Thursday, 7 July 2011
ROLLING BACK THE LANGUAGE OF ECONOMICS - Part 4 : DEBT
That is a harder question than you might imagine.
Most people think of debt as an amount of money that is owed to another person or company. However, over recent decades the new reality of debt has permeated all aspects of our lives through a complex process of financial wheeling and dealings.
Because governments around the world decided to move away from the 'gold standard', all currencies around the world are now 'fiat currencies'. That is to say that the notes in your wallets are no longer backed by a promise to pay the bearers in gold. Currencies have become detached from real assets like precious metals and allowed to fluctuate in perceived value as 'the market' dictates.
This means that ultimately, the value of money only carries a worth equivalent to the confidence that every participant has in the scheme at any particular time.
After the gold standard was abandoned, currencies were allowed to float freely and competitively against each other. Over time, this detachment has caused a psychological disconnection between the value of money and the value of real things. This detachment process has been exacerbated by the introduction of digital money transactions and time stretched credit options.
We all know how easy it is to buy something using a credit card or a bank transfer or paypal. The detachment process has made everyone buy and sell in a new way. The reality only reappears periodically when we get statements, or letters from our banks or overdraft repayment requests or defaults or bankruptcies or credit crunches or sovereign debt crises or world economic meltdowns.
You see, what we were convinced was money is actually now being realised for what it is. Debt. This new reality is true for every layer of the world economy. From the IMF right down to the peasant in Mozambique.
Because we have all participated in the scheme (actively or in some contrived secondary processes), we have all fallen into the same trap. The trap that enslaves us all.
From the federal reserve bankers that print new money (both digitally and on paper) to the idiot buying the latest Justin Bieber merchandise on eBay, we have all just been participating in some form of ponzi scheme based on fractional reserve banking and fractional reserve spending.
Since the 1930's when the gold standard was abandoned the financial processes that have brought us to where we are today, have created a financial system where nobody can begin to calculate how much money is out there (real and digital) or how much debt is out there.
It is estimated that about 99% of all money is actually really debt. That would also account for why prices have increased about 100 fold since 1930. In other words, we are no richer, only 100 times more in debt.
The tipping point is so close now. The curve can go in one of two directions. Either fiat currencies will collapse under their own weight of debt or a rapid consolidation of debt repatriation demands will cause an equal and opposite degree of hyperinflation.
Which way will it go?
It matters not. Either scenario will be a disaster.
Monday, 13 June 2011
CROSSING THE RUBICON - A Paradigm Shift and The Engineer in Me.
1. Up until sometime around the year 1800, all species (particularly ours) had little margin for error. Like all other animals we lived up to the limit of the food supply. The populations ebbed and flowed following simple differential equations bounded by the limits of supply of food and numbers of humans.
2. From around the year 1800, fossil fuel exploitation enabled us to rig the market through advances in mechanisation, production and fertilisation. This positive trend could only ever be a temporary one. It was inevitable that the population would increase to exploit this step change in maximum demand possibilities. All that has happened is that the ebbing and flowing wave has a higher amplitude and a shorter wavelength. In other words, things just happen harder and faster. Markets are exaggerated and rich/poor disparities are exacerbated to insane and ugly degrees.
3. Since around the year 1800, the population has increased from 0.8 billion to nearly 8.0 billion.
4. The high demands of 2 centuries of wealthy countries exploitative folly and the recent extraordinary demands of large, fast developing countries have applied a number of ramping functions and a number of extreme pulses to the system. Anybody who knows anything about control systems design or mathematical modelling fears such pulses.
5. Since 1960 the annualised growth in crop yields has fallen from 3.5% per year to 1.2% per year despite the use of oil based fertilisers having been increased significantly. All of this intense farming is clearly destroying the land's potential to re-mineralise itself through natural irrigation and precipitation processes.
6. Politicians and money-markets will never face up to any of the above truths.
7. From now on, price pressures and resource shortages will be a permanent feature of our lives.
All of the above contributed to the financial crisis of 2008 and the subsequent spikes in commodity prices like oil, energy, metals and foods.
Add the following list of potential tipping points to this and we could be looking at the perfect storm.
1. Events in Syria could be the most likely scenario to inflame a full scale war against Israel, in turn, dragging the whole of the middle east into turmoil.
2. It is highly likely that Israel or the USA will wage a war against Iran if Iran escalates its nuclear program.
3. Libya. Does it need an explaination?
4. As the weather warms in other middle eastern countries, more tensions, protests and revolutions are bound to occur. The tipping points have been attributed to democratic awakenings by western media groups. It is more likely to have manifested itself due to spikes in food prices. Spending on food in second and third world counties forms a much more significant share of a family's budget.
5. The tragic events in Japan and subsequent annihilation of the Fukushima nuclear industry has changed world energy policy forever. The abandoning of existing and future fission projects will add massively to the demand for hydrocarbon based fuels for energy conversion needs. The impact on one of the worlds largest economies is sending out financial shock waves across the globe. Economists will un-forget about peak-oil once more.
6. Energy expenditure in the USA has just exceeded 9% of GDP for the second time. The first time was in the summer of 2008, just before the 'global financial crisis'.
7. Austerity programs (you ain't seen nothin' yet) around the globe both nationally and locally are beginning to impact on the jobs economy. This will accelerate as the story unfolds.
8. The much talked about sovereign debt crisis is about to materialise in spectacular fashion. Who will be the first 'fall guy'? Almost certainly Greece, but much bigger names will be in the frame soon after. A tower of cards teetering. The fallout will be truly shocking.
9. The demise of the U.S dollar seems unlikely to most people but watch this space. China bought massive amounts of US treasuries over the last decade. It is now trying to dump these investments on unsuspecting world bond markets at a faster rate than it accumulated them and that was pretty damn quick.
The next few years (or months even) will be very interesting to say the least.
See you all on the other side.
Thursday, 14 April 2011
ROLLING BACK THE LANGUAGE OF ECONOMICS - Part 3 : MONEY
According to their website, the US Federal Reserve Bank is a government body. However, all of its shareholders (Directors) are private banks. None of its stock is owned by the US government.
These central banks have the ability to print money whenever they see fit. A private company creating money from thin air. They also provide money to their governments in order to make up their revenue shortfall or spending excesses. The government pays interest on these debts. This interests is guaranteed to compound and spiral with time.
The last time the USA balanced its books was in 1835.
A couple of quotes from the past that resonate profoundly today:
Wednesday, 13 April 2011
ROLLING BACK THE LANGUAGE OF ECONOMICS - Part 2 : STIMULUS
Tuesday, 5 April 2011
ROLLING BACK THE LANGUAGE OF ECONOMICS - Part 1 : INTEREST

