Categories
COVID-19 Economics Social Evolution

2021 – The Year of the Economy

Recently I read a book written by economist, Stephanie Kelton, called the “The Deficit Myth”, which provided a comprehensive analysis on modern monetary theory (MMT). In essence, deficits do not matter because as a sovereign fiat currency nation who’s debt is entirely in our own currency, the United States can spend as much money as we need with inflation being our only limiting factor. While I concur with the validity of MMT, I differ with Stephanie’s claim that politicians in both political parties are not already thoroughly versed in MMT. They are. And the implications are transformative.

The most cursory review of historical economy data shows two generations of politicians have purposely driven federal debt from $1 Trillion dollars in 1980 to over $27 Trillion dollars currently through the use of MMT.

Deficit spending paid for trillions of dollars of military spending, regressive tax cuts, a new entitlement (Medicare Part D) converted into a multi-trillion dollar boondoggle for the pharmaceutical industry by making bulk purchase pricing illegal, and a deregulation scheme that gutted environmental protection laws and repealed Glass-Steagall (to whom we have Bill Clinton to thank!). And pursuant to MMT, the trillions of dollars in annual deficits funneled surpluses to the private sector.

Tragically, fiscal policy supported by both political parties targeted the trillions in surpluses to the wealthiest Americans via trade agreements (GATT and NAFTA) that allowed American multi-national corporations to off-shore labor, assets, and profits further avoiding US taxation, while simultaneously forcing US labor to compete for jobs with 3rd world labor.

The GINI coefficient is the economic data point used to measure income and wealth inequality. A GINI coefficient of 0 equals perfect economic equality and 1 equals absolute economic inequality. According to the World Bank, the 1979 GINI coefficient in the US was .345 verses 2019 of .48 (source: Statista). 2019 US GINI coefficient is tied for the 20th most unequal economy in the world with Costa Rica, and by far the most unequal of all G7 nations (UK is #2 with .392). Yet this was all before COVID-19.

Since COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic, the US Congress has approved multiple stimulus packages with the most significant being the CARES Act approved the end of March 2020, and the recent $900 Billion dollar stimulus package. The CARES Act on its face included $2.2 Trillion dollars in economic stimulus, but also authorized the Federal Reserve to invest ten times the $425 Billion dollar allocation for corporations with more than 500 employees (or $4.25 Trillion dollars). A rough estimate of the distribution of the two stimulus packages follows:

Small Businesses (less than 500 employees) and Individuals =

$320B ($1,200 one time payments)

$160B ($600 one time payments)

$300B ($600/week Pandemic Unemployment Assistance or PUA

$  63B ($300/week PUA)

$480B (80% Payroll Protection Program or PPP; 20% poached by large corporations)

$285B (PPP 2nd round)

$  25B (Rent support)

$  10B (Child care)

$1.643 Trillion dollars

(25.2% of the two primary stimulus packages)

Large Corporations (500+ employees)

$  75B (Airlines)

$425B (large co. with 500+ employees)

$4,250B (Fed Reserve Investment)

$120B (PPP poaching)

$  15B (Airline 2nd stimulus)

$4.885 Trillion dollars

(74.8% of the two primary stimulus packages)

$6.528 Trillion dollars*

*(Total allocated excludes approximately $822 Billion dollars largely for emergency services, state & local government support, vaccination purchases & distribution, and a laundry list of heinous pork).

By the end of 2020, the economic damage of COVID-19 includes a 31% contraction in 2Q20 GDP (vs. 1Q20), 33% growth in 3Q20 GDP (vs. 2Q20 or 90% annualized of 2019 GDP), small businesses in operation down 29% since January 2020, net job loss of approximately 10 million jobs (primarily for jobs with annual salaries of $27k/year or less where employment is down 20%; jobs with annual salaries over $60k/year have returned to pre-COVID-19 employment levels). 4Q20 data, including the critical holiday shopping season (Fed Chair stated retail sales are sluggish), have yet to be reported.

