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Extreme Inequality = Economic Collapse

Extreme Inequality = Economic Collapse thumbnail

John Fullerton’s white paper, Regenerative Capitalism, lists eight principles critical to systemic economic health. The Capital Institute’s research group, Research Alliance for Regenerative Economics (RARE), uses recent scientific advances—specifically, the physics of flow [1]—to create a logical and measurable explanation of how these principles work to make or break vitality in the human networks of which economies are built. Here we explain why too much inequality is more than a moral problem. In fact, it drives economic systems towards collapse by sucking the life-blood out of real economies worldwide.

According to a recent study by Oxfam International, in 2010 the top 388 richest people owned as much wealth as the poorest half of the world’s population—a whopping 3.6 billion people. By 2014, this number was down to 85 people. Oxfam claims that, if this trend continues, by the end of 2016 the top 1 percent will own more wealth than everyone else in the world combined. At the same time, according to Oxfam, the extremely wealthy are also extremely efficient in dodging taxes, now hiding an estimated $7.6 trillion in offshore tax-havens.

Why should we care about such gross economic inequality? After all, isn’t it natural? The science of flow says: yes, some degree of inequality is natural, but extreme inequality violates two core principles of systemic health: circulation and balance.

Circulation represents the lifeblood of all flow-systems, be they economies, ecosystems or living organisms. In living organisms, poor circulation of blood causes necrosis that can kill. In the biosphere, poor circulation of carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, etc. strangles life and would cause every living system, from bacteria to the biosphere, to collapse. Similarly, poor circulation of money, goods, resources and services leads to economic necrosis—the dying off of large swaths of economic tissue that ultimately undermines the health of the economy as a whole.

Figure 1. A Fractal Banking System with a proper balance of small, medium and large banks helps optimize cross-scale monetary flow. Photo credit: Capital Institute
Fig. 1. A Fractal Banking System with a proper balance of small, medium and large banks helps optimize cross-scale monetary flow. Photo credit: Capital Institute

In flow systems, balance is not simply a nice way to be, but a set of complementary factors—such as big and little; efficiency and resilience; flexibility and constraint—whose optimal balance is critical to maintaining circulation across scales. For example, the familiar branching structure seen in lungs, trees, circulatory systems, river deltas and banking systems (Fig. 1) connects a geometrically constant ratio of a few large, a few more medium-sized and a great many small entities. This arrangement, which mathematicians call a fractal, is extremely common because it’s particular balance of small, medium and large helps optimize circulation across different levels of the whole. Just as too many large animals and too few small ones creates an unstable ecosystem, so financial systems with too many big banks and too few small ones tend towards poor circulation, poor health and high instability.

In his documentary film, Inequality for All, Robert Reich uses virtuous cycles to clarify how robust circulation of money serves systemic health. In virtuous cycles, each step of money movement makes things better. For example, when wages go up, workers have more money to buy things, which should increase demand, expand the economy, stimulate hiring and boost tax revenues. In theory, government will then spend more money on education which will increase worker skills, productivity and hopefully wages. This stimulates even more circulation, which starts the virtuous cycle over again. In flow terms, all of this represents robust constructive flow, the kind that develops human and network capital and enhances well-being for all.

Of course, economies also sometimes exhibit vicious cycles, in which weaker circulation makes everything go downhill—i.e., falling wages, consumption, demand, hiring, tax revenues, government spending, etc. These are destructive flows, ones that erode system health.

rgchart1

Both vicious and virtuous cycles have occurred in various economies at various times and under various economic theories and policy pressures. But, for the last 30 years, the global economy in general and the American economy in particular has witnessed a strange combination pattern in which prosperity is booming for CEOs and Wall Street speculators, while the rest of the economy—particularly workers, the middle class and small businesses—have undergone a particularly vicious cycle. Productivity has grown massively, but wages have stagnated. Consumption has remained reasonably high because, in an effort to maintain their standard of living, working people have: 1) added hours, becoming two-income families, often with two and even three jobs per person; and 2) increased household debt. Inequality has skyrocketed because effective tax rates on the 1 percent have dropped (notwithstanding a partial reversal under Obama), while their income and profits have risen steeply.