Another natural phenomenon that follows the same mathematical principle is sickness (i.e. diseases like cancers and viral infections).
It is interesting to note that the texts of the Christian, Jewish and Islamic faiths all expressly forbid the use of interest as the concept is seen as a levy on God's time. However, over time these ideas have been relaxed through a series of reinterpretations.
Nobody can be free of paying interest even if you save up for things before you buy them. Currently, due to the way interest has permeated through all aspects of the world economy via credit markets and commodities markets, about 45% of the price of all goods is used to service the interest on debt held in the supply chain.
Because of the invisible interest that has attached itself to the sales price of everything, most people are nett interest payers. In fact 85% of people are nett interest payers, about 5% of people are interest neutral and about 10% of people are nett interest receivers. In other words 10% of the people receive 90% of the interest that everyone else pays. Doesn't that sound like another more well known statistic. Yes, it is interest that is entirely responsible for the massively uneven distribution of wealth. How can you become a nett interest receiver. Well you just need to have a spare £500,000 hanging around that you don't need but you could invest.
Notwithstanding all of the above, the whole notion of interest is totally flawed. As an example, say that Jesus had deposited 1 penny into a bank account in the year 32AD with an account that would yield a typical long term interest rate of 5% per year. If he had returned in the year 2011 and gone to the bank to withdraw all of his money with interest, that amount would be
£8,582,678,794,222,570,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
That amount is difficult to imagine. However if the bank paid out in gold balls at today's gold value, it would amount to 44 trillion gold balls. Each gold ball would be the same weight as planet earth.
A great investment? Yes, but this financial model (INTEREST) cannot work in the long term.
Sunday, 6 March 2011
THE PRICE OF OIL vs THE COST OF OIL
Even though the price of a barrel of oil is fixed by just a couple of commodity exchanges around the world, the actual cost of oil extraction varies greatly from country to country.
It is much easier to extract oil from land based drilling platforms than it is from offshore rigs.
It is much easier to extract oil when it is close to the surface.
It is much harder to extract oil from tar and shale deposits.
In essence, the harder it is to extract, the more expensive the production costs.
The above is a simplification but other cost factors like local wages, distance from markets also contribute to costs.
I have spent some time researching these costs from various sources and the results are shown below.
Crude prices on the open market currently range from £100 to £120 US dollars per barrel.
The following is a list of average extraction costs by country (in US dollars per barrel).
Saudi Arabia - $1.50
Kuwait - $2.00
Iraq - $5.00
Canada - $8.50
Russia - $12.00
Iran - $12.50
Nigeria - $22.50
Venezuela $25.00
UK - $50.00
With profit margins this big, it is easy to see why western governments and businesses cosy up to non democratic middle eastern regimes.
IT'S OIL IN THE WRONG PLACE - Watch out for thieves !
I have listed the results in a table.
The table shows the top 10 oil producing countries with the most proven reserves. Please note that these 'proven' reserve figures are usually exaggerated by each country in order to reduce 'the fear' in the commodities markets and to insulate their respective domestic economies.
The table also shows how long each country's reserves would last if the world were dependent entirely on that country.
It also shows the top 10 oil consuming countries and how long they could survive if they had to rely on only their own oil, for instance if the world went all protectionist due to a world war or an extreme economic fear event.

