Something I mentioned in a recent post is the inherent yet unquantifiable 'event risk' which pervades the socioeconomic environment at this critical juncture. I mentioned the inevitability of a global currency crisis likely starting in Eastern Europe. However, in addition to the well known and oft discussed economic catastrophe we are facing, there is a wide array of other seemingly unrelated risks that will more than likely feed off of one another creating a lethal catastrophic firestorm of historic proportions. It turns out that the same greed, stupidity, laziness and denialism that got us into this economic catastrophe, played a starring role in several other simmering catastrophes as well - go figure...
Geopolitical/anarchic Risk:
Latent geopolitical risk has been simmering for quite some time in the usual places: Iran, North Korea, Pakistan etc. However, now other countries such as Mexico are seeing dramatic increases in violent crime as the fallout from the economic collapse causes various unforeseen dislocations. Even in my home country of Canada (British Columbia) there has been a spasmodic increase in gang-related crime the likes of which that Province has never seen. And then of course there are the myriad protests going on around the world fuelled by burgeoning unrest from the economic crisis. Expect those to become a lot more violent in the days ahead. Here in the U.S. the "tea parties" being staged as a protest against government intervention in the crisis are just the first signs of simmering anarchy and unrest in this, the most heavily armed country in the history of the world... And while we have just come through a relatively calm period from a human historical standpoint, as I have said before, expect that the ongoing explosion in economic volatility will produce a concomitant explosion in geopolitical anarchy, that we are only just now starting to witness...
Environmental Risk:
Thanks to decades wasted and billions spent on obfuscation and disinformation we of course are way behind the curve in addressing latent environmental issues. Expect that these too will find their way into the brewing catastrophic firestorm, as climatic temperature increases will bring rising sea levels, drought, earthquakes (from tectonic shifts, due to melting ice caps), tsunamis, floods and myriad other crises at a most inopportune time.
Peak Oil:
Peak oil will ultimately do more to reduce human consumption of fossil fuels than we could ever accomplish with a climate treaty. So from that standpoint, this is the one crisis that could ultimately bring great benefit to the human race, assuming that we survive the transition to viable alternatives. Expect the adjustment process from oil to renewable energy sources to be halting and turbulent to say the least. The price of oil will continue fluctuating wildly over time, accentuating the duration, severity, and frequency of economic recessions. Every time we look to be climbing out of a recession, expect the price of oil to leap ahead, thereby putting an automatic damper on economic growth. As growth slows, oil prices will eventually fall back again, thus putting the brakes on renewable energy projects that will be deemed economically unviable - just as many projects have now been shelved since oil fell below 50 (after having hit 150 only about 9 months ago). In short, it will be yet another repeating loop of short-sightedness and stupidity. Check - been there, done that.
Health and Disease:
Simply put, impoverished people can't take good care of themselves. And since the vast majority on this planet - including most in the heretofore 'wealthy' nations - will be poor, then expect preventive health maintenance to be reduced, putting us all at increased risk of sickness and disease. On top of that , health resources will be stretched and inadequate to cope with burgeoning pandemics, like the Swine Flu epidemic that is just now getting started. Suffice to say it's not a good time for the largest segment of our population (The Boomers) to be heading for retirement putting further strain on public health resources. It's also not so timely that we squandered the Medicare "trust fund" (i.e. the money coming out of your pay check every month) to pay for unaffordable tax cuts to fund conspicuous consumption and not one, but two ill conceived wars of misadventure....
Disaster Cocktail:
Put it all together and what do you have? You have a volatile cocktail of crises, each of which will accentuate and resonate off of one another in ways that policy-makers have not even begun to consider. After all, we have silos of "experts" fiddling around with the economy (rearranging deck chairs, really); health experts focusing on pandemics; scientists considering the environment; geologists considering peak oil etc. However, who is looking at the big picture? All of these crises are all coming together at the same time in both deadly and unforeseen ways. The economic connection is easy to make i.e. fewer resources to address any and all types of crises. However, how will geopolitical realignments affect the impacts of peak oil ? How will the environmental crises affect health and geopolitical stability? You get the idea.
The Complete Triumph of Laziness and Stupidity
Overwhelmed with unparalleled amounts of information, disinformation, propaganda and data in all forms, human beings have fallen back on blind faith and delusion as our standard mode of thinking and operation. Legions of "smart" people have told us that we can in no way predict the future and therefore it is a fool's errand to even try. I readily admit, there are many coincident crosscurrents that make absolute predictions virtually impossible, however understanding the general vector of human progress is not difficult in the least. So, while I can't say with absolute certainty what events will take place when, there can be little doubt to anyone with a shred of commonsense or honesty that the path we are taking on economic, environmental, energy and humanitarian related issues is spiraling downward. Yet we are constantly tempted by false prophets to believe that the laws of cause and effect have been suspended. Moreover, short-term side-effects can easily be obfuscated or rationalized away. Everyone from Nassim Taleb (Black Swan theory), Robert Prechter (EWI) - and countless others - have offered up sophisticated book-selling con jobs for why there are "unseen" forces at work (luck, social mood etc.) exerting absolute control over human destiny. Of course these theories only serve to contribute to the general sense of confusion and futility, thereby restraining our progress towards straightforward solutions to solvable problems. Worse, there are myriad others anchoring themselves to such pathetically glib fallacies as "we have been through worse before" and "the American economy always comes back". All I can offer as a fittingly glib rejoinder is "Past performance is no guarantee of future results". In short, the outcomes of cause and effect have not been permanently suspended, they have only been delayed such that the accumulated imbalances will only ensure that the inevitable devastating outcomes will be vastly magnified and uncontrollable...
Wave C Destruction
Finally, getting back to my favourite topic around the markets and economy, Prechter recently reinforced a critical observation the other day in the latest version of the "Elliot Wave Theorist", which is that 'C' waves, such as the one that we are in, are steeper and therefore far more destructive than 'A' waves. Recall under Elliot Wave Theory, the first leg down was 2000-2002, which was Wave 'A' in a 3 wave correction of the stock market (A-B-C) going back 300 years (i.e. the biggest correction we have had since the founding of the United States). Wave 'B' was a retracement rally that coincided with the George Bush fantasy years where people leveraged their homes like they were ATMs, we raided Social Security and Medicare to pay for a tax cut for the ultra wealthy, started two ill-conceived wars, and otherwise did our level best to prove that human beings are as dumb as a door knob. So, that puts us in Wave 'C', which started in October 2007 and has already brought the market lower than 'A' wave which ended in 2002. How do I know that Wave 'C' hasn't ended? Because if, Prechter is right (and I believe he is), then Wave C won't end until we retrace much of the stock market rise that has taken place since 1932 i.e. putting the Dow back below 1000. Accordingly to that theory which is by the way supported by all of the current economic data available (regardless of what your government is telling you)...then, once this little stock market rally ends (weeks, months from now - who knows?), we can expect the most devastating segment of Wave 'C' to begin in full force...
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NOTE: One may wonder why I quote Prechter's charting of the markets while I dismiss his social mood theories. He believes that prevailing social mood (which is cyclical) drives events whereas I believe events primarily drive social mood. While I can go so far as to believe that social mood is a contributing factor in human "change", I am not so fatalistic to believe in an exogenous (uncontrollable) theory of human progress/regress. That said, regardless of how we got to this pivotal juncture - events driving mood or other way around, the inevitable outcome is agreed to be the same...