Sliding downhill to a smaller world
Automation won't be so much of a trigger as it will be a constant pressure.
Bangladesh needs 2 million new jobs every year but, automation is cutting into all employment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsSDI8wWAyQ&t=210s
The Industrial Revolution has been chipping away at job niches for more than a century.
Robots will steal your white collar office job, too: 3 case studies ...
https://www.techrepublic.com/.../rob...ce-job-too-3-c...
Robots do destroy jobs and lower wages, says new study - The Verge
https://www.theverge.com/.../3/.../r...-us-labor-mark...
The trigger is most likely to be State spending to support people who have lost all or part of their income to automation. Italy is blowing out their budget to try to give some support to the poor. They will most likely blow the EU apart.
44 million Americans receive direct government support. 51% of Americans receive a check from the State. When the sovereign bond market blows, most of this support will come to an end. This public support is compensation to offset the loss of income. It won't be automation directly that blows up the sovereign bond markets. It will be the remedy for automation that blows the system.
Post WW II, America had 3% of the population and, 50% of the manufacturing capacity (ex iron curtain States) We lost that lock on manufacturing and aggregate income has fallen proportionately.
The computer has accelerated a process that began decades ago.
In the very crowded populations, 20% of seagulls are lesbian. Mother Nature has mechanisms for reducing population. Japan is the perfect example where they have even lost the desire for sex. The fertility rate in China is only 1.6 Most people realize that price inflation and resource depletion will bring us a lower standard of living. The whole world (ex sub-sahara Africa) is reducing their birth rate. This is completely incompatible with the demands of a debt-money system AND, the credit bubble.
The major CBs printed mega-pixels of new debt-money to try to compensate for the huge drop-off in consumption.
10/18 America’s $1.5 trillion student-loan industry is a ‘failed social experiment’ – MW
The debt bubble will blow when it is generally recognised that only debt-free money can keep it inflated. The FED prints debt-money but, the GOV has no ability or intention of paying it back. Last year, we paid $1/2 trillion in interest on public debt. It remains to be seen just how long the debt markets will allows the payment of interest-only with no hope of a return of principle. As interest rates climb, that $1/2 trillion will grow considerably.
No money,,,,, NO kids
10/19 Nearly half the world lives on less than $5.50 a day: World Bank – PhysOrg
EVERYONE assumes that; when things crash, the CB printing press will come to the rescue. I'm somewhat doubtful.
10/18 Saxo Bank outlook: A new easing cycle based on ugly realities – Mondo
10/18 Guggenheim: “By Q2 2019, expect risk-off everywhere with a 40% crash” – ZH
Buy more popcorn.
10/18 US stocks resume their decline – CNBC
Stocks had a short-lived dead-cat bounce but, they haven't stopped falling.
10/18 China’s stock market getting pummeled; that’s bad news for US markets – CNBC
"
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Blog/China
Posted Oct 19, 2018 by Martin Armstrong
The Sovereign Debt Crisis in China among the provisional governments is alive and well. The off-balance sheet government liabilities in the regions amounted to an estimated 40 trillion yuan which is almost $6 trillion. Some are calling this a “gigantic credit risk” which is a hidden liability. This represents 60% of GDP which bypasses the debt-to-GDP ratio set by the central government on the provinces. "
https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/i...the-provinces/
So, what happens to unemployment when this all blows?
The banks were first in line for free money. 0% money from GOV. This is in addition to all of YOUR savings that they speculated with. They bought up everything with that money and,,,, jacked up the price before they resold it to the end consumer.
This price inflation purely from speculation is what drove down the purchasing power of your wages. It is also the basis for the income inequality.
Here is the graph, https://tcf.org/assets/images/blog_i...mic-growth.png
"Modern economies depend on a thriving financial sector, and the U.S. finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector now accounts for 20 percent of GDP — compared with only 10 percent in 1947. But many observers believe that this expansion of the financial sector comes at a high cost"
https://tcf.org/content/commentary/g...owth/?agreed=1
OK, but, how do you do a financial evaluation of a parasite that produces nothing?
"They" make up a fictional value of what all this speculation is worth and, ADD it to the GDP.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EC0G7pY4wRE&t=82s
Automation won't be so much of a trigger as it will be a constant pressure.