It really does demonstrate the frailty of western oil guzzling economies. Look how vulnerable Japan, South Korea, Germany, France and Italy are.
Looks like the best places to be (in terms of prosperity and energy security) are Canada and Brazil.
You can also see why Iraq was so important to the Western forces and why the U.S. have built the largest embassy complex in the world.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Embassy,_Baghdad
Tuesday, 1 March 2011
FOOD MADNESS - Counting the calories
It takes 10 fossil fuel calories to produce 1 food calorie on a first world table.
An oil burning machine is used to plough a field.

That ploughing machine and all of the raw materials in that machine were manufactured using oil, gas and coal based energies.
An oil burning machine is used to plant seeds.

That seed drilling machine and all of the raw materials in that machine were manufactured using oil, gas and coal based energies.
The seeds are treated in a factory with germination products derived from oil.

The factory uses oil, coal and gas based energies to run.
The factory uses oil burning machines to bring raw materials to it and oil burning machines to deliver seeds to distribution centres.

These distribution centres consume oil, gas and coal based energies.
They use oil burning machines to transport their seed products to farms.

An oil burning machine is used to apply a high yielding fertiliser.

That fertiliser is derived from oil.
That fertiliser is produced in a factory that uses oil, gas and coal based energy sources.

That factory uses transportation methods and energy sources to distribute its product as the seed company.
The farms often rely on irrigated water systems.

Oil, gas and coal based energies are used to extract water from aquifers and pumped large distances using pumps that consume oil, gas and coal based energy sources.

Pesticides are used throughout the growing period.
These pesticides are derived from oil.
Like the seeds and the fertilisers, these pesticides are made in factories using oil, gas and coal based energies and are transported and distributed using oil burning machines.
The crops are harvested using a multitude of oil burning machines.
The crops are transported to distribution centres using oil burning machines.
The distribution centres use oil, gas and coal based energies.
The goods are packaged in plastics and cardboard.
The plastics are oil derived products.

Cardboard use huge amounts of oil, gas and coal based energies for their extraction, production, transportation and distribution needs.
These packaged products are transported to distribution centres using oil burning machines.
They are then redistributed to supermarkets using oil burning machines.

Millions of people collect their food from supermarkets each day using oil burning machines.