Given the fiscal stimulus has been heavily skewed toward large corporations verses small businesses or individuals (75% vs. 25%), Wall Street posted historic gains despite the global pandemic:

DOW industrials up 7.2% verses 2019

S&P 500 up 16.3%

Russell 2000 up 18.4%

NASDAQ composite up 43.6% (highest since 2009)

Source: Wall Street Journal

As of 11/30/2020, US Billionaires’ net worth increased $1 Trillion dollars since the pandemic began (Source: Statista and Americans for Tax Fairness).

According to the US Census Household Pulse Survey completed 12/21/2020:

33% of US households are having a hard time covering basic expenses.

33% expect joblessness to lead to eviction in the next 60 days.

12% report food shortages for their household.

Accordingly, COVID-19 has provided our political leaders the opportunity to use over $9 Trillion dollars** in deficit spending and stimulus to exacerbate income and wealth inequality in America.

**($9T = $5T in deficits (2020: $3.7T; 2021 so far: $1.329T [source: Congressional Budget Office] + $4.25T from the Federal Reserve)

This is the US pandemic economy.

The American people cannot rely on the current political parties or politicians or establishment political or economic commentators for constructive support in rebuilding the post-COVID-19 economy.

Recently (according to Reuters), Paul Krugman announced he expects the US economic recovery from the pandemic to be “much faster and continue much longer than many people expect.” The Nobel Laureate in Economics cites higher US savings rate and pent up demand as the drivers for the US economic recovery. Undoubtedly, the extraordinary savings and pent up demand must be from the 60% of American households (excluding 29% small business failures) that are not living paycheck to paycheck and can afford a $400 unexpected expense. Tragically, 40% of US households do not qualify (according to Federal Reserve data & a Harvard University study).

Solutions to the economic challenges facing people impacted by COVID-19 will not be coming from establishment sources.

Therefore, I strongly recommend focusing our attention regarding the post-pandemic economy on non-establishment commentators such as Richard Wolff, Yanis Varoufaukis, Peter Joseph, Chris Hedges, and Yuval Noah Harari.

Yuval Harari has written extensively about the economic impact of technological disruption, which has been accelerated by COVID-19. Take note of the extraordinary performance of the tech companies on the NASDAQ composite (up 43.6% vs. 2019). Large industrial corporations like General Motors (beyond buying back their own shares) are investing in automated technology to dramatically reduce the cost structure of their business models in anticipation of materially lower aggregate demand in the near term (3 to 5 years). Accelerating automation will make large portions of the working class “economically irrelevant” (according to Yuval Harari).

This is the discussion we need to have on the new post-pandemic economy.

Ecological sustainability is the reason why we must not simply restore the pre-COVID economy. While the climate science and global environmental events are irrefutable, powerful carbon based energy interests continue to block meaningful progress to keep global average temperature increases from exceeding the critical limit of 1.5 degrees.

The prospect of a sixth mass extinction event has been warned by diverse commentators including Pope Frances (see his 2015 encyclical “Laudato Si”) and David Attenborough (see his latest documentary released in September 2020: “A Life on Our Planet”).

The time is urgently now to escape the binary mythology of capitalism (developed in the 1700’s) or socialism (developed in the 1800’s), and innovate an economy of the 21st century. Much work has been done in this area.

Peter Joseph founded the Zeitgeist Movement (see https://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/about/) in 2008 as a science based economic sustainability project, which advocates for a global resource management economic system informed by open source innovation and utilizing decentralized production. Peter is a deeply thoughtful, exceptionally articulate advocate for a new, redefined economy that aligns with equality and ecological sustainability. Peter’s latest book “The New Human Rights Movement” was made into his latest film “InterReflections”, which was released October 2020.

If 2020 was the year of COVID-19, 2021 will be the year of the Economy.

To meet the challenges of the new pandemic economy, it behooves each of us to break with the conventional narrative in order to shift our consideration towards building a future worthy of our progeny.

Categories
COVID-19 Social Evolution

Remember

Often times in life we do not realize what we cherish until we have lost it.

Occasionally we are afforded a glimpse of what life would be without our cherished desire, and the experience serves as a vivid reminder we can never forget.

2020 is our vivid reminder of our need for human touch.