We should care about this kind of inequality because history shows that too much concentration of wealth at the top and too much stagnation everywhere else indicate an economy nearing collapse. For example, as Reich shows (Fig. 1a & b), both the crashes of 1928 and 2007 followed on the heels of peaks in which the top 1 percent owned 25 percent of the country’s total wealth.

Income Share of U.S. Top 1 percent. Reich notes that the two peaks look like a suspension bridge, with highs followed by precipitous drops. Photo credit: Robert Reich, Piketty and Saez
Fig. 1a & b: Income Share of U.S. Top 1 percent. Reich notes that the two peaks look like a suspension bridge, with highs followed by precipitous drops. Photo credit: Robert Reich, Piketty and Saez

What accounts for this strange mix of increasing concentration at the top and increasing malaise everywhere else? Putting aside the parallels to 1929 for a moment, most common explanations for today’s situation include: the rise of technology which makes many jobs obsolete; and globalization which puts incredible pressures on companies to lower wages and outsource jobs to compete against low-wage workers around the world.

But, while technology and globalization are clearly creating transformative pressures, neither of these factors completely explains our current situation. Yes, technology makes many jobs obsolete, but it also creates many new jobs. Yet, where the German, South Korean and Norwegian governments invest in educating their workforce to fill those new jobs, the American government has been cutting back on education for decades. A similar thought holds for globalization. Yes, high-volume industrialism—that is, head-to-head competition over price of mass-produced, uniform goods—leads to a race to the bottom; that’s been known for a long time. But in The Work of Nations (2010), Robert Reich also points out that the companies that are flourishing through globalization and technology are ones pursuing what he calls high-value capitalism, the high-quality customization of goods and services that can’t be duplicated by mass-produced uniformity at cheap places around the world.

So, while the impacts of globalization and technology are profound, the real explanation for inequality lies primarily with an economic belief that, intentionally or not, serves to concentrate wealth at the top by extracting it from everywhere else. This belief system is called variously neoliberalism, Reaganomics, the Chicago School and trickle-down economics. It is easily recognized by its signature ideas: deregulation; privatization; cut taxes on the rich; roll back environmental protections; eliminate unions; and impose austerity on the public. The idea was that liberating market forces would cause a rising tide that lifted all boats, but the only boat that actually rose was that of the .01 percent. Meanwhile, instability has grown.

The impact this belief system has had on the American economy and its capacities can be seen in American education. Trickle-down theories are all about cutting taxes on the wealthy, which means less money for public education, more young people burdened with huge college debt and fewer American workers who can fill the new high-tech jobs.

To be fair, this process is not just about greed. Most of the people who participate in this economic debacle do not realize its danger because they believed what they were told by the saints and sages of economics and many are rewarded for following its principles. So, what really causes the kind of inequality that drives economies toward collapse? The basic answer from the science of flow is: economic necrosis. But, let me flesh out the story.

Institutional economists talk about two main types of economic strategies: extractive and solution-seeking. (Hopefully, these names are self-explanatory.) Most economies contain both. But, if the extractive forces become too powerful, they begin to use their power to rig the rules of the economic game to favor themselves. This creates what scientists call a positive feedback loop, one in which “the more you have, the more you get.” Seen in many kinds of systems, this loop creates a powerful pull that sucks resources to the top and drains it away from the rest of the system causing necrosis. For example, chemical runoff into the Gulf of Mexico accelerates algae growth. This creates an escalating, “the more you have, the more you get” process, in which massive algae growth sucks up all the oxygen in the surrounding area, killing all of the nearby sea life (fish, shrimp, etc.) and creating a large “dead zone.”

rcchart2

Neoliberal economics set up a parallel situation by allowing the wealthy to use their money to extract ever more money from the overall economy. The uber-wealthy grow wealthier by:

  • Paying for policy favors—big corporate bailouts and subsidies; lobbying; etc.
  • Removing constraints on dangerous behavior—removing environmental protections; not prosecuting financial fraud offenders; ending Glass-Steagall, etc.
  • Increasing the public’s vulnerability—increasing monopolistic power by diminishing antitrust regulations; limiting the public’s ability to sue big corporations; limiting Medicare’s ability to negotiate for lower pharmaceutical rates; limiting bankruptcy for student loans, etc.
  • Increasing their own intake—rising CEO salaries and escalating Wall Street gambling; and limiting their own outflows—externalizing costs, cutting worker wages and lowering their own taxes.