To reiterate then. For each calorie of food on a first world table, another 10 calories of fossil fuel derived energy has been used to put it there.
And finally to put this in perspective.
Each person requires around 2000 food based calories per day to maintain themselves. In power terms this equates to 2.326 KWh; about the same as an electric kettle running for 1 hour or 15 TV sets running for an hour. And given that it takes 10 calories of fossil fuel to produce and transport 1 calorie of food to your table, each person uses the equivalent of 23.26 KWh of fossil fuel energy per day. That is about twice the amount of fossil fuel energy that the average family uses each day for their domestic electricity requirements.
Tuesday, 15 February 2011
FOOD FOR THOUGHT - The commodity conundrum
Reasons why global food prices are heading out of control.
Droughts, storms and fires - These have impacted on rising food prices. However, these events happen every year and are not responsible for the current spikes in commodity prices.
Emerging markets - Rapidly developing central Asian countries are seeing phenomenal economic growth activity. Corporations are exploiting their rising disposable incomes and these countries are now sucking in a diversification of 'en vogue' agricultural products. These are being sourced on the world commodity exchanges and driving prices higher.
Bio fuels - Developed countries, particularly those who have signed up for multinational climate change mitigation agreements, are chasing every megawatt from every possible area. Vast tracts of land have been turned over to produce bio crops. This leaves a significant reduction in the available acreage required to produce sugar and cereals in these cash crop producing regions. Lack of supply pushes prices higher.
Commodity speculation - Investment bankers have switched their strategies in light of the financial crisis and the post crisis equity fear expeienced in dealing rooms around the world. Commodities and complex commodity derivatives are now being transacted with the fury once reserved for stocks, shares, options and futures. With all of these new middle men taking their cut, offloading prices have soared.
Globalisation - This has facilitated a tsunami of commodity exchange possibilities. These new 'panaceas' will realise themselves as speculative bubbles followed by spectacular and chaotic collapses.
Currency wars - Because of the financial crisis and the subsequent debt hangover and austerity programs, Governments around the world are doing their damnedest to reduce the value of their fiat currencies in order to inflate away their structural sovereign debts. This only facilitates a race to the bottom. The result of low currency values is higher import prices.
Crude oil price - For a whole raft of reasons previously discussed, crude oil prices will only be heading in one direction and that is not down. Many pesticides, animal feeds and crop fertilisers are derived from oil based products. Most commodities also attract vast fuel miles and transportation costs.
The Tunisian, Egyptian and future middle eastern, central Asian and African stories all have rising food prices as a catalysing process. In the short term a welcome regime change may come. However it is unlikely that regime changes will curtail the longer term future of escalating food prices.
Monday, 7 February 2011
MASTERS & SERVANTS - Say goodbye to hope
David Cameron - Private education at Eton , PPE at Oxford. He is a direct descendent of William IV and cousin of Queen Elizabeth II. He is married to the daughter of the 8th Baronet of Sheffield.
Nick Clegg - Private education at Westminster School, Social anthropology at Cambridge. He is a direct descendent of the Imperial Russian Baronecy.
William Hague - Studied PPE at Oxford. President of the Oxford Union.
Ken Clarke - Studied law at Cambridge.
Theresa May - Studied Gegraphy at Oxford.
Liam Fox - Studied medicine at Glasgow.
Vince Cable - Studied natural scieces and economics at Cambridge.
Chris Huhne - Privately educated at Westminster school. Studied French at La Sorbonne and PPE at Oxford.
Andrew Lansley - Privately educated at Brentwood. Studied politics at Exeter.
Michael Gove - Studied English at Oxford.
Philip Hammond - Privately educated at Brentwood. Studied PPE at Oxford.
Andrew Mitchell - Privately educated at Rugby. Studied history at Cambridge.
Owen Paterson - Privately educated at Radley. Married to the daughter of the $th Viscount Ridley.
Michael Moore - Privately educated at Strathallan. Studied politiocs and history at Edinburgh.
Cheryl Gillan - Privately educated at Cheltenham ladies college.
Jeremy Hunt - Privately educated at Charterhouse. Studied PPE at Oxford.
Danny Alexander - Studied PPE at Oxford.
Francis Maude - Privately educated at Abingdon School. Studied law at Cambridge.
Oliver Letwin - Privately educated at Eton. Studied at Cambridge and London Business school.
David Willetts - Privately educated at King Edwards. Studied PPE at Oxford.
George Young - Privately educated at Eton. Studied PPE at Oxford. He is the 6th Baronet.
Dominic Grieve - Privately educated at Westminster School. Studied modern history at Oxford.