Remember…

Seeing the smile of a stranger you held the door for…

Feeling a firm handshake of a new acquaintance…

Receiving a hug from a friend simply because you needed one…

Immersing in the exhilaration of the crowd at a great music concert…

Shimmying up to the bar to order drinks during happy hour…

Participating in the wave at your favorite sporting event…

Squeezing in to a fully occupied elevator and feeling relieved because you made it in time…

This used to be our normal lives.

Life without human touch is sterile, virtual, and isolated.

Our communication lacks depth because like texting it is uninformed by body language or vibration.

We are reduced to digital simulations that can more easily be labeled and categorized.

Consideration is quaint.

Cancel culture is rampant.

Mutual understanding is obsolete.

This is the new normal.

Never forget how we feel today.

Yet we will move past COVID-19. The health implications of social interaction will restore to normal.

We will have the opportunity to reconnect with each other.

How we connect will be a function of the perspective we have gained.

We are one humanity.

Interdependently nourished by the natural environment that sustains us.

Remember…

Categories
Economics Social Evolution

An Alternative to Money

Money is a very efficient medium of exchange compared to barter. The problem with money is it ties access to resources based solely on possessing it. The more money you have, the more resources you can control.

Accordingly, money is amoral because it is indifferent to the need for resources. The existence of money necessitates scarcity in the availability of resources by allowing a few people to possess control over enormous resources leaving most people on earth resource deprived.

What then is a meaningful alternative? To answer this question, I need to review a few indisputable facts:

We share one planet, which produces a finite amount of natural resources that sustains all of us.

Technological advances leverage our natural resources to produce a finite amount of finished goods and services.

If each person is empowered to possess as much resource as they are able to accumulate, there will never be enough resources for everyone.

If all people have access to the accumulation of human knowledge, they will possess the necessary information to identify their unique talents and perfect their unique skills in order to maximize their individual productivity.

If humanity guarantees access to the resources each person can use to reach and maintain their full potential, there would be no need to accumulate excess resources to ourselves.

Eliminating money, and guaranteeing access to resources eliminates price and quality differentiation of goods and services, which occur today to allow fortunes to be made on affordable, sub-standard goods and services.

If all goods and services are designed to provide the highest quality possible, enormous resources will be saved by eliminating repetitive consumption, planned obsolescence, and other economic inefficiencies common to the current global economy.

If all goods and services are provided at the highest quality possible, health and wellness will be optimized for all people.

If we shift from an ownership relationship with resources to a stewardship relationship, we will maximize utilization and minimize waste.

Currently, we possess resources that are idle until we are ready to use. Sophisticated use-share systems can be innovated that would allow people to reserve resources for when they are needed. This would make resources, now produced at the highest quality possible, available on demand.

Accordingly, access to resources will be based on what we can USE…no more and no less.

Waste and gluttony will be global security violations.

Sustainability will be restored through a system of global resource management informed by the accumulation of human knowledge.

Categories
COVID-19 Social Evolution

Time to build…

When we reopen the economy, how much money will be spent on goods and services?

Post-COVID-19 hurdles include Health security & financial security.

If Demand=Jobs=Money, then

Low demand=few jobs=scarce money=abandoned resources=worse than 1932

Solution: Money can no longer be a surrogate for resources.

In the housing crisis that led to the great recession of 2008-9, money evaporated from the economy, leading to the abandonment of millions of homes due to defaulted mortgages, which destroyed billions of dollars worth of resources from neglect.

We do not need to repeat 2008-9, 1929-39 or worse.

We just need to acknowledge that money is not the same as resources, and devise another means of distributing resources.

Contemplate a resource management based economic system.

Sustainability is the central tenet.

Utilization is the currency.

Gluttony & waste are global security vices.

Stewardship of resources, not ownership, is a virtue.

Consideration for the well being of our progeny becomes an obsession.

Sounds like Utopia?

So did free market capitalism compared to hunter-gatherer-barter societies, medievalism, and colonialism.

Utopia is actually just the next step in our social evolution.

