By Paul B. Farrell: SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. - Warning bells, alarms scream
louder. But our banks and politicians can’t hear, are deaf, in denial.
Won’t take action ... not until it is too late.
That’s the latest from Simon Johnson and Peter Boone in “The Doomsday
Cycle Turns: Who’s Next?” Who is next? America, Japan, the euro zone are
the triple threat next in the line of fire, in danger of collapsing,
thanks to a doomsday conspiracy where global “political and financial
systems have aligned to build these dangers rather than suppress them.”
Three years ago, the first warning: “The Doomsday Cycle.” Since then
Simon Johnson, former IMF chief economist, co-authored two bestsellers,
“13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown,”
and recently, “White House Burning.” Peter Boone is a research associate
at the London School of Economics, which published their doomsday
warnings.
In the first they warned: “Over the last 30 years, we have built a
financial system that threatens to topple our global economic order, we
have let an unsustainable and crazy ‘doomsday cycle’ infiltrate our
economic system.” This doomsday “cycle will not run forever … The
destructive power of the down-cycle will overwhelm the restorative
ability of the government, just like it did in 1929-31.”
America has ignored the lessons of the 2008 meltdown even though coming
“remarkably close to another Great Depression. Next time, we may not be
so lucky.”
First. Risks shifted from emerging nations to big developed nations
Why? The “next time” is accelerating. But Americans are distracted by
election drama, can’t see the oncoming train. Are Johnson and Boone
alarmists crying wolf? Chicken Littles? Cassandras? No, they do see the
collapse coming, its driven by a conspiracy of “political and financial
systems” that will not act “until it is too late.”
So in this new warning, they ask: “Who’s Next? ” Here’s a summary, some paraphrased, some direct quotes:
Earlier, smaller emerging nations were at risk of collapsing. The threat
has now shifted to developed countries, their financial institutions,
government finances, and economic growth prospects are at great risk:
And that world has “created enormous, complex financial structures that
can inflict tragic consequences with failure and yet are inherently
difficult to regulate and control ... there are more and worse crises to
come.”
Second. Financiers and politicians align in ‘symbiotic’ conspiracy
“There is a common problem underlying the economic troubles of Europe,
Japan, and the US: the symbiotic relationship between politicians who
heed narrow interests and the growth of a financial sector that has
become increasingly opaque. Bailouts have encouraged reckless behavior
in the financial sector, which builds up further risks — and will lead
to another round of shocks, collapses, and bailouts.” That’s a doomsday
conspiracy: money and politics.
The Doomsday Cycle became visible in 2007-08 in the months following the
fall of Lehman, and Iceland, Irish banks and “endless lending programs
by the IMF and the EU” for Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Italy, Spain,
other euro-zone countries. Today some are claiming that the euro zone
“put the worst of their problems behind them.”
Wrong, they’re in denial: “The doomsday cycle is indeed turning,” but
it’s “heading towards Japan and the U.S.” where “the current level of
complacency among policy makers in those countries is alarming,” warn
Johnson and Booth.
Worse, they’re now predicting the cycle will “hit Europe again and
probably harder than before.” Yes, Europe “is in big trouble:” Massive
budgets, no growth, no bailout money and a loss of political support.
Third. Doomsday cycle accelerating, America is targeted
Back “in the 1980s and 1990s, deep economic crises occurred primarily in
middle- and low-income countries that were too small to have direct
global effects. The crises we should fear today are in relatively rich
countries that are big enough to reduce growth around the world.”
Why? Because America’s “financial infrastructure makes it possible to
borrow a great deal relative to the size of an economy ... far more than
is sustainable relative to growth prospects.”
Worse, “the expectation of bailouts has become built into the system,”
from Treasury and the Fed. Unfortunately, what’s owed is far “more than
can ultimately be paid,” and growing fast.
From a behavioral-economics standpoint, our financiers are now so
totally addicted to these unrealistic expectations and delusions they
cannot see the risks from inside the “thought bubble” we’re trapped in.