All of these processes help the already rich concentrate more, and circulate less. In flow terms, therefore, gross inequality indicates a system that has: 1) too much concentration and too little circulation; and 2) an imbalance of wealth and power that is likely to create ever more extraction, concentration, unaccountability and abuse. This process accelerates until the underlying human network becomes exhausted and/or the ongoing necrosis reaches a point of collapse. When this point is reached, the society will have three choices: learn, regress or collapse.

What then shall we do? Obviously, we need to improve our “solution seeking” behavior in realms from business and finance to politics and media. Much of this is already taking place. From socially-responsible business and alternative forms of ownership, to democratic reform groups, alternative media and the new economy movement—reforms are arising on all sides.

But, the solutions we need are also often blocked by the forces we are trying to overcome and impeded by the massive merry-go-round momentum of “business as usual.” Today’s reforms also lack power because they are taking place piecemeal, in a million separate spots with very little cross-group unity.

How do we overcome these obstacles? The science of flow offers not so much a specific strategy, as an empowering change of perspective. In essence, it provides a more effective way to think about the processes we see every day.

The dynamics explained above are very well known; they are basic physics, just like the law of gravity. Applying them to today’s economic debates can be extremely helpful because the latter have devolved into ideological debates devoid of any scientific foundation.

We believe Regenerative Economics can provide a unifying framework capable of galvanizing a wide array of reform groups by clarifying the picture of what makes societies healthy. But, this framework will only serve if it is backed by accurate theory and effective measures and practice. This soundness is part of what Capital Institute and RARE are trying to develop.

ecowatch.com



8 Comments on "Extreme Inequality = Economic Collapse"

  1. Northwest Resident on Thu, 11th Feb 2016 8:35 pm 

    The world can’t afford another financial crash – it could destroy capitalism as we know it

    That’s the title of this article published in the UK’s Telegraph, a not insignificant international news outlet. Link below.

    And I agree. Like I’ve opined once or twice on this forum a while back, there isn’t enough economically viable oil (energy!) to launch the global economy out of the downward spiral we find ourselves in. My steadfast motto is “This is the LAST oil bust” — end of the road. There won’t be any more “booms” to juice the economy and get those happy shoppers out to the malls buying useless shit for the garbage pile and moving up to much bigger houses, cars, and whatever.

    There IS going to be another financial crash, coming soon, this one much bigger and much more impactful than the 2007/2008 warm-up. And no, our current form of “democracy” (for the few) most definitely will not survive the trials and tribulations that are headed our way, that we are in fact already up to our asses in.

    Enjoy the comforts and ease of the oil-based “good life” while it lasts. It is a slam dunk bet that you’ll be looking back on today as “the good old days” in the not too distant future.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/12151115/The-world-cant-afford-another-financial-crash-it-could-destroy-capitalism-as-we-know-it.html

  2. John Kintree on Thu, 11th Feb 2016 9:01 pm 

    Bernie Sanders says we need a political revolution. Sounds right to me.

  3. makati1 on Thu, 11th Feb 2016 9:29 pm 

    I believe it was Thomas Jefferson who said that the US needed a revolution about every 20 years to keep it on track. We are about 200 years overdue and doomed to fail as a nation. I don’t need to read a long article about the economy to know that the game is over. Never to return. As NWR said: “Enjoy the comforts and ease of the oil-based “good life” while it lasts.”

  4. noobtube on Fri, 12th Feb 2016 12:47 am 

    The 5 stages of Peak Oil Collapse

    DENIAL (1970s – 2001)
    ANGER (2001 – 2008)
    BARGAINING (2008 – today)
    DEPRESSION (??????)
    ACCEPTANCE (??????)

  5. Davy on Fri, 12th Feb 2016 3:38 am 

    In finance as in peak oil: “its the flow not the stock, stupid”

    “If Credit Is Right, The S&P Is Facing A 40% Crash”
    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-02-11/if-credit-right-sp-facing-40-crash

    “and credit is always right in the end! 1,100 is the target…High Yield bond yields and Leveraged Loan prices are at their worst since 2009 as it seems the hosepipe of QE3 liquidity (its the flow not the stock, stupid) is slowly unwound from a buybacks-are-over equity market.”

