Gold Telegraph 03/10/2018
Global debt has reached record heights without any signs of relief.
While central bankers try to explain away the phenomenon of these
out-of-control numbers, it’s not much of a mystery. Immediate
consumption with the promise of repayment sometime in the future has
consequences. Global debt is staggering to the point most of it will
never be repaid. Certainly not in our generation. Perhaps by our
grandchildren, but as global debt keeps mounting, the picture is
doubtful.
The per capita global debt is $30,000. Who, exactly, will be making repayments?
Economists insist that the 2007
financial crisis could not have been predicted. Yet, all the signs of
out-of-control credit where there. Today, economists are repeating the same mantra, despite the spiraling world debt. The question is not if the next bubble will strike. It’s a matter of when.
The math is fairly simple. The more a
country increases its debt to simply stay afloat, the more like the
increasing debt will cause a tightening of credit. The next step in the
equation is a burst bubble and economic crisis. This is what happened in
1929, happened again in 2007, and it’s happening now. Past behavior is
the best predictor of future behavior.
Out-of-control credit will undoubtedly
slow down the US’s current economic growth. It probably won’t cause an
outright crisis. Other countries may not be as fortunate.
Countries such as
China, Belgium, South Korea, Australia, and Canada are experiencing an
unprecedented credit bubble, with few systems in place to control it.
The resulted inflation or simply write-offs of debts could result in a
global financial disaster we have not seen before. The current economic
upswing is unlikely to continue.
Prior to 2007, globalization, the exchange of goods
and services between countries, was at its highest level. Since then,
globalization has leveled off. We may have seen the peak of
globalization. Emerging countries, benefiting from globalization, have
raised their standard of living and cheap goods are no longer crossing
borders with the same abandon. Countries are instituting nationalistic
protectionist measures to protect their own economy. Globalization is
giving way to “islandization,” where the movement of capital and good
across borders is being limited instead of expanded. This limited global
trading, along with rising geopolitical tensions, will negatively
affect global economic expansion, while the global debt is still
spiraling out of control.
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