Things Fall Apart. Big Things
Geopolitical and financial risks are proliferating...
The ERA of global integration and accord has ended and the era of global
disintegration and discord is
heating up, writes OfTwoMind's Charles Hugh
Smith in Addison Wiggin's Daily
Reckoning.
In historian
Peter Turchin's terminology, when everyone finds reasons to cooperate, the result is an era of accord;
when everyone finds reasons not
to cooperate, the result is an era of discord.
Beneath the chaotic swirl of
complex dynamics and risk, two
core drivers emerge: De-globalization and de-financialization.
The 30-year era
of increasing globalization
has reversed, reducing the influence of markets and increasing the influence of national
security.
Where the
globalization era led to global trade agreements which served at least a few of every participants' core
interests, the
de-globalization era will be characterized by fragmentation and deals being cut between nations outside
of traditional alliances and
ideological camps.
In the neoliberal worldview, markets are solutions to
virtually every problem: Open up
markets and let price discovery and innovations solve all problems.
This
construct is ideologically
appealing, but in the real world, markets generated extremely risky supply-chain dependencies on
unreliable offshore
sources.
Yes, these dependencies were efficient and profitable, but when things
fall apart, they cause
dominoes to fall far beyond what "markets" anticipated or could hedge.
The
50-year era of increasing
financialization has also reversed. In a nutshell, financialization optimized capital at the expense of
labor/wage earners, and
optimized speculation via the vast expansion of credit and leverage, enabling finance to commoditize
virtually everything in the
global economy – labor, capital, goods, services and yes, even risk.
But
commoditized risk that can be hedged
only includes the risks that are visible and known. When extremes become more extreme, the potential for
risk to escape the neatly
fenced corral of hedged risk increases in ways that cannot be quantified and hedged.
I tend to think many
observers focus too narrowly on risks arising from financial crises, for example, a crisis in the
multitrillion-Dollar shadowy
derivatives market that could cascade as holders of derivative contracts with claims on underlying
collateral (for example, the homes
underlying mortgages in a mortgage-backed security) start seizing the collateralized assets embedded in
the derivatives
chain.
The basic idea is well-established: derivatives (such as CLOs and CDOs
as well as many even more
exotic concoctions) can include claims on the underlying collateral of debt-based assets such as homes
or vehicles.
The public has tolerated a stinking mass of self-serving bailouts and insider dealings
under the threat of "If we don't
do this, the entire system collapses in a heap" for the past 15 years, but their patience with financier
strip-mining may run out more
quickly than the political elites imagine.
History suggests that social
revolutions often start spontaneously
from an apparently trivial event: The deadwood of a corrupt system rigged to funnel asymmetric rewards
to the few at the expense of
the many finally catches fire, and quickly becomes a conflagration.
US elites
seem to have no recognition of
that dynamic. And they wonder why Donald Trump is so popular with working-class Americans. Elites want
to decry Trump's appeal to
these "deplorables" without looking themselves in the mirror as to why Trump appeals to
them.
If the
traditional party system worked so well for this large swath of Americans, Trump never would have gotten
so far. He would have been
laughed off the stage in the 2016 primaries, and never would have won the Republican nomination, let
alone the general
election.
But Trump won the election. And elites have refused to recognize
their failure that resulted in his
election. But the story is bigger. Now let's consider the world – and the Dollar.
Significant portions of the
world are looking to "de-Dollarize." This trend has greatly increased since the US has sought to
"weaponize" the Dollar to punish its
geopolitical opponents.
More specifically, I'd characterize this vast
reshuffling of global capital flows as
a direct consequence of two factors:
- The ascendance of national security over market incentives (i.e. profits, mercantilist exports, etc.)
- The fragmentation of broad trade agreements in favor of special deals with trading partners that include not just tariffs but access to strategically significant commodities and investment capital flows.
In other words, trade is no longer about opening new markets for mercantilist exports and parking
surplus Dollars in Treasuries. It's
about securing essential commodities and capital flows in exchange for access to supply chains and
financial markets.
The mercantilist era has ended. So-called free trade (there is no such thing) that created
critical national
security-related dependencies on frenemies is now something to avoid and reverse at all
costs.
Mercantilist
nations that have depended on increasing exports as the source of their economic growth will find
markets restricted as relocalization
and glocalization become priorities. (This includes China, Germany, Japan and other export-dependent
economies).
We can foresee deals that include access to commodities, guarantees to buy sovereign bonds,
opening previously closed
sectors of mercantilist economies and access to direct investment, not just trade and
tariffs.
In other
words, the fragmentation of global trade opens the door to deals brokered between individual nations,
tailored to their own interests,
that cover not just interests in trade per se but in securing commodities, essentials and capital
flows.
Globalization is not dead, but it is fading. "Glocalization" is becoming the new mantra.
Risk also rises when
established processes break down as multiple crises emerge and reinforce each other – what's known as
polycrisis. When established
mechanisms no longer resolve crises or conflicts, then leaders will naturally be tempted to try ever
more extreme measures to regain
control (or the illusion of control).
Every leader is prone to miscalculation,
but authoritarian regimes with
highly concentrated nodes of decision-making are more prone to making catastrophically bad decisions
because they've suppressed
dissent and open debate as threats to the regime's political and narrative control.
The global trend toward
authoritarianism concentrates decision-making in the hands of the few, increasing the risks of fatal
misjudgments or
miscalculations.
Amidst a disconcertingly expanding universe of risks, here are
10 of note (hat tip to
Richard Bonugli for assistance).
It can be understood as a risk matrix. (My own
list of 10 risks would be
different, of course, but this is a worthy place to start).
The Top 10
Geopolitical/Financial
Risks
- Financiers seizing collateral in a derivatives crisis, AKA "The Great Taking"
- Cyberattacks
- Tariff wars
- Confiscation of other nations' financial assets
- Selling/boycott of US Treasuries
- Imposition of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs)
- Russia's ban of uranium exports to the West
- Restrictions on strategically significant commodities
- Private cryptocurrencies forcibly folded into CBDCs
- Escalation of the Ukraine war
- The Mercantilist Era Is Over
Where does our risk assessment take us? Perhaps the most apt metaphor to describe the decade ahead is
that investors, consumers and
taxpayers will all be rafting whitewater rapids with ever-briefer stretches of calm.
So what do we do as
individuals? De-risk our lives as much as possible and focus on increasing our problem-solving
skills.
This
is my definition of self-reliance.











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