  6. Davy on Fri, 12th Feb 2016 3:49 am 

    “Crushing The “Oil’s Just A Supply Issue” Meme In 1 Painful Chart”
    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-02-11/crushing-oils-just-supply-issue-meme-1-painful-chart

    “Day after day we are told that the plunge in oil prices (just like the collapse in The Baltic Dry freight index) is a “supply” issue… it’s transitory and global demand is doing fine thank you very much. Sadly, as everyone really knows deep down inside their Keynesian hearts, this is utter crap and as Barclays shows the shocking 18% YoY crash in distillates “demand” – something that has never happened outside of a recession – blows the one-sided argument of the energy complex out of the water.”

  7. theedrich on Sat, 13th Feb 2016 4:52 am 

    Let us consider another factor in the economic-collapse process:
    From http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-02-10/here-exchange-left-stunned-janet-yellen-looking-deer-headlights:

    On 2016 Feb 10, during Yellen’s appearance before the House Financial Services committee, Duffy finally had enough, and in a heated exchange asked Yellen what on legal authority is the Fed exerting privilege to ignore a Congressional probe into what is clearly a criminal leak [i.e., by the Fed, of FOMC {Federal Open Market Committee} material inside information via Medley Global and any other undisclosed channels], one which has nothing to do with monetary policy and everything to do with the Fed providing material, market moving information to its favorite media and financial outlets.

    As for the “deer in headlights” look, and why Yellen is so adamantly refusing to comply with subpoenas and provide the US population and Rep. Duffy with the requested information regarding how it was that the Fed leaked critical information to Medley Global’s (founded by Richard Medley, former chief political strategist to George Soros) Regina Schleiger, the answer as Yellen explained last May …

    As has been disclosed through the public release of my calendar in 2013, I had one meeting with Ms. Regina Schleiger of Medley Global Advisors during the period covered by the staff review.  As Vice Chair of the Board, I met with Ms. Schleiger on June 11, 2012, to hear her perspectives on international developments.  This meeting took place well before the Medley Global Advisors October 3, 2012, report that raised questions about FOMC information security.  Nothing Medley Global Advisors reported in October about the events of the September 2012 FOMC meeting could have been conveyed in June and let me assure you that, in any case, I did not convey any confidential information.

    I am informing you of this contact because I believe [it] is appropriate to do so in my role as Chair of the FOMC.

    … is simple:  Yellen herself was the source, only there is no definitive proof … yet, as confirmation that the Chairwoman herself leaked the information in question would be grounds for prison time.

    From this we now know that the Fed is actually controlled by Hungarian Jew billionaire Georg Sörös and his gang, and that Yellen is an accomplice in this octopoid criminal syndicate of theft.  Hotflash Clitory is the front puppet for this syndicate, which is supporting her with enormous amounts of money in campaign contributions and media influence.

    The syndicate is alarmed not just by the success of Trump but especially by the unexpected emergence of Commie-like Bernie Sanders.  He should be very careful, because if he somehow manages to become a real threat to the female marionette, he may suddenly have an “emergency,” either medical or otherwise, which will put him out of the running for the presidency.

    In any case, the proles will continue blissfully ignorant of the subterranean war for global control going on beneath their feet.

  8. Apneaman on Sun, 14th Feb 2016 1:28 pm 

    Disparity in Life Spans of the Rich and the Poor Is Growing

    “Despite big advances in medicine, technology and education, the longevity gap between high-income and low-income Americans has been widening sharply.

    The poor are losing ground not only in income, but also in years of life, the most basic measure of well-being. In the early 1970s, a 60-year-old man in the top half of the earnings ladder could expect to live 1.2 years longer than a man of the same age in the bottom half, according to an analysis by the Social Security Administration. Fast-forward to 2001, and he could expect to live 5.8 years longer than his poorer counterpart.

    New research released on Friday contains even more jarring numbers. Looking at the extreme ends of the income spectrum, economists at the Brookings Institution found that for men born in 1920, there was a six-year difference in life expectancy between the top 10 percent of earners and the bottom 10 percent. For men born in 1950, that difference had more than doubled, to 14 years.”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/13/health/disparity-in-life-spans-of-the-rich-and-the-poor-is-growing.html?_r=0

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