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Collapse Is the Only Reform

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Financialization = Death | Collapse Is the Only Reform The Hawaiian Islands Editor?s note: Ours is

Financialization = Death [The Daily Reckoning] October 19, 2024 [WEBSITE]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( Collapse Is the Only Reform The Hawaiian Islands Editor’s note: Ours is a heavily financialized economy with sometimes extreme excesses. Can these excesses be eliminated without crashing the economy? The answer is no, according to Charles Hugh Smith. [Charles Hugh Smith] CHARLES HUGH SMITH Dear Reader, Thanks to recency bias, we tend to think the world has always been more or less as it is today. Tectonic shifts beneath the veneer of everyday life escape us unless we make a concerted effort to peel back the veneer of normalcy. For example, consider the rise of finance as the dominant force in our socioeconomic/political status quo. Statista gives us a rough picture of the dominance: In 2023, the finance, insurance, real estate, rental, and leasing industry contributed 20.7% to the United States' gross domestic product (GDP). This is higher than the long-term average of 7.29%. In 1947, the finance industry made up only 10% of non-farm business profits. By 2010, the finance industry made up 50% of non-farm business profits. The chart below of non-bank financial institutions' assets as a percentage of GDP tells the story: prior to the era of financialization, non-bank financial institutions' assets trundled along for decades at around 40% of GDP. Recall that "non-bank financial institutions" is shorthand for the mechanisms of financialization, which is the globalized commoditization of everything into a tradable financial instrument. Labor, capital, risk, currencies, commodities, income streams, real-world assets — everything is converted into a financial doppelganger that can be arbitraged and traded for profit. The actual use-value is no longer the "value" being "created"; the "value" is "created" by generating an entirely abstract financial shadow cast by the collateral of the real world. Way out of Whack This transmogrification of the global economy into a fully financialized shadow world took off in the early 1980s when financiers were first given access to unlimited credit and the other tools of financialization. Non-bank financial institutions' assets soon soared from 40% of GDP to 140% of GDP, and in the final blow-off phase of hyperfinancialization that we're experiencing now, these assets are 200% of GDP — five times the pre-financialization era levels that were deemed "widespread prosperity" (the Trente Glorieuses, the 30 glorious years of shared prosperity from 1945–1975). [39° 39' 43" N, 119° 25' 9" W]( Jim Rickards just traveled over 2,500 miles to these exact coordinates. It’s there that one of the greatest American gold secrets lies. Fewer Americans have probably [entered this location]( than Area 51… But it holds one of the biggest gold secrets Jim’s ever seen. [Click Here To See Jim On Location NOW]( The wealth generated by financialization and hyper-financialization isn't shared; it's concentrated in the hands of those with access to credit and the other tools of financialization, currently epitomized by private equity. This excerpt from a post on promarket.org illuminates the reality that financialization isn't cost-free to the economy: Epstein and Montecino argue that the total cost of the financial system is comprised of rents, misallocation costs and the costs of the 2008 crisis. Such costs can be divided into two types: transfers and inefficiencies. When combined together, Epstein and Montecino estimate that they total to $688 billion a year, or 4% of GDP. Cumulatively, from 1990–2023, this number would add up to $22.7 trillion. Adjusted for inflation, this sum totals $30.2 trillion in today's dollars — larger than America's entire GDP of $27 trillion. An Inherently Unstable System The larger point is that an economy that's dependent on the distortions of financialization for its "growth" and profits is not a stable system. The gross imbalances generated by the distortions undermine its stability, and the system collapses under its own weight once the imbalances destabilize society and the real-world economy. As historian Peter Turchin has documented, the cycle of socioeconomic-political disintegration-integration runs around 50 years, and so here we are. Turchin caught some flak for predicting the handbasket would start its slide into heck in 2020, and voila. Having lived through the last cycle of tumult, discord and disintegration, that we're in another such cycle is obvious to me, but not to others. That the end of the Debt-Speculation Super-Cycle is upon us is obvious to many of us, but hotly denied by the multitudes counting on The Everything Bubble never popping. I had an interesting conversation with a very successful millennial entrepreneur (A.C.) on the question how do we reduce the destabilizing excesses of financialization without crashing the economy? A.C.'s concern was the immense suffering that would result once the speculative bid of financialization collapsed, something he felt was inevitable if even the most modest restrictions were put in place, for example, restoring the Glass-Steagall separation of commercial from investment banking. [EXPOSED: The Dems’ Illegal Plot to Keep Trump Out of Office]( [Click here for more...]