Tuesday, 2 February 2016

The Global Economy Could Fall Farther and Faster Than Pundits Expect | Zero Hedge

The Global Economy Could Fall Farther and Faster Than Pundits Expect



Systemic fragility doesn't respond to central bank jawboning or Keynesian claptrap; unlike those "policy tools," fragility is real.
The core narrative of central bank/cartel capitalism is centralized agencies have the power to limit downturns and extend credit-based "good times" almost indefinitely. The centralized power bag of tricks includes fiscal policies such as deficit spending to boost "aggregate demand" in downturns and monetary policies such as lowering interest rates to zero and buying assets, a.k.a. quantitative easing.
If we crawl under the barbed wire and escape the ideological Keynesian Concentration Camp, we find thinkers such as Ugo BardiJohn Michael Greer and Dimitry Orlov, whose work explores the dynamics of collapse, resilience and sustainability.
All three have added a great deal to my own (emerging) understanding of the many dynamics of collapse.
We can summarize the dynamics of collapse in many ways; here's one: collapse is latent fragility manifesting. A familiar (and tragic) health analogy offers an example: a middle-aged man doesn't appear ill, a bit thick around the middle perhaps, but neither he nor his intimates can see the fragility of his clogged arteries and blood-starved heart. Seemingly "out of the blue," the man has a massive heart attack and passes from this Earth, to the shock of everyone who knew him.

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