Our friend Stoneleigh, over at TAE wrote in rebuttal to Chris Martenson who himself recently posted a rebuttal to the deflationist position so strongly advocated by TAE: Commodities Look Set to Rocket Higher
Since TAE apparently refuses to let me comment, I'll start a discussion here with my rebuttal

As usual, I find myself in agreement with Stoneleigh on the details and importance of systemic feedback mechanisms, but do not reach the same conclusion of the case made for the "Deflation Thesis". As much as I enjoy reading their blog, I am always left with the impression that the only percieved possible outcome is the predetermined inevitable deflationary crash, and all evidence is presented as proof.
You might wonder how I can agree with with the arguments without accepting the conclusion? Firstly, I actually take issue with the idea of "a conclusion", there will come a time when the final quantum wave function collapses for humanity, but until then, while there is still uncertainty and people running around, I suspect there to continue to be a complex dynamical response within the ecological-system we reduce to financial-econonomics. As "financial-economics" as we consider it today is a reduction of the true system, a human political fiction externalising inconvienient variables and feedbacks which fail to recognsile into our simplified mental framework, the entire ediface can change or cease to exist as ever more is externalised and becomes detached from reality.
Secondly, I remember posting there a long time ago (2008) stating QE would happen, and that central bankers would do all in their power to fight what they understand to be the delfation scenario as laid out on these pages, even to the detrement of their soverign credit rating. It was dismissed as so much nonsense, nothing would be done which would so risk damage to the underlying safety in and reserve currency status of the US Treasuries and the US dollar. Of course much has happened since, and I'm still of the opinion the goose will be slain before hope is given up on infinite golden eggs.
Thirdly, IMO, the big picture issue is one of systemic net energy starvation, financial bubbles/busts (or deviations from reality within the financial-economic system) happen when the human imposed model fails to map the ecological system it attempts to simulate, resources are misallocated and the natural environment destroyed.
Fourthly, credit was created when the prevailing psychology was one of growth, infinite expansion, indeed strucurally the financial system is dependent on credit, interest, and ever more human appropriation of the natural world. Credit isn't the driver, it's the mechanism of translating or leveraging existing human capital and available energy into realising or liquidating natural capital and resources. It's that process which drives expansion and gives the apparent validity to the economic system as a whole. The decline in credit is arguably a psychological response to the unconscious congnition that the returns of capital investment no longer give added value, externalities are getting too significant to ignore. Past depressionary crises periods occured where the contemporay financial-economic system failed to sufficiently model the real human ecomomy, but there was still plenty of scope to manage our way out by refining he model to pump profit by redirecting loss into ecological sinks. The model itself evolved over time to enhance growth while figuratively and in some cases literally burying the costs.
So, that all said, I do not see this as simply a credit unwind or deflationary period, but as a phase of increasing instability and volatility as the financial system is overwelmed by externalities it has no control over and no ability to price. The eventual outcome of which will be the current system replaced with something else, knowing us, something equally as flawed, but until then I predict increasing chaos until the range of probabilites resolves into a possible configuration supported by reality, a new quantum state.








