How To Time Collapses
Dmitry
Orlov
4
February, 2014
Over
the past half a decade I've made a number of detailed predictions
about collapse: how it is likely to unfold, what its various
manifestations are likely to be, and how it will affect various
groups and categories of people. But I have remained purposefully
vague about the timing of collapse and its various stages, being
careful to always append “give or take half a decade” to my dire
prognostications. I wasn't withholding information or being coy; I
really had no way of calculating when collapse will happen—until
five days ago, when, out of the blue, I received the following email
from Ugo Bardi:
Hi
Dmitry,
You
may be interested in this post of mine.
Starting
from this post, I'm trying to draw a parallel between the collapse of
the Soviet Union and the impending collapse of Italy. There are, as
always, similarities and differences. In particular, the Soviet Union
collapsed almost immediately after that oil production flattened out
and started declining. On the contrary, the Italian government
survives despite a loss of 36% in oil consumption.
My
impression is that it is all related to different taxation methods. I
understand that the Soviet tax system was based mainly on commodity
taxes and on taxes on production. When production stalled, people had
nothing to buy and the government had nothing to tax because most
people owned nothing and had little or no savings in banks. So, the
government had no choice but to fold over and disappear.
Instead,
the Italian system is based largely on income tax and property tax.
The government is losing revenues on commodity taxes (e.g. on
gasoline) but it can compensate with property taxes. Italians, on the
average, are “rich,” in the sense that they have savings in banks
and most of them own their homes. So, the government can tax their
properties and their savings. As long as Italians still have
something taxable, then the government will survive. It will
disappear only when it has managed to strip citizens completely of
everything they have.
Do
you agree with this interpretation? (BTW, Italy as a state may be
even more culturally diverse than the old Soviet Union was.)
Ugo
I
wrote back:
Hi
Ugo,
Very
interesting article. Yes, the entire southern tier of the EU is in
some early stage of collapse, but so far it hadn't occurred to me to
draw parallels between it and USSR. Now that you mention it, the
parallel is obvious: it is financial collapse triggered by something
having to do with oil, but with polarities reversed, and delayed by a
period of wealth destruction.
In
the case of USSR, taxation wasn't really a source of government
revenue. The national economy was based on government ownership of
everything, central planning and budgets, and a system of assigning
ministerial contracts to enterprises owned by the ministries. The
external economy was a matter of exporting hydrocarbons in exchange
for foreign currency, which was used to buy grain—mostly feed grain
for cattle, without which the population would become
protein-deprived and malnourished. Over the so-called “stagnation”
period of the 1980s the Soviet economy became hollowed out because of
several trends. Too much spending on defense was one of them. Another
was that investment in capital goods (machinery, plant and equipment)
reached the point of diminishing returns, which is very difficult to
characterize but not so difficult to observe. Lastly, Solzhenitsyn
and the dissident movement had done irreparable damage to Soviet
prestige, destroying morale. The coup de grace, when it came,
consisted of two pieces. One was the inability to expand oil
production given the state of Soviet oil extraction technology of the
era. The other was the fall in oil prices, down to $10/bbl at one
point, because North Sea and Alaska both went on stream, and the
Saudis pumped as much oil as they could based on a tacit agreement
with the US to depress oil prices and thus crush the Soviets. In this
they largely succeeded. The USSR became heavily indebted to the West,
and, at the very end, needed Western credit to keep the lights on in
the Kremlin. One of the final scenes featured Gorbachev on the phone
with [West Germany's Chancellor] Helmut Kohl asking him to ask the
Americans to release some funds.
Now,
I can see parallels to this in what is happening now in the US and in
the EU, but with all the polarities reversed: here oil flows in and
money flows out, and the coup de grace [will be] high oil prices
rather than low. Instead of failures of central planning, which
failed to allocate production effectively, we have failures of the
globalized market, where production is effectively globalized but
consumption is ineffectively localized among the wealthy and the
formerly wealthy, and has to be fueled by credit. Instead of
diminishing returns from deployment of capital goods, we have
diminishing returns from deployment of capital itself, where a unit
of new debt now produces much less than a unit of economic growth.
The damage to reputation and morale is mostly on the US side of the
Atlantic, where in place of Solzhenitsyn and the dissident movement
we have Abu Ghraib [scandal], [Wikileaks' Julian] Assange and
[Edward] Snowden. With the EU, most of the damage has to do with
[the] experience of economic disparities between the rich core and
the increasingly impoverished periphery, and the recent move in
Ukraine to walk away from the EU, and the ensuing Western-financed
mayhem in Kiev, show that the bloom is off the EU rose as well. The
runaway military spending is likewise mostly a US issue, although
epic failures in Afghanistan, Libya and Syria, in which the EU is
complicit, are likely to have some effect as well.
