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What the world is witnessing, without actually paying much attention, is
the death of our debt-based economy — that is, borrowing the means to thrive
in the now from a future that can’t really furnish it anymore. The illusion
that the future would always provide was a legacy of the cheap energy era.
That era ended in 2005. The basic promise is broken and with it the premise
for living as we had been. The energy available today, especially oil, is no
longer cheap enough to run the industrial economies designed to run on it.
Any way that you look at the dynamic, Modernity loses.
With oil under $50 a barrel, and gasoline under $3 a gallon (back east),
the public apparently thinks that the Peak Oil story is dead and gone. But
when it costs $75 a barrel to pull the stuff out of the ground, and the stuff
only sells for $47 a barrel, the oil companies’ business model doesn’t really
work. The shale oil companies especially have been gaming the system by
issuing bonds that pay relatively high interest rates in an investment
climate where almost nothing else offers enough yield to live on, especially
for pension funds and insurance companies. Two little upward bumps this year
in the price of oil toward the $50 range prompted a wish that the good old
days of high-priced oil were coming back, that the oil business would be
profitable again.
The trouble is that high oil prices — say, over $100 a barrel, as it was
in 2014 — crush advanced economies, so that demand for oil crashes, and with
it productive activity. Without productivity, the debts issued by companies
(and even governments) don’t get repaid. There really is no “sweet spot” in
this energy cost equation.
A lot of wishful thinkers would like to believe that you can run
contemporary life on something beside oil. But the usual “solutions,” solar
and wind energy, don’t pencil out, especially when you consider that the
hardware for running them — the photovoltaics, charge controllers, batteries,
turbines, and blades, can’t be mass-produced and distributed without the very
fossil fuels they are supposed to replace.
These matters add up to the essential quandary of our time. It has
expressed itself in falling standards of living for what used to be the
middle class, most particularly in the USA. European countries have tried to
work around this problem with their rigid bureaucracies for keeping those
already employed from losing their jobs. In France, Spain, and Italy, this
has only made it much harder for people under 30 to get a job. The jobs
picture for millennials in the USA is not much better, though there’s no
structural job-protection for their elders who are still working here. They
live in abject fear of termination by the HR ghouls of the big corporations.
Sooner or later the younger generation will explode in rage at the system
and there is no telling what the result will be. We’re already seeing it in
the black ghettos, where decades of accrued social dysfunction make the
anomie and purposelessness — of young men especially — much worse. The newer
loser class of people who once had good jobs and now have poor prospects of
ever getting them back gets swept up in the mania for their incoherent
champion, Trump, who shows no sign of understanding the essential quandary of
our time. The tragedy of Trumpism is that the man so poorly represents a
large group of Americans with genuine woes and grievances. And the larger
tragedy of our country these days is that events did not prompt better
leaders to step forward.
The explanation may be that people who actually understand the dark
dynamics spinning out are rather pessimistic about the our ability to carry
on under the familiar disposition of things. Hillary represents the forces in
our national life that want to pretend that nothing is wrong, that all the
splendid rackets of the day — Federal Reserve interventions, corporate
debt-fueled stock buybacks, military log-rolling, medical racketeering, the
college loan Ponzi, pension fund levitation, primary dealer bank interest
rate arbitrage, agribiz Frankenfood proliferation — can just grind along like
some old riverboat banger engine keeping the garbage barge of American life
afloat. Thus, Hillary is shaping up to be the patsy of the century, likely to
preside, if elected, over the biggest blowup of established arrangements that
world has ever seen.
The debt problem alone is absolutely certain to express itself in at least
three major ways: the crash of equity markets, the collapse of the bond
markets, and the loss of faith in the value and meaning of whatever money
you’re using. Any of those events would turn the economic life of the linked
advanced economies upside down. Any of them could occur during the 2016 US
election season.