The Bubonic plague of 1346-53, ending in the Great plague of 1665-66, destroyed Mercantilism in Europe creating space for free market capitalism.

Today, COVID-19 has destroyed our modern, integrated, free market economy.

The post-COVID-19 economy will require a systemic recapitalization.

The only question remaining is what new economy will we choose to build.

Categories
Social Evolution

Out with the old; In with the new.

Do we really require human deprivation in order to feel special?

We can enjoy all the pleasures of privilege without subjugating others. The key is removing the need for accumulation by guaranteeing everyone has access to the resources they can use to reach their full potential.

Consider dinner at home with your family. No one lunges at the food with the intent to take as much as they can, because everyone knows they are guaranteed to get their full share.

In this emerging new society, waste is the primary vice that virtue must eradicate. Prestige is tied to how much we each contribute to the well being of humanity. Human progress will accelerate based on the proliferation of our individual potential.

If my proposition sounds too lofty for your sensibilities, you remain constrained by the old paradigm…scarcity. Let me be blunt. Scarcity is caused by the incentive to accumulate, which is necessary when you are not guaranteed access to resources. This old paradigm has proven to be unsustainable.

Faced with mass migration induced by resource deprivation, resource hoarding societies will either impose apartheid style immigration policies or experience unmanageable population growth.

Thankfully a new alternative is emerging: a full access, resource based, global economy. Yet for this well documented alternative to be viable, each of us must reconsider our values. How do we best advance the well being of ourselves and our families? By maximizing the ability of every person to contribute to our global well being.

Categories
Social Evolution

Dying from survival…

You know what I mean. To spend each day doing whatever you must to keep the lights on…to make sure your family is safe…to hold it all together for one more day. Dying from survival is allowing your soul to fade slowly away from lack of fulfillment…void of purpose…resigned to the task of pushing your bolder up that damn hill again, and again.

To what end?

There is more to this life than stacking coins of security. Remember when you didn’t even know about the grind? Yes, we were all young…dreaming about life before obligations. Actually feeling moments of happiness, unencumbered by responsibility.

That you still exists. This is who we are supposed to be. Our life fulfilled by reaching toward our aspirations; Unhindered by hunger or thirst or illness or lack of opportunity.

Our restoration resides beyond this paradigm we know all too well. The moment we stop living to stack coins is the moment we reclaim our true destiny…and recover the wellspring of our humanity.

We did not evolve to only survive.

Categories
Social Evolution

What if…

Remember playing “what if” as a child? What if you had a million dollars? What if you could live forever? I used to spend a lot of time day dreaming about what if. Today, as I consider my life, I now wonder what if my life was free from the constraints of money. The more I think about the impact money has on my life, the more I realize I am a slave to the need for money.

Virtually everything I know, everything I do, everywhere I go, everything I eat, and everywhere I sleep…is all determined by money. It has always been this way.

Yet in many ways, I’m a very blessed man. I was born and raised in the richest country in the world. I was provided a fantastic private school education. I entered my adulthood at a time when opportunities were opening to aspiring adults from an expanding range of ethnic, racial, and gender backgrounds. My chosen career came from amongst a wide range of choices, informed by extensive access to our accumulated knowledge. Despite all of these advantages, virtually every choice I have made was a function of money.

What if we all were free to make choices not constrained by the need for money? Let that thought sink in.

Imagine being born in a world where global resources were managed to maximize sustainability and minimize waste. Technology and innovation are deployed to produce the best products and services based on the accumulation of human knowledge. Automation is maximized to provide all the mundane, repetitive processes and services necessary for modern life, freeing each of us to focus our energies on pursuing our highest vocational aspirations. Every person would have access to a comprehensive education where the goal is scholarship not wealth. In such a world, a virtuous life would be measured by how each of us contribute to the well being of all of us.

Sounds like Utopia? Actually, this is what freedom feels like. Free people are empowered to reach their full potential. Slaves are constrained from reaching their full potential for the benefit of their masters. As we examine our lives today, how many of us can truly say we are free?

