpose of deploying capital has
prevailed as reality among people who use the implements of the
dinner table, but something weird has happened to it in recent
years.
It has entered a stage of grotesque, hypertrophic metastasis
that now threatens the life of the industrial organism it
evolved to serve.
Its current state can be understood in direct relation to the
run-up to peak oil (peak fossil fuel energy, really, since coal
and gas figure into it, too).
The oil age, we will soon discover, was an anomaly. Many of the
things that seemed "normal" under its regime will turn out to
have been rather special.
And as the beginning of the end of the oil age becomes manifest,
these special things are starting to self-destruct pretty
spectacularly.
For one thing, finance in the past twenty years has evolved from
being an organ serving a larger organism to taking over the
organism, becoming a kind of blind, raging dominating parasite
on its former host.Or to put it less hyperbolically, it has
become an end in itself.
That is what they mean when they say that the financial sector
has been "driving" the economy.
A feature of this ghastly process has been the evolution of
financial instruments into ever more abstract entities removed
from reality-based productive activities.Stocks and bonds were
understood to represent direct investment in enterprise.
Sometimes the enterprise was a failure, and sometimes the people
running it were swindlers, but no one doubted that common stock
represented the hope for profit in a particular venture like
making steel or selling laxative chemicals.
The new "creatively-innovated" financial "derivatives" of recent
years are now so divorced from any real activities or product
that often the people trafficking in them don't understand what
they're supposed to represent.I'd bet that more than half the
people in the New York Stock exchange any given day could not
explain the meaning of a credit default swap if a Taliban were
holding their oldest child over a window ledge across Wall
Street.
The innovation of mutant financial "products" is a symptom of
the "crack-up boom" that characterizes society's response to
peak oil.
The main implication of peak oil for an industrial economy is
that the 200-odd-year-long expectation for continued regular
growth in combined energy-activity and productivity at roughly
three to seven percent a year under "normal" conditions - that
expectation is now toast.
Ander the new regime of peak oil and its aftermath, regular
energy depletion, society can expect no further industrial
growth but only contraction, and all the certificates,
instruments, and operations associated with the expectation for
further industrial growth lose their legitimacy
Seen in this light, one can then understand the temporary value
of these mutant financial derivatives. They allowed participants
to conceal the fact that these "investments" were not directed
at productive enterprise.They also provided a cohort of sharpies
with "vehicles" for converting the leftovers of the industrial
economy into assets for themselves - a form of looting,
really.Hence, the employees of Bear Stearns, Goldman Sachs, and
Merrill Lynch gave themselves $50-million Christmas bonuses for
trafficking in these inscrutable non-productive financial
gimmicks, and were able to acquire fifty-room Easthampton houses,
Gulfstream jets, and impressionist paintings.
Of course, the aftermath might not be so pretty for these guys,
since the next thing they may acquire could be long prison
sentences.If they flee prosecution in their Gulfstream jets,
they will not be able to take their Hamptons estates aboard with
them. Those who remain may live to see mobs with flaming torches
outside their windows, as in the "Frankenstein" movies of their
suburban childhoods.But this has yet to play out.
For the moment it appears that we have entered the climax of the
crack-up. The slick and inscrutable derivative vehicles
infesting the ledgers of the investment banks, are now being
systematically revealed as frauds of one kind or another, and,
self-evidently lacking in worth.
The process now underway is gruesome.The sheer dollar losses
envolved are almost as incomprehensible as the phony operations
and instruments that they are derived from - twelve billion here,
nine billion there.
As the late Senator Everett Dirkson once quipped, "sooner or
later you're talking about real money ...."Or are we?Is it money
or "money". And if it's "money", what will become of it?And of
us?
How will it allow us to live?
http://jameshowardkunstler.typepad.com/clusterfuck_nation/2007/11/peak-money.html
http://www.billtotten.blogspot.com
http://www.ashisuto.co.jp
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