Johnson and Boone see into our warped reality in three key areas:
1. Politicians ... only see “great opportunities” and reelections.
Politicians are obsessed with power, government as an opportunity “to
buy favor and win re-election,” as “repeated bailouts have become the
expectation not the exception.”
2. Financiers ... sees only “easy money and great fortune.”
“The complexity and scale of modern finance make it easy to hide what is
going on. The regulated financial sector has little interest in
speaking truth to authority; that would just undercut their business.
Banks that are ‘too big to fail’ benefit from giant, hidden and very
dangerous government subsidies. Yet despite repeated failures many top
officials pretend that ‘the market’ or ‘smart regulators’ can take care
of this problem.”
3. Voting public ... see too little, “until it is too late.”
“The issues are abstract and lack the personal drama that grabs
headlines,” as becomes ever clearer in the debates, cable reports and
political ads. Worse, our policy leaders are in conflict and “complicit
in the schemes of big banks and politicians. The real costs of bailouts
are disguised, millions of jobs lost, lives ruined, balance sheets
damaged — and for what, exactly? The public is baffled and our leaders
are driven by greed, selfishness and denial.
Doomsday recycling ... targeting America, Japan, euro zone
Johnson and Boone warn, the entire world is being swept up in this
historic shift: “Over the past four centuries, financial development has
strongly supported economic development. The market-based creation of
new institutions and products encouraged savings by a broad
cross-section of society, allowing capital to flow into more productive
uses.”
But since the 1980s “our financial development has gone badly
off-track,” thanks to their alliance with politicians” resulting in
“irresponsible public policy.”
Johnson and Boone see Japan on a “long march to collapse”: an aging
population, declining population, slowing growth, and a debt-to-GDP
ratio that’s skyrocketed from about 70 to over 200 in the past 30 years.
“The symptoms are different in the U.S.” but the impact will be the
same: collapse. The 2008 crisis increased debt by 50%. Banks got
bailouts, now too-big-to-fail. That created an army of lobbyists and
“pro-bailout” politicians. After each new crisis, politicians promise
it’ll “never happen again ... but still it happens, again and again.”
And “with each crisis, the financial risks are getting larger ... more
unaffordable.” Soon we will “run out of enough savers to buy the bonds
needed to bail out the system” and “suffer the ultimate collapse.”
Johnson and Boone see “no sign that the euro zone will emerge from crisis any time soon.”
The euro zone is a magnet for 17 nations, drawn to the ECB liquidity
window, which “converts unattractive government and bank-issued
securities into highly liquid collateral ... at low interest rates.”
Banks love it.
But its “easy to understand how the system got abused and why it will be
so difficult ever to make it safe,” loaded now with risky derivatives
that ballooned from nothing in 1998 to 19 times the entire GDP of the
euro zone, a ticking time-bomb.
America + Japan + euro zone are a ticking time-bomb to collapse
The “Japanese can’t control their public finances ... the U.S. can’t
control its too-big-to-fail banks” ... plus pile on the “complexity of
merging 17 regulators and 17 national governments into a system where
someone else can be made responsible for bailing out the intransigents.”
Unfortunately our system has become “crisis-prone” a “financial and
regulatory nightmare” posing “great dangers to global financial
stability.”
“The tragedy of the euro zone appears unavoidable,” warn Johnson and
Boone, with “far greater risks that will spread to Japan, the U.S., and
other advanced economies.”
The run-up to the 2008 meltdown is replaying and we’re in denial: “We
have created enormous, complex financial structures that can inflict
tragic consequences with failure and yet are inherently difficult to
regulate and control.” And yet, we naively assume our political systems
will “check these dangers,” even as our leaders “develop symbiotic
relationships that encourage irresponsible growth.”
This is self-deceptive: “There are more crises to come and they are
likely to be worse than the last one.” The world is now controlled by a
doomsday conspiracy where “political and financial systems have aligned
to build these dangers rather than suppress them.”
And unfortunately, the conspiracy will not wake up and voluntarily “fix
their underlying fiscal and financial problems ... until it is too
late.” Yes, too late. World markets and the global economy must first
collapse.Source
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