Comparing
USSR to Italy is difficult because of the disparity of scale: 1/5 of
the planet's dry surface versus a smallish peninsula; an economy that
slowly decayed in isolation versus an integral part of the EU; a
country where the choice is between burning hydrocarbons or dying of
exposure versus one where the choice is between riding a scooter or
taking the bus; a country with a ravaged agricultural sector unable
to grow enough protein calories versus a nation of foodies where
corner groceries make worthy subjects for oil paintings. But I think
that when it comes to the actual collapse, when it finally comes,
there will still be identifiable similarities. Financial collapse
always comes first: all sorts of financial arrangements unravel as
the center becomes unable to float the periphery, and in response the
periphery starts to withhold economic cooperation. The result is a
breakdown in supply chains, shutdown of production, and, shortly
thereafter, shutdown of commerce. In the case of the USSR, this
unfolded in 1989-91 as the various republics and regions refused to
cooperate with Moscow. I suspect that this will also happen in the
EU, at some point. But I think that you are exactly right that
whereas the average Soviet citizen could not be fleeced, Italy, and
much of the EU, still have plenty of fat sheep that the government
can shear to keep things running. Thus we are looking at a few more
years of steady decline before the lights start going out. This,
then, is the key distinction: the USSR collapsed promptly because it
was already skin and bones, whereas the US and the EU still have
plenty of subcutaneous fat to burn through. But they are, in fact,
burning through it. And so, the conclusion is, collapse will come,
but here it will take a little longer.
-Dmitry
Ugo
responded:
I
agree with you, of course. It makes perfect sense to me and it is the
main point I was making: the Soviet government couldn't tax Soviet
citizens too much because they owned very little.
...
The
Italian government instead has some luck in the sense that Italians
have some savings and most of them own their homes. So, the
government is progressively strangling their citizens to squeeze out
of them all that they have—while they still have something.
The
last round of tax increases in Italy is targeting homes and it is
really, really hurting, especially the poor. You can be poor here,
and still own a house that you inherited from your parents. Now the
government asks you to pay as if that house were revenue! That is
truly evil. People who don't have the money to pay this property tax
can only indebt themselves with banks (or worse). Eventually, they'll
have to sell their homes or give them to the bank (or to the
Mafia)—the result is disaster for everybody, including for the
banks, and even the government. But the whole thing has a perverse
logic. It has the advantage that it generates some immediate cash
which is badly needed, then the hell with the future.
The
[next] phase will be to target bank accounts. Then, when there will
be nothing left, the government will decamp and say bye to everybody.
Hell, what a planet I landed in.....
All
the best,
Ugo
And
so here is the outline of the method for calculating the timing of
collapses:
1.
Find out when the collapse clock starts running by looking for a
significant drop in energy consumption
2.
Calculate how long the clock is going to run by dividing the total
wealth of the citizenry by the economic shortfall of the shrinking
economy
For
any industrial economy the collapse clock starts running as soon as
the consumption of fossil hydrocarbons starts dropping appreciably.
It is sometimes difficult to tell whether this has already happened
if the country in question is still a major hydrocarbon producer.
Gross production numbers can still be holding steady or even seem to
go up a bit, but once you subtract all the energy that is being
expended on energy production itself, and on the unprofitable
mitigation of its many undesirable consequences, you might be able
see a decline sooner rather than later. Notably, the net energy
yield, or EROEI, is very low for all the newer unconventional sources
that have been trumpeted as panaceas in recent years, such as ones
that require hydrofracturing and drilling in deep water, tar sands
and so on. (The so-called “renewables,” such as wind, solar and
biofuels, are an even bigger joke, because all of them with the
exception of hydroelectric plants have net energy that is too low to
sustain an industrial economy, plus they all depend on technologies
that are “nonrenewable” unless the country maintains a vast
industrial base which happens to run on fossil fuels.) And so the
drop in net energy consumption is clear for Italy, which produces 7%
of the oil it consumes and imports the rest, whereas the picture is
somewhat less clear for the US, which still manages to supply around
a third of its oil.
Since
all industrial economies literally run on fossil fuels, lower energy
consumption immediately translates into a lower level of economic
activity and a shrinking economy. The gap between the expectations of
economic growth that are dialed into all of the financial
arrangements, and the reality of economic decline driven by lower
energy availability, has to be plugged with the population's savings.
There are a number of ways of expropriating wealth, generally
proceeding from various kinds of stealth taxation measures, to more
overt measures, to outright expropriation. Taking the US as the
example (since I am most familiar with it) the expropriation cascade
is proceeding as follows:
1.
Central bank policy of zeroing out of interest rates on savings
combined with massive money-printing. This forces money into
speculative markets (stocks, real estate, etc.) creating huge
financial bubbles; when these bubbles pop, savings are said to be
destroyed, but in reality that money has already been spent by the
government or used to fill the private coffers of those closely
associated with the government.
2.