Categories
Economics Social Evolution

The day after the financial crash…

We have been there before. October 30th, 1929…October 20th, 1987…September 30th, 2008. On these days we had as much food on the shelves of our stores as we did the day before. We had as many suitable homes capable of sheltering us from harsh weather. We still had jobs and meaningful work to do. What changed?

The financial markets were desperately short of money. The availability and quality of resources that made our lives worth living had been unaffected. But the severe shortage of cash led over time to the devastating waste of enormous resources, destroyed by neglect. Crops shriveled in the fields; the assembly line stopped producing products; homes were abandoned; jobs were lost; savings were lost; marriages were destroyed; broad access to higher education was eliminated; All because money was in too few hands. Consider for a moment that we destroyed billions of dollars worth of homes in America in the residential real estate collapse of 2007-2009…all due to abandonment caused by a shortage of money.

Money has become a surrogate for resources. If you have money, you can access resources. And if you lose your money, your access to resources are taken away. The thing is…money is not resources. Money is a totally arbitrary way to determine access to resources. Would any of us have the money and therefore the access to resources we have if we were born to the lowest caste in India? Or to a single impoverished mother in rural Appalachia? Yet we compound the randomness of birth with the use of money as a surrogate for resources to determine who is able to reach their full potential.

Given this reality, who amongst the fortunate can honestly claim they earned the privilege they enjoy at the expense of the less fortunate? In the parable of Lazarus and the rich man, we are all the rich man. According to the Worldwatch Institute, 12% of the world’s population living in North America and Western Europe accounts for 60% of private consumption spending, while the one-third living in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa accounts for only 3.2%. Our disproportionate consumption of global resources creates the conditions for mass deprivation of billions of people, few of which have the opportunity to reach their full potential.

The system of global economics that produce these inhumane conditions is not sustainable. We are experiencing resource depletion, destabilization of political institutions, a global refugee crisis involving mass migration to more fortunate countries, radicalized populations fueling global terrorism, and the exploding addictions to drugs and alcohol as more and more people self-medicate to cope with the inadequacy of available choices to improve their lives.

Our choice is clear: change to a full access, sustainable, resource management based, global economy, or degrade into a modern dystopia where fewer resources are available to sustain fewer people.

Categories
Social Evolution

My North Rim experience…

I have dreamed about going to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon for years. I have been to the more frequented South Rim multiple times and had the pleasure of hiking to Havasupai Falls and camping for four days. Every time I travel to the Grand Canyon I am renewed by the natural, majestic beauty of our functioning ecology. Imagine the vivid night sky unimpeded by the light pollution of modern city life…darkness filled with bright, distant beacons, sparkling like diamonds. I longed for the renewal that has only come when I am immersed in the most natural settings. I have been here for one day. The North Rim’s beauty is beyond written description. Yet the renewal I hoped for will not come.

Why? The sky is blotted with a haze of chem trails. What would otherwise be a gorgeous clear to naturally cloudy sky has been reduced to a haze of industrial manipulation. As I look in the sky, a relentless series of planes fly above the Canyon leaving massive X’s across the sky. This expanding image reminds me of America’s successful moon landing where our astronauts left an American flag planted on the surface. Then…we claimed the moon. Today…”they” claim the sky.

Historically, we claim the Earth through the ownership of her land, water and natural resources. But who are we to claim any of it? What did we do to think we have the right to control nature’s resources for our own exclusive uses? Even here at the remote North Rim of the Grand Canyon, we dare to claim the sky and use it for whatever undisclosed purpose…robbing everyone else from enjoying the natural beauty of this otherwise pristine setting. Thankfully, this is the last throws of the old paradigm. Self-interest has run its course.

More and more people see the destructive effects of unbridled self-interest. We are hitting critical mass in social, political, economic and spiritual thought, where people acknowledge our interdependence on each other and the natural environment that provides for our survival. This new realization is elevating the shift toward common interest as a core consideration. Sustainability and efficient utilization of resources will be the new currency. Waste, gluttony, and degradation will be the primary forbidden vices. Compared to the old paradigm, critics will accuse us of seeking Utopia. We do not. We are evolving out of necessity. And like every species of life, we will adjust or manifest our own extinction.