With reference to Hurricane Harvey and disruption to the ethylene industry as well as to the oil industry this paper by David Korowicz is essential to understanding the meaning.
Edge of Extinction: Disruption of Supply Chain
Trade Off: Financial system supply-chain cross contagion – a study in global systemic collapse
Feasta,
17 July, 2012
This new study by David Korowicz explores the implications of a major financial crisis for the supply-chains that feed us, keep production running and maintain our critical infrastructure. He uses a scenario involving the collapse of the Eurozone to show that increasing socio-economic complexity could rapidly spread irretrievable supply-chain failure across the world.
Read the paper (PDF, 1 MB)
Overview
This
study considers the relationship between a global systemic banking,
monetary and solvency crisis and its implications for the real-time
flow of goods and services in the globalised economy. It outlines how
contagion in the financial system could set off semi-autonomous
contagion in supply-chains globally, even where buyers and sellers
are linked by solvency, sound money and bank intermediation. The
cross-contagion between the financial system and trade/production
networks is mutually reinforcing.
It
is argued that in order to understand systemic risk in the globalised
economy, account must be taken of how growing complexity
(interconnectedness, interdependence and the speed of processes), the
de-localisation of production and concentration within key pillars of
the globalised economy have magnified global vulnerability and opened
up the possibility of a rapid and large-scale collapse. ‘Collapse’
in this sense means the irreversible loss of socio-economic
complexity which fundamentally transforms the nature of the economy.
These crucial issues have not been recognised by policy-makers nor
are they reflected in economic thinking or modelling.
As
the globalised economy has become more complex and ever faster (for
example, Just-in-Time logistics), the ability of the real economy to
pick up and globally transmit supply-chain failure, and then
contagion, has become greater and potentially more devastating in its
impacts. In a more complex and interdependent economy, fewer failures
are required to transmit cascading failure through socio-economic
systems. In addition, we have normalised massive increases in the
complex conditionality that underpins modern societies and our
welfare. Thus we have problems seeing, never mind planning for such
eventualities, while the risk of them occurring has increased
significantly. The most powerful primary cause of such an event would
be a large-scale financial shock initially centring on some of the
most complex and trade central parts of the globalised economy.
The
argument that a large-scale and globalised financial-banking-monetary
crisis is likely arises from two sources. Firstly, from the outcome
and management of credit over-expansion and global imbalances and the
growing stresses in the Eurozone and global banking system. Secondly,
from the manifest risk that we are at a peak in global oil
production, and that affordable, real-time production will begin to
decline in the next few years. In the latter case, the credit backing
of fractional reserve banks, monetary systems and financial assets
are fundamentally incompatible with energy constraints. It is argued
that in the coming years there are multiple routes to a large-scale
breakdown in the global financial system, comprising systemic banking
collapses, monetary system failure, credit and financial asset
vaporization. This breakdown, however and whenever it comes, is
likely to be fast and disorderly and could overwhelm society’s
ability to respond.
We
consider one scenario to give a practical dimension to understanding
supply-chain contagion- a break-up of the Euro and an intertwined
systemic banking crisis. Simple argument and modelling will point to
the likelihood of a food security crisis within days in the directly
affected countries and an initially exponential spread of production
failures across the world beginning within a week. This will
reinforce and spread financial system contagion. It is also argued
that the longer the crisis goes on, the greater the likelihood of its
irreversibility. This could be in as little as three weeks.
This
study draws upon simple ideas drawn from ecology, systems dynamics,
and the study of complex networks to frame the discussion of the
globalised economy. Real-life events such as United Kingdom fuel
blockades (2000) and the Japanese Tsunami (2011) are used to shed
light on modern trade vulnerability.
Read the paper (PDF, 1 MB)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.