( Former CIA Advisor Jim Rickards is putting his career on the line. After accurately predicting Biden’s drop out, he’s now exposing the Democrats’ plan to keep Trump out of the White House… even if he wins the election. We may be headed towards societal meltdown. Please keep this information confidential. [Watch The Presentation NOW]( The Moral Universe That the suffering caused by the implosion of the Everything Bubble will reach every level of society is self-evident and should concern us all. But we must also place all finance-economic questions in the context that we inhabit a moral universe, not a purely mechanical or digital system like a clock or a computer. [image 1] In the moral universe, the question is what is the right thing to do now for future generations? The self-evident answer is to deflate the financialization bubble, defang its predatory tools and take the lumps now rather than dump the ever-expanding destructive consequences on the next generation. This can be viewed as our civic/moral duty. We also discussed an alternative strategy: Wait for the inevitable collapse of the bubble and then clean the nation's financial house of both the wreckage and the causes of the catastrophe, financialization. Either way, the implosion of the Everything Bubble will occur and the suffering will be great. We can try to deflate the bubble slowly via restoring Glass-Steagall, etc., but given the extremes of speculative excess, even modest reforms might trigger the collapse. Take the Pain Now — or Take More Pain Later Or we can let the bubble implode under its own weight and have a plan ready to clean house when the dust settles. This is the result of letting greed, corruption and fraud run amok for decades under the phony guise of "creating value:" Once the bill comes due, those responsible will wring their hands, blubbering that they were simply "doing God's work." Yes, well, you can tell the preacher on Devil's Island, where you'll be living out your retirement. Can we rein in the excesses of financialization without crashing the economy? Sadly, no. Now that the economy is dependent on the speculative excesses and distortions of financialization, there is no way to avoid the banquet of consequences that has already been served and is only awaiting the seating order. But we can do what's right and take the pain now rather than let it pile even higher before it implodes on the next generation's watch. Like what you’ve read? [Go here]( for more. Regards, Charles Hugh Smith for The Daily Reckoning [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:feedback@dailyreckoning.com) Editor’s note: Jim Rickards has personally put his money into this [one unique gold investment.]( It’s not physical gold. It’s not any kind of stock option. It’s not some big gold miner. And it’s not a bond, not jewelry, not scrap metal, not a collectible or novelty, not a gold crypto or anything else you might be guessing. If you want to see what Jim’s just placed his big gold bet on (and to ride shotgun alongside him)... [click here to play...]( [Click here right now.]( Thank you for reading The Daily Reckoning! We greatly value your questions and comments. Please send all feedback to [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:feedback@dailyreckoning.com) [Charles Hugh Smith] [Charles Hugh Smith]( is an American writer and blogger, and serves as the chief writer for the blog "Of Two Minds". Started in 2005, this site has been listed No. 7 in CNBC's top alternative financial sites, and his commentary is featured on a number of sites including Zerohedge.com, The American Conservative, and Peak Prosperity. [Paradigm]( ☰ ⊗ [UPDATE PREFERENCES]( [Contact Us]( © 2024 Paradigm Press, LLC. 1001 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MD 21201. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press, LLC. delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your The Daily Reckoning e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from The Daily Reckoning, feel free to [click here,]( or manage your newsletter preferences [here.]( Please note: the mailbox associated with this email address is not monitored, so do not reply to this message. We welcome comments or suggestions at feedback@dailyreckoning.com. This address is for feedback only. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, [contact us here]( or call (844)-731-0984. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. The Daily Reckoning is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. Please read our [Privacy Statement.]( If you are having trouble receiving your The Daily Reckoning subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox by [whitelisting The Daily Reckoning.](

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