Government policy of canceling retirements or short-changing
retirees. The federal government has worked hard to make its official
measure of inflation all but meaningless so that it can justify its
policy of making cost of living adjustments to social security
payments that are far less than the the real increases in the cost of
living. Another federal expropriation scheme is via guaranteed
student loans, which cannot be discharged through bankruptcy, and
which have created an entire class of indentured servants. At the
more local level, state and municipal governments are curtailing or
canceling retirement programs by virtue of going bankrupt.
3.
Ever more onerous reporting requirements for financial transactions,
especially for those who try to leave the country and expatriate
their savings. All foreign bank accounts must now be reported, and
people who work abroad are now forced to file voluminous annual
reports that cost thousands of dollars to prepare. Those who decide
to repudiate their US citizenship are made to pay a hefty exit tax.
Nevertheless, record numbers of US citizens have been doing just
that. Just having a US passport often makes it impossible to set up
accounts in foreign financial institutions, which have little desire
to comply with US demands for financial disclosure.
These
are the measures that are already in place. Looking at what's been
tried before, here and elsewhere, we can see what other measures are
in the works. Among them:
1.
So-called “bail-ins” where insolvent financial institutions are
rescued by confiscating depositor funds. We can expect the script to
be similar to what happened in Cyprus: politically connected
depositors get word ahead of time and yank out their money forthwith;
everybody else gets shorn.
2.
Limits on bank withdrawals. You might still “have” money in the
bank, but that's the only place you can “have” it. The semantics
of the verb “to have” can be quite tricky, you see...
3.
Ever-increasing taxes on property resulting in property confiscation.
It works like this: government prints money and hands it out to its
friends; its friends use it to temporarily bid up property values;
property taxes go up to a point where the property owners can't pay
them; owners lose their properties. A staggering 63% of real estate
purchases in Florida last December were cash purchases.
4.
Various kinds of sudden, new, super-complex regulations,
noncompliance with which results in very large fines. In turn,
nonpayment of these fines results in forfeiture of assets. The US has
some very curious laws according to which inanimate objects such as
cars, boats and houses can be charged with a crime, seized and
auctioned off. We can expect lots more of such property grabs in the
future.
5.
Gold confiscation, which happened once in the US already, so there is
a precedent for it. Yes, I know that this will make a number of
people upset, but I am yet to hear a convincing argument for why the
US government would not resort to gold confiscation when that turns
out to be one of the few remaining cards it can play.
This
list is by no means comprehensive. If you feel that I have missed
something major, please submit a comment, and I will consider it for
inclusion.
Now,
it would be nice if all of these measures worked like clockwork,
always producing the right amount of wealth confiscation to levitate
the government, and the financial scheme on which it is based, for a
little while longer. Alas, as with most things, something is bound to
go wrong at some point, most likely when you least expect it. And it
seems like a dead certainty that something will in fact go wrong well
before every last American citizen is relieved of every bit of their
accumulated wealth and is living peacefully in a roadside ditch,
wearing an attractive loincloth and a stylish mudpack for a hat,
quietly perfecting a nouvelle cuisine that features snails au jus and
dandelion salad au chaume. Maybe you can imagine it, but I can't.
Beyond a certain point, I can only imagine reports of widespread
“public disturbances” followed by “breakdown of law and order.”
Still,
I hope that this framework will allow us to set an upper bound for
how long collapse can be deferred for any given country. Once
hydrocarbon consumption drops appreciably, the clock starts running.
Then it is possible to estimate how long the clock can theoretically
run by dividing the remaining net worth of the population by the size
of the hole in the economy created by falling energy consumption.
But
after that things get messy. Some countries will hollow themselves
out quite peaceably, and go softly into the night, while others will
explode and fast-forward though the financial-commercial-political
collapse sequence. And so perhaps the most useful thing to know is
whether the collapse clock is already running for any given country,
because if it is already running, then it becomes a fool's game to
wait around for the inevitable outcome.
One
reasonable approach is to get another passport and quietly relocate
to another country. It is important that this country be one for
which the collapse clock is not running and won't be for a long time
yet. Ideally this would be a financially secure, politically stable,
energy independent, militarily invincible, underpopulated,
non-extradition country which will be among the last to be severely
disrupted by climate change and where you could have lunch with
Edward Snowden. But this approach doesn't appeal to everyone, and I
understand that.
And
so another approach is to adapt to what's coming while remaining in
the US, or in any other country for which the collapse clock is
running, by making yourself, and your wealth, should you have any,
illegible. Here is a very nice article by one smart cookie by the
name of Venkatesh Rao on the concept of illegibility. And here is his
very nice primer on being an illegible person. This kind of
illegibility has nothing to do with bad handwriting; it is about
hiding in plain sight. Please read these as homework, because I will
have more to say on this topic in the near future. And I would love
to see a list of countries for which the collapse clock is running,
along with first-order estimates for how long it could possibly run
for each one, based on their population's net worth and the country's
economic shortfall. But since this post has just gone over 3000
words, I am leaving this as an exercise for the reader.
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