Bangladesh needs 2 million new jobs every year but, automation is cutting into all employment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsSDI8wWAyQ&t=210s
The Industrial Revolution has been chipping away at job niches for more than a century.
Robots will steal your white collar office job, too: 3 case studies ...
https://www.techrepublic.com/.../rob...ce-job-too-3-c...
Robots do destroy jobs and lower wages, says new study - The Verge
https://www.theverge.com/.../3/.../r...-us-labor-mark...
The trigger is most likely to be State spending to support people who have lost all or part of their income to automation. Italy is blowing out their budget to try to give some support to the poor. They will most likely blow the EU apart.
44 million Americans receive direct government support. 51% of Americans receive a check from the State. When the sovereign bond market blows, most of this support will come to an end. This public support is compensation to offset the loss of income. It won't be automation directly that blows up the sovereign bond markets. It will be the remedy for automation that blows the system.
Post WW II, America had 3% of the population and, 50% of the manufacturing capacity (ex iron curtain States) We lost that lock on manufacturing and aggregate income has fallen proportionately.
The computer has accelerated a process that began decades ago.
In the very crowded populations, 20% of seagulls are lesbian. Mother Nature has mechanisms for reducing population. Japan is the perfect example where they have even lost the desire for sex. The fertility rate in China is only 1.6 Most people realize that price inflation and resource depletion will bring us a lower standard of living. The whole world (ex sub-sahara Africa) is reducing their birth rate. This is completely incompatible with the demands of a debt-money system AND, the credit bubble.
The major CBs printed mega-pixels of new debt-money to try to compensate for the huge drop-off in consumption.
10/18 America’s $1.5 trillion student-loan industry is a ‘failed social experiment’ – MW
The debt bubble will blow when it is generally recognised that only debt-free money can keep it inflated. The FED prints debt-money but, the GOV has no ability or intention of paying it back. Last year, we paid $1/2 trillion in interest on public debt. It remains to be seen just how long the debt markets will allows the payment of interest-only with no hope of a return of principle. As interest rates climb, that $1/2 trillion will grow considerably.
No money,,,,, NO kids
10/19 Nearly half the world lives on less than $5.50 a day: World Bank – PhysOrg
EVERYONE assumes that; when things crash, the CB printing press will come to the rescue. I'm somewhat doubtful.
10/18 Saxo Bank outlook: A new easing cycle based on ugly realities – Mondo
10/18 Guggenheim: “By Q2 2019, expect risk-off everywhere with a 40% crash” – ZH
Buy more popcorn.
10/18 US stocks resume their decline – CNBC
Stocks had a short-lived dead-cat bounce but, they haven't stopped falling.
10/18 China’s stock market getting pummeled; that’s bad news for US markets – CNBC
"
AddThis Sharing Buttons
Share to Facebook11Share to TwitterShare to LinkedInShare to Google+Share to More20
Blog/China
Posted Oct 19, 2018 by Martin Armstrong
The Sovereign Debt Crisis in China among the provisional governments is alive and well. The off-balance sheet government liabilities in the regions amounted to an estimated 40 trillion yuan which is almost $6 trillion. Some are calling this a “gigantic credit risk” which is a hidden liability. This represents 60% of GDP which bypasses the debt-to-GDP ratio set by the central government on the provinces. "
https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/i...the-provinces/
So, what happens to unemployment when this all blows?
The banks were first in line for free money. 0% money from GOV. This is in addition to all of YOUR savings that they speculated with. They bought up everything with that money and,,,, jacked up the price before they resold it to the end consumer.
This price inflation purely from speculation is what drove down the purchasing power of your wages. It is also the basis for the income inequality.
Here is the graph, https://tcf.org/assets/images/blog_i...mic-growth.png
"Modern economies depend on a thriving financial sector, and the U.S. finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector now accounts for 20 percent of GDP — compared with only 10 percent in 1947. But many observers believe that this expansion of the financial sector comes at a high cost"
https://tcf.org/content/commentary/g...owth/?agreed=1
OK, but, how do you do a financial evaluation of a parasite that produces nothing?
"They" make up a fictional value of what all this speculation is worth and, ADD it to the GDP.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EC0G7pY4wRE&t=82s
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